Clarifying India’s Strategic Doctrine Non-articulation of India's strategic doctrine lends it to be interpreted and perceived variously. India's security establishment need not be defensive about its strategic doctrine but boldly take on critics in the strategic community. Besides, its articulation would help provide direction to the military in their formulation of military doctrine, planning and acquisitions. Ali Ahmed | October 25, 2010 | IDSA Comments
China’s Territorial Claim on Arunachal Pradesh: Crafting an Indian Response The paper provides three plausible explanations for the increase in China’s aggressive postures in India’s eastern sector and a few policy recommendations are offered for consideration. Namrata Goswami | October 25, 2010 | Issue Brief
Obama’s visit to India: Is the glass of Indo-US strategic partnership half full or half empty? While President Obama’s visit to India in November 2010 should further strengthen the Indo-US strategic partnership, some issues have the potential of clouding the relationship. Both sides should be sensitive to each other’s concerns and focus on areas such as space cooperation to give the relationship greater dynamism. Arvind Gupta | October 25, 2010 | IDSA Comments
Managing Supersession in the Armed Forces: An HRM Approach Supersession is too important an aspect of organizational existence to be dismissed lightly. It is a situation to be managed jointly by the organization and affected individual with the clear understanding that organizational interests are overriding. The Human Resources Management (HRM) approach aims to ensure that staffing manning of an organization effectively meets the quantitative and qualitative aspects at all times to ensure efficiency and effectiveness. An important element of HRM is Human Resource Planning (HRP). Suryakant Bal | October 2010 | Journal of Defence Studies
Promotion System in the Army: Dealing with Peacetime Atrophy In practice, it has been found that a peacetime army tends to atrophy and lose its war fighting orientation. It develops a lopsided emphasis on peacetime routine, spit and polish. In fact, a wartime army may well be the very anti-thesis of a peacetime army. Years of non-use of the military instrument sometimes results in the rusting of its value system and ethos. G. D. Bakshi | October 2010 | Journal of Defence Studies
A Passage Through India? Given the fragility of ISAF’s southern lines of communication passing through Pakistan, India could consider offering a passage through its territory as a meaningful alternative. Harinder Singh | October 21, 2010 | IDSA Comments
26/11 Redux in Europe: Strategic Imperatives The current terrorist threat has reemphasised the importance of Europe, considered to be increasingly irrelevant in global security and strategic calculus. Alok Rashmi Mukhopadhyay | October 21, 2010 | IDSA Comments
Can Prime Minister Singh push through a Nuclear Deal with Japan? The DPJ has relaxed its earlier rigid position and is no longer demanding that India join the NPT as a pre-condition for the nuclear pact. Rajaram Panda | October 21, 2010 | IDSA Comments
How ISI terrorises Pakistani Journalists Umar Cheema’s abduction and torture by ISI officials recently is part of the strong arm tactics employed by the Pakistan Army and its intelligence wing to force journalists to fall in line. Rajeev Sharma | October 19, 2010 | IDSA Comments
Afghanistan: India should keep a low profile for the present India must stay engaged, keep a low profile, earn the goodwill of the Afghan people through its multifaceted assistance programme, and stay away from any costly misadventure in the security sector. Arvind Gupta | October 18, 2010 | IDSA Comments