Showing posts with label book reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book reviews. Show all posts

Friday, 17 March 2023

 Some book reviews from the archives, early 2000s

BOOK REVIEW 13 Jul 2003

Lt Gen (Retd.) Sood, VK; Swahney, P., Operation Parakram: The War Unfinished; New Delhi, Sage Publications, 2003; pp. 204; Rs. 280/-.

 The book under review has been co-authored by a team comprising a retired Vice Chief of Army Staff and a leading correspondent specializing in security affairs. As can be expected the book is an informative one particularly for lay readers in that it explicates operational and strategic issues much in the news over the past few years. For specialists in the security field it is relevant in that it reveals internal thinking within the Army regarding how to deal with issues as Kashmir and Pakistan. The book is a recommended read more importantly for the hint it carries in its title that Operation Parakram is not quite over with the ‘strategic relocation’ of troops. In its parting sentence it appears to back what it presents as the Army position that the ‘War Unfinished’ should be taken to its logical conclusion – ‘Even as the military is bracing of another Operation Parakram- it would be real this time- the political leadership should attempt to see the strategic imperatives as they are, and not as they ought to be’. Clearly the tail is likely to wag the dog yet again, something an unsuspecting country cannot permit a second time round, Operation Parakram being revealed comprehensively as the first, if unsuccessful instance. It is therefore imperative to debunk the arguments the book advances for the Army position on the matter, lest its advocacy in the book acquire it a following leading up to a clamor for the ‘real’ thing. 

 

For strategic affairs aficionados, it is not strange that the book reflects the Army’s position, rather than a service position, the latter being non-existent. The Army’s position would appear to be suffering from the shortcomings of a ‘military mindset’ in that it is narrow, myopic and has institutional self-interest at its core. It also reveals a grave misreading of Clausewitz, in that the Army believes that destruction of the military ware withal of a foe would yield a desired political outcome. This is best summed up by an extract from the Army’s doctrine brought out in the book: ‘The Indian Army believes in fighting the war in enemy territory. If forced into a war, the aim of our offensives would be to apply a sledgehammer blow to the enemy. The Indian Army’s concept of waging war is to ensure decisive victory…’. Even though the doctrine predates Pokhran and Chagai it appears to have not been revised in the age of ‘limited war’. The book reveals that though the January avatar of Op Parakram was a Northern Command inspired ‘bottom up’ one limited to POK, by June its ambition had increased to launch three strike corps into Pakistan’s desert sector in the hope that Pakistan’s mobile formations would be destroyed without pushing its nuclear threshold. This, despite the author’s admitting that the Indian military has not been kept in full picture of India’s nuclear capabilities by its politicians and scientific enclave. If that be the case, then it can be surmised it is less in picture with regard to the nuclear capabilities and least of all intentions of Pakistan. Therefore, it can be argued that a naïve belief that the war would not go nuclear underlay the position of the Army, a factor the politicians appear to have happily been more in tune to.

 

This brings one to the aspect of political control. The book rightly criticizes the government for not informing the military of the purpose of the mobilization. As a result it was amenable to a permissive interpretation, evident from the contretemps surrounding the dismissal of a strike corps commander for overstepping his non-existent brief. A more generous interpretation could be that in leaving the ‘war unfinished’ the government exhibited political control despite the Army position and pressure. While the book appears critical of the government’s lack of resolve, the contrary appears closer to the facts. This is an aspect that requires bolstering lest commentary in the vein carried in the book make the case that the government is oblivious to strategic considerations that ought to be sole preserve of a professional military. In a nuclear environment, this is patently not the case, even if Clausewitz’s dictum on the abiding primacy of the political of over two centuries vintage is ignored for a moment.

 

The book suggests that there are two solutions to India’s joint Kashmir-Pakistan problem. One is in administering a military defeat to Pakistan and second is for an internal resolution to the Kashmir militancy. It considers the latter impractical and therefore its inclination for the military option. The book does not reflect on how success was to be obtained in the January and June versions of Op Parakram, even though it does spell out the problems. With regard to the January option, though it takes Gen Musharraf’s threat of reacting ‘unconventionally’ at face value in that it brings out the threat of the Mujahideen to Indian thrusts in the mountains of POK, and the difficulty of taking on formidable mountain defenses particularly in snow clad winter, it does not give out Indian Army’s answer to these problems. Strategic vapidity is evident from the fact that though the first few chapters dwell on the Taliban threat, the Army backed a winter offensive even as the Taliban was being wrapped up by Op Enduring Freedom. In so far as the June option is concerned, it does not tell us how Indian Army expected to grapple with the ‘operational parity’ presented by Pakistan. At best, we are told of Indian Army’s obsession with ‘territory’. The then Vice Chief is quoted as saying that ‘the role of the Army was to occupy (territory) with the others (air force etc) come in support of it’. The ‘what if’s’ such as ‘What if Pakistan’s reserves refused to play ball?’ are completely ignored in this bit of advocacy of the Army’s untenable position. Given this lack of information it is too pat on the part of the authors to back the military position as they do – ‘the commanders would know best…The Indian Army must call Pakistan’s nuclear bluff…’.

 

Lastly, the authors appear to believe that the structural and technological evolution post Op Parakram in terms of formation of the NCA etc would help India prevail next time round with a better politician-military interface. A different approach requires to be privileged in that such evolution ought to be utilized to reassert political control on the military lest its propensity for role expansion into the political domain of determining whether to wage war and its ends is appropriately curbed. There is an certain urgency to this in that the military perspective brought out approvingly in a quote from a former Chief’s account of his term in office indicates that the Indian Army appears to be adrift in the era of globalisation and its compulsions seized as it is narrowly with admittedly palpable security threats across the country – ‘It was more than obvious that when the Narasimha Rao government embarked on its economic liberalization it also quietly pushed issues like defense and national security very low down in the list of priorities’. Clearly India’s economic strides, with their attendant national security implications, cannot be allowed to be deflected by a bunch of terrorists inciting its Army into self-interestedly pushing the government into over-reacting.

 

BOOK REVIEW 2 Jun 2002

Philpot, D., Revolutions in Sovereignty: How Ideas Shaped Modern International Relations; Princeton, Princeton University Press, 2001, Pages – 339, $ 19.95

 

Daniel Philpot is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Santa Barbara. As befits a ‘rising star’ (Philpot is 35 years old) on the firmament of international relations theorists, his book is an ambitious that sifts historical evidence to prove his contention that ideas have had a role in shaping modern international relations. The importance of his thesis on the influence of ideas lies more in what the implications are for the future. If ideas have brought about the state system as exists today, the ideas that are current may well change its contours in the future. In short, ideas bear watching. His theory is well substantiated, though he lays no claim to ideas being the sole historical arbiter. He accords due respect to realist and materialist macro-explanations of historical movements as the formation of the nation state system of today in the Westphalian tradition.

 

In the introduction, the book deals with the concept of international constitution – the underlying precepts of the international system, which in the present rests on sovereign states. International constitutions are the legitimating norms and practices of the sovereign entities that ‘create orders but not necessarily orderliness’. Philpot reflects on the three faces of sovereignty in international constitutions: what are the legitimate polities; who are entitled to such recognition; and what are their prerogatives. He characterizes as ‘revolution’ when there is any revision in any of these three faces of sovereignty. The principal movement in sovereignty has been the two separate though similar revolutions – the original Westphalia Treaty restricted to Europe; and the spread of the same to remainder of the globe with decolonisation. It is noteworthy that the author characterizes two recent phenomenon as revolutions – the integration of Europe and the post-cold war propensity towards intervention. These two aspects are reversing the steady march of state sovereignty and are pregnant with possibilities in the future.

 

The author then dwells on the role of ideas – they shape identities and are a form of social power. He identifies how they become socially empowered through the input of intellectuals and activists. By gauging cause and effect the author seeks to substantiate his argument that ideas have had a role in shaping the present. His proof is centered in the history surrounding Westphalia in the first revolution he deals with, and in the second revolution (ie. the spread of the first revolution across the globe in the sixties) he reveals the force of ideas on the British and French empires. What a subsequent edition of the book can reflect on is the manner the international constitution will turn out once the reverse revolutions underway constraining sovereignty as we know it play themselves out.

 

It is remarkable that such books are not as yet originating in our cultural milieu. Our intellectuals appear to concentrate on the here and now. There is a case for encouraging such scholarship within our learning institutions. A means to this end is to emulate the manner such work gets done in the West, the outlines of which are generally covered by authors in their Preface. The extensive peer review of books testifies to the gestation process that contributes to exactitude in argument and fact. Another measure is the setting and sustaining of standards in the production of knowledge through initiatives as the one under which this book has been published – Princeton Studies in International History and Politics edited by Jack Snyder, Marc Trachtenberg and Fareed Zakaria. The book is therefore worth reading if only to reflect on how persuasively contextual issues are tackled.

 

BOOK REVIEW 30 May 2001

Major Vivek Chadha, The Book of Military Quotations; New Delhi: Bookmart Publishers, 2001; Pages- 320; Rs- 695/-

 Major Chadha’s operational service in theatres ranging from Sri Lanka to J&K, has instigated his quest for an understanding of the nature of his calling. His first book was a first hand account of the demands on the leader at the spear end of the LIC battlefield. His book under review promises more to come, for there is still a bright career ahead for this officer – the insights of which he is unlikely to keep to himself. This is hopefully the sign of arrival of the modern officer corps, wherein the members deliberate not only the experience but also its meaning.

 

The book originated in a remarkable observation by the Major, in that there is a vacuum of military quotations originating in the Indian cultural and military milieu. It is to the credit of the Major that he has taken time off from his official schedule to prepare this useful book. It reveals a point of wider import, in that the army is now diluting its anti-intellectual culture in its transition to being an army of the info age. That this book is as much about military history, it would appear that sensibly the army has not lost a sensitivity to its past.

 

It is a book that will get repeatedly thumbed for it has a thoughtfully prepared menu of topics, which the complier, being an insider, is in the best position to know. It has been well presented by the publishers, but at a price that may seem daunting. Nevertheless, it is a book that should grace the shelf of any young officer who adopts the forces as a way of a life. The section on India’s wars will no doubt expand in editions that can be predicted to follow this one. This may infuse a greater Indian bias in the book, thereby fulfilling the compliers original intent.

 

Quotations are the compression of wisdom into memorable language. Thus they are both a work of art and philosophy. The selection on offer reveals the compiler’s aesthetic sense as also the wide scope of his search. In this age of attention spans as short as commercials, quotations serve the further purpose of attracting the reader to reflect on the thought they transmit. Since in right thought springs right action, the food for thought that this book contains is recommended as staple to the fresh entrants to the officer corps.  

 

 BOOK REVIEW 15 May 2001

Michael C. Desch, Civilian Control of the Military – The Changing Security Environment; Baltimore and London; John Hopkins University Press; Pages – 184.

 The author acknowledges that John Mearsheimer planted the seeds of the book under review with an interesting anecdote. He describes Mearsheimer as dividing the field of security studies into three subfields. The first deals with nuclear strategy; the second with grand strategy and conventional forces; and the last with military-society issues. The impression he left was that specialists had treated the first two exhaustively, whereas the last, by far the more interesting subfield, was the least studied. This is relevant in our context as well, for there is indeed a striking dearth of specialists looking at the ‘soft’ underside of the military profession. Recently, some work in this direction has come out of Rajasthan University.

 

However, the subject is somewhat alien to the general reader. It is for this reason, this book and similar ones that originate abroad are recommended. They help provide the conceptual tools with which to understand military sociology. Though most such books do not deal with the political orientation of the Indian military, there are some remarkable exceptions as Rosen’s India and its Armies, Cohen’s classic The Indian Army and the one on the absence of coups in India by Apurba Kundu. Intelligent analogies and inferences can be drawn to come to grips with the Indian setting. Moreover, there is a certain convergence in the sociology of modern militaries, even if some of the writing deals with the movement of militaries into the post-modern age. Since ours is a military and polity in the throes of change the experience of the same elsewhere has very pertinent lessons for us. It is for this reason military sociology must find right of place on our reading lists.  

 

The book under review deals with the impact of the changing security environment post-cold war on civilian control of the military. It approaches the subject on the theoretical plane, instead of merely being descriptive in the case studies it uses to embellish the academic points it seeks to raise. It advances a structural theory on civil-military relations, as against the existing ones based on the personalities, organizational characteristics, and the nature of the civil authority. He basically wishes to resolve the debate between two points of view on the impact of external threat environment on civil-military relations – the first is Lasswell’s thesis on the ‘garrison state’ wherein adverse threat environment may lead to a loss of civil control; in the opposed viewpoint this is unlikely to be the case. Desch’s argument reinforces the latter point of view. His case-studies include the US and Russian militaries; the Latin American militaries and the French and German cases. These case-studies are worth perusing from the general knowledge point of view, and to gain an insight into an academic approach to theory building.

 

In a nutshell, his view is that good civil-military relations are likely in high external and low internal threat environments. With respect to low external and high internal threat environments, as obtain in our case his theory predicts the poor (worst) civil-military relations. Given this, the reader can judge the veracity of Desch’s theory on his own. Since most commentaries on the ongoing systemic reengineering of our security structure deal with its efficiency and effectiveness, a look at the same from what it implies for democratic control will be instructive – a look that can only be facilitated by military sociology.

  

 BOOK REVIEW 31 May 2001

Maroof Raza, ed. Generals and Governments in India and Pakistan; New Delhi: Har Anand Publications; 2001; Pages 144; Rs. 250/-

 The book under review is the first of an intended ‘Military Affairs Series’ by the publishers, the series editor being a former member of the army officer corps Major Maroof Raza. The purposefulness of the publishers is evidence of the marketability of books regards security issues in today’s India – a niche market originally identified with Lancers. Earlier a criticism of our strategic culture had it that ours was a society apathetic to security and threats to the same. This is happily no longer the case, thanks in part to the effort of the retired fraternity as also the more pro-active stance on these issues by recent governments. The series aspires to enlighten the concerned citizen on the major aspects of security issues in the public eye in order that a constructive debate ensue and inform the executive. How it differs from the periodicals dealing with the same is that it shall be dealing in the main with ‘how’ to think through such issues rather than ‘what’ to think about them.

 

More importantly, the series editor has chosen military sociology as the first theme. The Western centric discourse in this field has been breached by this effort that brings under one cover the writings of the younger generation of the strategic ‘community’. The contributors are working with institutions involved with security matters to include the IDSA, the Women in Security, Conflict Management and Peace (WISCOMP), and the BBC. It is heartening to note that two of the contributors are ladies, for this is a trend that will surely enhance the perspectives on offer in the hitherto male preserve of strategic analysis. Their views, that have earlier appeared elsewhere, reflect the importance accorded to the aspect of civil-military relations in a democratic society. Seen in a comparative perspective, in this case with the Pakistani example of dysfunctional relations, the positive aspects of the Indian experience stand out. The fact is that the stability of this equation has been in some measure responsible for the wider success of the Indian experiment with liberal democracy. It is now in the process of evolution, with the Government seized of the matter restructuring the national security apparatus, an aspect that Raza could have done well to throw more light on.

 

The contributions include an interesting discussion of the militarisation of Indian politics since the Eighties by Dr. Sumona Dasgupta, who works with WISCOMP. She avers that the readiness of application of the military template in both the internal and external spheres is indicative of the same, though it does not imply that there has been any politicization of the military as a consequence. There is a theoretical look at the meaning of the cliché ‘apolitical military’ by Sanjay Dasgupta, who is completing his Phd from the reputed Department of War Studies, King’s College London. (Incidentally, Raza and the present reviewer share the same alumni.) His chapter provides the conceptual tools with which the layperson can approach the subject. His examination of the implications of nuclear weaponisation for civil-military relations is instructive, for it looks at the way both South Asian states have coped with the changed circumstance. Dr. Smruti Pattanaik of the IDSA reviews the unfortunate dominance of Pakistani politics by the military. It has its lessons for us in terms of being a constant reminder of the impact of politicization on professionalism. We need look no further than the Kargil encounter to acknowledge the debilitating effects of the same.

 

Raza’s own contribution is the comparative study, which can be faulted for being somewhat soft on the Indian armed forces quest for access to the higher decision making process. The input of the armed forces has been an increasingly important feature of defence and internal security decision-making. The armed forces have played the game of bureaucratic politics adeptly in the recent past. In so far as they may have fallen short, it owes in part to their falling prey to service parochialism – which has been exploited by the intermediary layer, the bureaucracy. The success of jointness (the singular aspect that the institution represented by this journal deals with) will be in the synergy at the apex level of the inter-service hierarchy when representing the armed services position on issue of joint concern – which at this juncture is the materialization of the apex command structure that encompasses within it the Strategic Command.

 

The themes that are to follow include military technology, the military-media interface, internal conflicts and defence budgets. The publisher would do well to live up to the attention the series is bound to attract, in that the production values will have to be set higher than were for this apparently hastily assembled book. Raza must be complimented for continuing the good work of keeping the service interests in the public eye. His is a model example of transition from the regimented confines of the military to the savvy echelons of the civil street – a transition that is to be inevitably made by most of those in service. It also indicates that ‘we have it in us’ – not only what was required to join up, but also that required to begin anew. One can only wish the series a wide audience that will be made wiser by its focused attention to the security problems of our times.  

 BOOK REVIEW 9 Feb 2002

Karnad, B., ‘Nuclear Weapons and Indian Security: The Realist Foundations of Strategy: New Delhi, MacMillan, 2002; pp. 724, Rs. 795/-

 Nuclear enthusiasts owe a debt to Karnad’s daughter for goading her father into finishing his first book. This book is certain to join the other two equally penetrative tomes by Perkovich and Tellis on India’s nuclear journey on the bookshelf of any discerning military professional. It is a book that must be read in conjunction with Vanaik and Bidwai’s South Asia on a Short Fuse. While Vanaik and Bidwai have delved into Gandhian and Nehruvian thought and India’s position on nuclear weapons since then to arrive at the conclusion that Pokhran II was a radical departure, Karnad seeks to establish that weaponisation was a logical corollary to Nehru’s policy of acquiring the nuclear deterrent. Contesting this widely held perception of Indian aversion to the Bomb helps Karnad forward his wider thesis that India requires to move beyond its current nuclear posture of gaining a ‘force in being’ (as termed by Tellis) to a tous azimuts capability to include a strategic triad, thermonuclear weapons and ICBMs. In this manner, Karnad believes India will be able to acquire the strategic space, international stature and military muscle considered necessary for a major player in realism inspired world politics.

 

The book begins with a survey of the Vedas to establish that violence to further state goals is envisaged as a permissible practice in these revered verses that serve as the roots of India’s civilisational ethos. His aim appears to be to bust the myth that India stands for abnegation and non-violence alone. In arguing the contrary, he avers to Arthashastra as evidence of past political practice, proving thereby that pursuit of national interest through the use of force has been a characteristic feature. He thereafter attempts to interpret Gandhi and Nehru in a light that Gandhians and Nehruvians may find debatable, if not subversive. Since his work is an advocacy of the maximalist nuclear posture for India, he requires tackling these aspects to undercut the arguments raised by votaries of renunciation or moderation who rely on these sources for sustenance of their position.

 

Thereafter the book relies on access to freshly declassified material in archives in the USA and the UK. The argument that the author propounds is that India’s policy of nonalignment in the initial years was a cover for pursuing its national interests deemed as being furthered by a nuclear program and tilting towards the West to the extent of seeking security guarantees and military hardware from these sources. The book traverses the Perkovich revealed terrain of how the Nehru-Bhabha combine covertly maneuvered India down the nuclear lane. His interviews with the key personnel of the nuclear program as Iyengar and Ramanna and strategists as K Subrahmanyam take the book through the Indira period. He is particularly interesting in his coverage of the last decade, primarily because his sources have been senior bureaucrats, military men and scientists who have been generally kept anonymous in the footnotes. He has himself been an ‘insider’ over these years, having been a member of the First NSAB that drafted the paper that today probably serves as the basis of India’s as yet unstated nuclear doctrine.

 

He dissects several areas that comprise the nuclear discourse revealing new nuances in each instance. These include the bureaucratic politics that has been in attendance in India’s nuclear journey, the interpersonal interactions and the personality profiles of the politicians, scientists and bureaucrats who have been in on the nuclear loop, the shortcomings of ‘minimum deterrence’ popularized by the IDSA school, the manner in which military input into decision making has been neglected over the years, the use of Special Forces to plug the subconventional space that can be exploited in a dyadic conflict and a critique of the ‘force in being’ posture. Karnad, in keeping with his reputation, writes authoritatively, articulately and with passion. The production values of the book indicate that Indian publishing industry has come of age, for there was no incidence of the printer’s devil in the 700 pages that comprise the densely argued book. The drawback of the author sometimes repeating himself in both detail and ideas can be forgiven in light of the fact that his effort was to win converts to his grand Grand Strategic vision for India.

 

It is this vision that is unfortunately the least compelling aspect of the book. It does appear far-fetched that India requires to acquire a nuclear strike capability against not only China, which is understandable, but also against USA. Doing so will enable India to gain a place at the high table in the author’s view. He does not adequately contest the perspective that India’s nuclear capability can only do so much for India in gaining it credibility as a global player. There are several other indices, not least of which are economic power, social cohesion, ideational and moral strength, that make for a Great Power. Over emphasizing the nuclear aspect of national power may not be appropriate given the demise of nuclear-armed Soviet Union. It is also not self-evident that doing more in the nuclear field would contribute to the national interest by further strengthening the Indian deterrent. Ability to convert the Californian coast into rubble is not necessarily the most compelling index of power. The second feature of the vision is that it takes an ahistorical view of interstate relations in concentrating only on the power dynamic. International relations theory has moved beyond realism to furnish paradigms that ought to attract attention of policy makers. In avoiding serious theoretic confrontation with the contending philosophies in the discipline of international relations, Karnad appears to have taken the easier way out. Perhaps in attracting a rigorous counter from the opposite side of the diverse membership of the ‘strategic community’ this may have dividend for those interested in strategy. As a last word, it may be said that though Karnad attributes his interest in matters military of which we are the beneficiaries to the influence of Shri Jaswant Singh and Shri KC Pant, partial credit for the same should perhaps also be given to his school, Belgaum Military School!


 BOOK REVIEW 13 May 2001

Robert W Stern, Democracy and Dictatorship in South Asia: Dominant Classes and Political Outcomes In India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh; Westport, Praeger, 2001; Pages – 194.

 The author, Dr. Stern, is an avid ‘South Asia watcher’ – a tribe to which scholarly India owes much. The transcontinental membership of this club indulges in visits to, discussions on, and writing about the many facets of the subcontinent, ranging from its social life to politics. They are in a sense contemporary Ibn Batutas. Their importance is that the mirror they raise to our faces helps reduce the blind-spots we fondly carry of ourselves as political entities. Their continued involvement with trying to understand us helps open a window on us to those who may likewise wish to make sense of our magnitude and its contradictions. In this club exist both India baiters and friends of India. Dr. Stern can be ranked amidst the latter on account of this dispassionate account of India in contrast with her significant neighbors/cousins.

 

The argument is a difficult one to follow for those who are not habituated to think in terms of classes (many in the subcontinent prefer the shorthand of ‘communities’). That is not reason enough not to persist with the book for it does have a worthwhile perspective to present – one that gets more interesting as the narrative moves closer to us in time. He delineates two ‘communalisms’ of the pre-independence era to which he attributes the partition and the evolution of the three (initially two) political systems subsequently. The interaction of ‘popular’ communalism and   ‘elite’ communalism under imperial intervention of weightage and reservation led to the imagination, invention and consolidation by dominant classes of the ‘communities’. In the post-partition era the meaning and impact of parliamentary democracy on dominant classes varied for the two states. Whereas the Westminster model found root in India under the tutelage of a single party system, the imbalance between the two wings of Pakistan prevented its emergence with any degree of certainty and depth there. While East Pakistan was predisposed to it, owing to its pre-partition tradition of mediated politics, it was not so in West Pakistan dominated as it is by the landlord class. This accounts for the second partition. The book brings us up to date with the internal politics of all three countries.

 

Though we are familiar with the details, a sophisticated understanding of the same is often elusive. The book is therefore a useful addition to the literature on the contrast between democracy and dictatorship in South Asia. Its bibliography lists other works to include Ayesha Jalal’s rewarding one on the same theme. The importance of perusing these works by those in the security field, such as the readers of this journal, is that dogmas and myths get exposed for what they are. This is the first step to the realization that in new-age security thinking, coming to grips with the socio-political thought must precede understanding of the region’s geo-politics. Secondly we do need to know more of our neighbors. With regard to Pakistan, our perception is generally limited to it being a Punjabi dominated state on the verge of being a ‘failed state’. Our knowledge of and interest in Bangladesh is generally abysmal. The book helps us flesh out our knowledge base and theoretical heuristics.

 BOOK REVIEW 7 May 2001

Kanwal, G., Nuclear Defense: Shaping the Arsenal: New Delhi, Knowledge World, 2001; Pages- 246, Rs___.

 Colonel Kanwal has written the book under review while undergoing sabbatical at the Institute of Defense Studies and Analysis to work on a project sponsored by the Army HQ on a possible nuclear force structure for India. The book is important in two respects: one is that it represents the result of a formalized interface between the defense forces and the ‘strategic community’, and second, more importantly, is the insight the informed citizenry can glean on the direction and nuances of strategic thought within the military in a nuclear age. The former is to be commended as a measure worth institutionalizing for no other reason than that the latter does raise apprehensions that there is indeed an acute need for the same. 

 

The Colonel’s writings are by now familiar to those who follow the security debates, for he has been prolific over the past two years of his academic existence. He has the credentials to attempt the onerous task of examining the post-weaponisation force structure for he has headed an in-house think tank in the South Block – a section in the Military Operations Branch. The Colonel set out on the present undertaking to examine the manner the Draft Nuclear Doctrine could be operationalised. His findings are presented in a nutshell in the concluding chapter - that has, in the main, appeared as an article in a recent edition of the Indian Defense Review (though the article erroneously mentioned the name of the book as Force Structure for Nuclear India). His book is in the tradition of military men writing nuclear strategy, namely the redoubtable General Sundarji and Brig (Magu) Nair.

 

His argument is that, in order for our ‘no first use’ policy and intent of inflicting ‘unacceptable damage’ in retaliation to be credible, we need to opt for ‘megaton monsters’ numbering about 200 based on a triad of delivery systems under strict political control. His calculations reveal that this is an affordable figure. Given the fact that we are now a de facto nuclear power, reflections such as this are welcome for they will shape the final manner of deployment and employment of this deterrent capability.

 

However the point of interest is the Colonel’s insistence that even a defensive use of the nuclear weapon on its own territory on military targets by Pakistan as per its deterrence policy of possible ‘first use’ should be met with a retaliatory strike by India on its population and industrial centers. Given this certainty, he feels ‘they will, quite naturally, sue for peace’. This is the kind of wishful thinking that even the fictional scenario writer Humphrey Hawksley cannot be faulted with. This is even more dangerous when the Colonel recommends that India ‘call the Pakistani bluff’ by deep penetrations by its strike formations in pursuit of the ‘marginalisation’ of the Pakistani military as a ‘force majeaure’ in Pakistan. That this conventional mode of thinking has not appreciably changed can be discerned from the fact that the recent military exercise in the tradition of periodic gigantic exercises has been codenamed Ex Purna Vijay i.e. Total Victory (!). This is borne out by the helpful quote by the author from the ARTRAC publication on doctrine on the army’s intention of winning a ‘decisive victory’ by carrying the war deep into enemy territory (p. 98).

 

Brodie’s point that the sole purpose of militaries in the nuclear age is not to fight wars but to deter them has not been registered sufficiently for we believe that the purpose of nuclear weapons is merely to deter nuclear use by the adversary and not to deter war itself. It is this that raises doubts on the relevance of linear Cartesian logic to nuclear strategy, adopted by the Colonel schooled in the military training institutions as the Staff College and at the Higher Command Course. Clearly, if the military is to staff an integrated MOD and the CDS system radical restructuring of the officer development syllabi may be necessary. Minor irritants as dating the infamous utterings of Zulfi Bhutto on a fond preference for the staple for cows to post-1971 war are not germane to this point. This rises to immediacy in light of the fact that despite considerable research work that has gone in to produce this book, the author categorizes the Indian deterrent philosophy as one of ‘deterrence by denial’!

 BOOK REVIEW 

Thomas Risse, Stephen C Ropp and Kathryn Sikkink, (eds.) The Power of Human Rights: International Norms and Domestic Change: Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1999; Pages- 318; Price-

 The book under review is by scholars committed to the cause of human rights. They are part of what they categorize as the ‘international human rights advocacy network’. The book examines the linkages that this network has spawned with western governments, INGOs and the UN agencies in the field, as also the cumulative impact of this ‘global human rights polity’ on domestic change within human rights violator states. It has several case studies of pairs of states from different regions of the world. Its conclusions are remarkable for the fact that it forwards ten practicable lessons based on their theoretical framework for human rights practitioners.

 

The theoretical framework in question is a five phase ‘spiral model’ dwelling on the manner of socialization into international norms of recalcitrant states. In the ‘repression phase’, activation of the network is done in order to highlight the violations. This leads to the ‘denial phase’, in which the state rejects the imposition of an external paradigm of human rights. Once sufficient information is made available on the state’s human rights record, it undertakes a defensive ‘tactical concessions’ phase. In doing this, it lays itself bare to penetration through argumentation and lobbying by human rights activists. This forces the state to acknowledge the ‘prescriptive status’ of human rights norms. Lastly, is the phase in which the state exhibits ‘rule consistent behavior’ through institutionalization and habituation to human rights norms.

 

The impact of the international relations situation (‘world time’) on this spiral is considered, though not in as much depth as may have been warranted. The fact is that the West in keeping with its geo-political purpose has condoned repressive behavior of violator states. To neglect this aspect is to iterate the West’s assumption that human rights violations are a resultant of domestic factors in the developing world. The second noteworthy point is that the book does not discuss the cases of China and India, thereby disregarding the experience of major states and regions. Therefore the book can be recommended reading only for human rights buffs.  

BOOK REVIEW 23 Aug 2001

Stephen D Krasner, Sovereignity: Organised Hypocricy: Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1999;  Pages- 264, Price- $ 16.95.

 As may be expected from an eminent realist, the book is a trove of arguments on the fallacy of the assumption of sovereignty as a hardy perennial in international affairs in both theory and practice. The Professor discusses the two main attributes of sovereignty, namely Westphalian sovereignty and international legal sovereignty, to debunk any notion of the sanctity of sovereignty. In other words, state practice does not stand testimony either to the belief in the exclusion of external actors from domestic authority configurations (‘Westphalian sovereignty’) or to the understanding that recognition is due only to state entities (‘international legal sovereignty’). This owes to the fact that the ‘logic of consequence’ supercedes the ‘logic of appropriateness’ as the guide to state action. Therefore, the author argues that the concept of sovereignty is ‘organised hypocricy’.

 

The author rightly begins with an overview of his argument. Thereafter he attempts to demolish the meanings vested in the concept of sovereignty in the contending theoretical schools, namely neo-realism, neo-liberalism, the English school and the constructivist school. He then appraises the concept against the backdrop of minority rights and human rights – the two aspects that have caused the transgression of the concept in such as a manner as to make it relatively meaningless. A similar examination with respect to the conditionalities imposed by international financial institutions and of globalisation is enlightening in that an Indian reader can relate the arguments to the recent circumstances closer home.

 

The major thesis that the writer reinforces is the belief that ‘the strong will do as they can while the weak suffer what they have to’. For those with grandiose visions of a resurgent India this may be heart warming. However, persisting with such Thucidydian truisms into the new millennium is unlikely to yield a world society or an international community with which we may be able to overcome the problems of the day and those of the future.

 BOOK REVIEW 1 Feb 2003 

Sahadevan, P., (ed.) ‘Conflict and Peacemaking in South Asia’; Lancer Books, New Delhi, 2001; pp.533, Rs. 850.

 The book has an optimistic theme in that it places peacemaking efficacy on par with the intractability of conflicts these efforts address. Given the events over the last year, it would appear that such optimism in the South Asian context, specifically with respect to the pivotal states India and Pakistan, is debatable. Nevertheless, it reveals the hope and tenacity in peacemaking that alone can bring about any movement in the status quo on the several conflicts without end that plague South Asia.

 

The book grew out of a seminar at JNU in the wake of the nuclear tests in 1998. The papers presented at the seminar by academics from all South Asian countries, along with some additional essays commissioned by the editor to fill in the gaps, comprise the book. It is a useful addition to security literature, even if it somewhat dated, for it deals with the plethora of bilateral and multilateral issues at the root of ongoing disputes and potential conflicts. The advantage of the book is in the treatment it gives issues other than those that comprise the usual fixations of regional security studies of Indo-Pak relations and Kashmir. Thus we have the water sharing problem, the unresolved border problems and the Sino-Indian relations also getting the fair share of attention that is justly their due if we are to gain a perspective on the theme of peacemaking and conflict being complementary and of equal import in South Asia.

 

The book is divided into four sections. Part I may interest all strategic study enthusiasts for it deals with familiar issues of relative power, its usage and means to temper it. For the purposes of the study, China has rightly been included as a regional actor. The treatment of their topics by Raju GC Thomas and Pravin Swahney is idiosyncratic. Swahney particularly is high on military detail, but has not been able to integrate these into a cohesive whole. Kanti Bajpai and Swaran Singh provide the optimism in their assessment of the nuclear question and CBMs respectively. Territorial disputes and water disputes are dealt with in subsequent two sections. This is an educative section in that knowledge of the disruptive as also peace inducing potential of these issues is not widely available and consequently these issues have not been adequately appreciated. Lastly, is a look at how global balances have affected the region, not only in furthering rivalries here but also in the manner in which external powers have tried to bring about a modus vivendi through their peacemaking efforts. The chapter by Moonis Ahmar, unfortunately the lone Pakistani contributor, brings the Pakistani thrust toward mediation into focus. The book could have done with a concluding, equally comprehensive chapter as his introductory one by the editor.

 

In summation, two points need mention in assessing the book. One is the signal contribution to security studies that academics at JNU through their deliberations at the Core Group for the Study of National Security are making for furthering interest and insights in the subject. Second is that there requires to be greater participation by non-Indian academics in such ventures dealing with South Asia. In this manner perspectives from the periphery can mitigate the India-centric nature of the subcontinent that is partially at the root of certain disputes.

 


  


Sunday, 19 May 2019


https://www.dropbox.com/s/bch58m97lvd28t5/ebook%20of%20book%20reviews%20%281%29.docx?dl=0
Firing from others’ shoulders
By Ali Ahmed
eBook XI – Compilation of book reviews







For Major General (Retired) Dipankar Banerjee
In gratitude



Preface
This ebook compilation comprises book reviews written 2008 onwards. The book is aptly titled, Firing from others’ shoulders, since it discusses ideas thrown up by authors in respective books. The books were prominent contributions to the literature, mostly in the field of strategic studies. Some have been agenda setting and many discussed ideas already in the national security discourse. Between them, they illuminate vast stretches of South Asia, its happenings and times over the past decade. Many of the points made have been referred to by me in my writings, collected in the earlier ten compilations. The strategic studies field has been greatly advantaged by the swirl.
The ebook traces the intellectual ferment in strategic, security and peace studies. The books covered touch topics ranging from nuclear doctrine to terrorism. In discussing the books - and adding my two pennies worth - the attempt has been to deepen thinking on regional and national security. I believe the mainstream can do with some stirring. It is far too statist, cloistered in realism and – worse - made vapid over the period by the ideological contamination of ascendant cultural nationalism. Swimming against the current has been challenging, but made interesting on that account all the same. It can hopefully be seen on these pages from choice of books to review and the particular idea to highlight, thrash out or trash.  
I am grateful to editors who have given space in their publications, in particular the prominent journal, The Book Review India. I must mention Adnan Farooqui in this breath. I have not included the reviews that were carried in service journals in the period and prior to 2008. In the nineties, I was an avid contributor of book reviews to the United Services Institution Journal, where some 30 reviews were published, albeit with a few being merely a paragraph long. All told, I have crossed the 100 book reviews mark. Not only have I enjoyed the reading, but also the thinking that went into taking the work further to sets of readers, both within and outside uniform. The book would interest students and academics, besides helping narrow the reading lists of practitioners constantly short of time. The books appear chronologically, making it easier for lay readers to follow the developments from the global to the local.
I dedicate the book to General Dipankar Banerjee, who I have had the privilege of knowing all through my time on the strategic circuit and who has constantly had an encouraging – and at times life defining - word all along.
As with all other Preface write ups in my ebook compilations, I end this one with a word of thanks for my family, who have patiently allowed me to disappear from time to time behind book covers and then proceed right away to bang away at the keyboard. My excuse has been that the output might be worth something. Since I fire from others’ shoulders in this book, I am certain this time round it would not be a lame excuse.



Contents
Happymon Jacob, Line on Fire: Ceasefire violations and India-Pakistan escalation dynamics, New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2019
Srinath Raghavan, The Most Dangerous Place: A History Of The United States In South Asia, 2019, Penguin Random House, Gurgaon, India
Saifuddin Soz, Kashmir: Glimpses of History and the story of Struggle, Rupa Publications India, 2018
Arshin Adib-Moghaddam, Pshycho-nationalism: Global Thought, Iranian Imaginations, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018, pp.170, ISBN – 978-1-108-43570-3.

Chris Ogden, Indian National Security, New Delhi: Oxford University Press (Oxford India Short Introductions), 2017; ISBN 0-19-946647-5, pp. 152; Rs. 295/-
Chris Ogden (ed.), New South Asian Security: Six Core Relations Underpinning Regional Security, New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan, 2016, pp. 183, ISBN 978 81 250 62615
Avinash Paliwal, My Enemy's Enemy: India in Afghanistan from the Soviet invasion to the US withdrawal, HarperCollins; 1 edition, 2017
Kaushik Roy and Sourish Saha, Armed Forces and Insurgents in Modern Asia, Routledge, 2016

TV Paul (ed.), Accommodating Rising Powers: Past, Present and Future, Delhi: Cambridge University Press, 2016, pp. 326, ISBN – 978-1-316-63394-6

Sumit Ganguly, Deadly Impasse: Indo-Pakistani Relations At The Dawn Of The New Century,  Cambridge University Press, New Delhi, 2016, 188, 395

Ikram Sehgal, Escape from Oblivion: The Story of a Pakistani Prisoner of War in India, Karachi: Oxford University Press, 2012, pp. 138, Rs. (Pak) 695/-, ISBN – 978-0-19-906607-0

Vivek ChadhaIndian Army’s Approach to Counter Insurgency Operations: A Perspective on Human Rights, Occasional Paper 2, IDSA, New Delhi, 2016, pp. 40

Nandini Sundar and Aparna Sundar (eds.), Civil Wars In South Asia: State, Sovereignty, Development, Sage Publications, Delhi, 2014, pp. 273, Rs. 850.00

Rajesh Rajagopalan  and Atul Mishra Nuclear South Asia: Keywords And Concepts,
Routledge, New Delhi, 2014, pp. 306, Rs. 850.00

Christopher S. Chivvis, Toppling Gaddafi: Libya And The Limits Of Liberal Intervention,
Cambridge University Press, New Delhi, 2014, pp. 249, Rs. 495.00

Taj Hashmi,  Global Jihad And America: The Hundred-Year War Beyond Iraq And Afghanistan, Sage Publications, Delhi, 2014, pp. 322, Rs. 995.00

Ahmed S. Hashim, When Counterinsurgency Wins: Sri Lanka’s Defeat Of The Tamil Tigers ,
Foundation Books, Delhi, 2013, pp. 267, Rs. 850.00

Hy Rothstein and John Arquilla (eds.), Afghan Endgames: Strategy And Policy Choices For America’s Longest War, Cambridge University Press, New Delhi, 2013, pp. 229

Feroz Hassan Khan, Eating Grass: The Making Of The Pakistani Bomb, Foundation Books, Delhi, 2013, pp. 520

V.R. Raghavan (ed.), Internal Conflicts Military Perspectives, Vij Books, New Delhi, 2012, pp. 324,`1250.00

Sumit Ganguly and William R. Thompson (eds.) Asian Rivalries: Conflict, Escalation, And Limitations On Two-Level Games, Foundation Books, New Delhi, 2011, pp. 259.

D. Suba Chandran and P.R. Chari (eds.), Armed Conflicts In South Asia 2011: The Promise And Threat Of Transformation, Routledge, New Delhi, 2012, pp. 297, `795.00

Ali S. Awadh Asseri, Combating Terrorism: Saudi Arabias Role In The War On Terror, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2009, pp. 196, Rs 450.00

Bharat Karnad, India’s Nuclear Policy, Pentagon Press, Westport (CT), 2008,
pp. 221, Rs. 795,  ISBN 978-0-275-99945-2

K.S. Sheoran, Human Rights and Armed Forces in Low Intensity Conflict, Centre for Land Warfare Studies, New Delhi: Knowledge World, 2010, pp. 88, ISBN 978-93-80502-24-3, Rs 225. 

Sumit Ganguly and S. Paul Kapur, Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia: Crisis
Behaviour and the Bomb, Routledge, New York, 2009, pp. 251, $126, Rs 795, ISBN
978-0-415-44049-3

Jaideep Saikia and Ekaterina Stepanova (eds.), Terrorism: Patterns of Internationalisation, Sage Publications, New Delhi, 2009, pp. 266, Rs. 695, ISBN 978-81-7829951-8 (Hardback)

Harsh V. Pant, Contemporary Debates in Indian Foreign and Security Policy: India Negotiates Its Rise in the International System, Palgrave Macmillan, New York, 2008, pp. 202, ISBN 0-230-60458-7

M.J. Akbar, Tinderbox: The Past and Future of Pakistan, Harper Collins, New Delhi, 2011, 343 pp., Rs 499, ISBN 978-93-5029-039-2

Gurmeet Kanwal, Indian Army: Vision 2020, New Delhi, Harper Collins, 2008, pp. 342, Rs. 495/-, ISBN 13: 978-81-7223-732-5
Arshin Adib-Moghaddam, A Metahistory of the Clash of Civilisations: Us and Them Beyond Orientalism, Hurst and Company, London, 2011, $45, 338 pp., ISBN 978-184904-097-6
Talmiz Ahmad, Children of Abraham at War: Clash of Messianic Militarisms, Delhi: Aakar Books, 2010, pp. 475/-, Rs 1250/-, ISBN 978-93-5002-080-7
Suba Chandran, D., “Limited War: Revisiting Kargil in the Indo Pak Conflict”; India Research Press, New Delhi, 2005; pp. 161, Rs. 495/-
Praveen Swami, India, Pakistan and the Secret Jihad: The Covert War in Kashmir, 1947–2004 (New York: Routledge, 2007, Pp. 258. Price: Rs 495. ISBN 978-0-415-40459-4

Carey Schofield, Inside the Pakistan Army: A Woman’s Experience on the Frontline of the War on Terror, Pentagon Press; 2012 

Astri Sukhre, When More Is Less: The International Project In Afghanistan 
Hurst & Co, London, 2011, pp. 293, £ 25.00

D. Caldwell, Vortex Of Conflict: US Policy Toward Afghanistan, Pakistan And Iraq, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2011 (First South Asian Edition 2012),

Stephen P. Cohen and Sunil Dasgupta, Arming without Aiming: India’s Military Modernisation, New Delhi: PenguinViking, 2010

Priyanjali Malik, India’s Nuclear Debate: Exceptionalism and the Bomb, New Delhi: Routledge, 2010, ISBN 978-0-415-56312-3, pp. 344, Rs. 795/-

Ayesha Jalal, Partisans of Allah: Jihad in South Asia; Ranikhet, Orient Longman Pvt Ltd; pp. 373, Rs. 695/-; ISBN 81-7824-231-1

Karnad, B., ‘Nuclear Weapons and Indian Security: The Realist Foundations of Strategy: New Delhi, MacMillan, 2002; pp. 724, Rs. 795/-

Rajagopalan, Rajesh, Fighting Like a Guerilla: The Indian Army and Counterinsurgency, 2008, Routledge, New Delhi

Manpreet Sethi, Nuclear Strategy: India’s March Towards Credible Deterrence, New Dehi: Knowledge World, 2009, pp. 395, Rs. 880/-, ISBN 978-81-87966-70-8


Sunday, 5 July 2015

Publications update - Jul 2015

  • Book s– 3
  • Edited book (co-editor) – 1
  • IDSA Monographs – 2, Unpublished monograph (USI) - 1
  • Book chapters – 12
  • Articles in refereed journals – 16 (Strategic Analysis – 6)
  • Articles in military journals – 25
  • Articles in other journals – 32 (EPW – 1)
  • IDSA publications – 23 (Issue Briefs – 6, Journal of Defence Studies - 16)
  • Book reviews - 36
  • Web -  idsa.in -   39 ; foreignpolicyjournal.org -   32; ipcs.org-  41 ; claws.in - 30; Other - 41
  • Newspapers- 35
  • Publications while in military service (prior to Jul 2008) - 95
PUBLICATIONS: ALI AHMED 
Books    
       1.     India’s Doctrine Puzzle: Limiting War in South Asia, New Delhi: Routledge, 2014.
          2.     On War in South Asia (CinnamonTeal, 2015)
          3.     On Peace in South Asia (CinnamonTeal, 2015)
Edited volumes
1.     Ali Ahmed, J Panda and Prashant Singh (eds.), Towards a New Asian Order, New Delhi: Shipra Publications, 2012
Monographs
          1.     Reconciling Doctrines: Prerequisite for Peace in South Asia, IDSA Monograph Series No. 3, 2010
     2.     India’s Limited War Doctrine: The Structural Factor, IDSA Monograph Series No. 10, 2012
Chapters in edited volumes
1.     ‘India on the doctrinal front’, in S.N. Kile and P. Schell (eds.) Emerging Military Technologies and the Implications for Strategic Stability in the Twenty-first Century, SIPRI (forthcoming 2015)
2.     ‘Indian army doctrines’ in Harsh Pant (ed.), Doctrine Handbook (forthcoming 2015)
3.     ‘Countering Insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir: Debates in Indian Army’ in Maroof Raza (ed.), Confronting Terrorism, New Delhi: Penguin Books, 2009
4.     ‘Applicability of Sub-Conventional Operations Doctrine to Counter Insurgency in Assam’, in Bhattacharya, R. and S. Pulipaka (eds.), Perilous Journey : Debates on Security and Development in Assam, New Delhi: Manohar, 2011
5.     ‘India 2030: With History as guide’ in Lele, A. and N. Goswami (eds.), Asia 2030:The Unfolding Future, New Delhi: Lancer 2011
6.     ‘India’s Nuclear Doctrine: The Military Dimension’, in Jayant Baranwal (ed.), SP’s Military Yearbook2010-11, New Delhi: SP Guide Publications, 2011
7.     ‘Indian Strategic Culture: The Pakistan Dimension’ in Indian Strategic Culture: The Pakistan dimension in Krishnappa, Bajpai et al. (eds.), India’s Grand Strategy: History, Theory, Cases, Taylor and Francis, 2014.
8.     ‘The Nuclear Domain: In Irreverence’, in Mohammed Badrul Alam, Perspectives On Nuclear Strategy Of India, And Pakistan, Kalpaz Publications, Delhi, India, 2013.
9.     ‘AFSPA in light of Humanitarian Law’ in Vivek Chadha, Armed Forces Special Powers Act: The Debate, IDSA Monograph Series No. 7, 2012.
10.  ‘UN Peacekeeping Operations: Leveraging India’s Forte’ in IDSA Task Force,  Net Security Provider: India’s Out-of-Area Contingency Operations, 2012
11.  ‘Nuclear Doctrine and Conflict’ in Krishnappa and Princy George (eds.), India’s Grand Strategy 2020 and Beyond,IDSA, Pentagon Security International, 2012.
12.  ‘India’s Nuclear Options: The military dimension’ in SP’s Military Yearbook, 2011-12, pp. 39-42.
Articles in refereed journals
1.     No first use nuclear policy: An existential crisis ahead, EPW, 49 (20), 1 May 14
Strategic Analysis
2.     Political level considerations and nuclear retaliation, Strategic Analysis, 36 (4), 2012
3.     Political Factor in Nuclear Retaliation, Strategic Analysis, 34 (1), Jan 2010.
4.     India's Response Options to Pakistani Nuclear First Use, Strategic Analysis, April 2010,  Volume: 4 Issue: 2.
5.     The Interface of Strategic and War Fighting Doctrines in the India–Pakistan Context, Strategic Analysis, 33 (5), September 2009.
6.     Towards a proactive military strategy: Cold Start and Stop, Strategic Analysis, 35 (3), May 2011.
7.     Pakistan’s Nuclear Use and Implications for India, Strategic Analysis, 34 (4), July 2010.
8.     Others
9.     The Indian Army: Borders and other such lines, Journal of Peace Studies, Vol 20, Issue 3&4, July-December 2013
10.  Cold Start: The lifecycle of a doctrine, Comparative Strategy, 31:5, 453-468
11.  ‘Internal Security Crises in Punjab, Kashmir and Jaffna: The power of moderation’, South Asian Survey,  17 : 2 (2010): 283–294 
12.  Understanding Indo-Pak Relations, Journal of International Studies, Bangladesh (BILIA), Vol 1-2, Dec 2010.
13.  Internal security crisis: The virtue of equanimity, Journal of Peace Studies, 18 (1,2), Jan-Jun 2011.
14.  Strategic Culture and Indian Self-assurance, Journal of Peace Studies, Vol. 17, Issue 2&3, April-September, 2010.
15.  Strategic Culture and Indian Self Assurance, Journal of Peace Studies, 17 (2,3), Apr-Sep 2010.
16.  L’Inde Strategique (Translated into French) (India Strategic), La renaissance de l’inde, AGIR, Paris
IDSA
publications

Journal of Defence Studies
1.The 1965 Indo-Pak War: Through Today’s Lens, Journal of Defence Studies, 9:3, July 2015
2.Reconciling the AFSPA with the legal spheres, Journal of Defence Studies, 5 (2), Apr 2011.
3.India-Pakistan relations: Military diplomacy vs Strategic Engagement, Journal of Defence Studies, 5 (1), Jan 2010.
4.TNW in Nuclear First Use: The Legal Counter, Journal of Defence Studies, 5 (4), Oct 2011.
5.Military Response to a Future 26/11 – A Dissuasive Analysis, JDS, 3 (4), 2009.
6.Reconciling AFSPA with legal spheres, Journal of Defence Studies, 5 (2), April 2011.
7.India-Pakistan relations: Military diplomacy vs Strategic Engagement, Journal of Defence Studies, 5 (1), Jan 2010.
8.TNW in Nuclear First Use: The Legal Counter, Journal of Defence Studies, 5 (4), Oct 2011.
9.Military Response to a Future 26/11 – A Dissuasive Analysis, JDS, 3 (4), 2009.
10.           Reconciling AFSPA with legal spheres, Journal of Defence Studies, 5 (2), April 2011.
11.  India’s Response Options to Pakistani Nuclear First Use, Journal of Defence Studies, 4 (2), April 2010.
12.  TNW in Nuclear First Use: The Legal Factor, JDS, 5 (4), 2011.
13.  India’s conflict strategy: The legal angle, JDS, 4 (3), July 2010.
14.  Furthering No First Use in the India-Pakistan Context, JDS, 3 (3), July 2009
15.  India’s Conflict Strategy: The Legal Angle, Journal of Defence Studies, July 2010 Volume: 4 Issue: 3.
16.  Cold Start and the Sehjra Option, JDS, 4 (4), Oct 2010
Policy/Issue Briefs
17.  Revision of DSCO: Human Rights to the fore, Policy Brief, IDSA, March 2011.
18.  Reviewing India’s Nuclear Doctrine, Policy Brief, IDSA, April 24, 2009.
19.  Elevate Human Rights as the Core Organising Principle in Counter Insurgency, IDSAIssue Brief, November 2011.
20.  A Consideration of Sino-Indian Conflict, IDSA Issue Brief, October 2011.
21.  2011 and Beyond: Visualising AfPak, IDSA Issue Brief, November 2009
22.  2011 and beyond: Visualising Af-Pak, Issue Brief, IDSA, December 23, 2009.
23.  India’s Response to CBW Attack, Journal of Chemical and Biological Weapons, Oct-Dec 2008
Articles
1.     Conventional Backdrop to the Nuclear Foreground, CLAWS Scholar Warrior, Spring 2015
2.     India's forthcoming nuclear doctrine review, Aakrosh, July 2014
3.     Cold Start lite is not enough, Agni, Vol XV, No. VI, Oct-Dec 13,
4.     Rethinking India’s nuclear doctrine, Agni, Jan-Mar 2010, Vol XII, No. II, pp. 25-32.
5.     Offensive in the mountains: Mountain Strike Corps, SPs Land Forces, 8/6, Dec 11-Jan 12.
6.     Limited Nuclear Operations, SP’s Land Forces, July 2014
7.     India’s forthcoming nuclear doctrine review, Aakrosh, July 14 (forthcoming).
8.     Understanding India’s Military, Sardar, 1 (6), 2010 (Kazakhstan military magazine).
9.     Rethinking India’s Nuclear Doctrine – Agni, XII (II), Jan-Mar 2010.
10.  The Nuclear Factor in India’s Post 26/11 Military Options, Agni, XII:1, Jan-Mar 2009, pp. 50-65..
11.  Reconciling doctrinal dichotomy, Aakrosh, 13 (49), Oct 2010.
12.  Counter insurgency in the liberal perspective, Aakrosh, 13 (47), April 2010.
13.  Indian Nuclear Command and Control, Aakrosh, 14 (50), Jan 2010 (Also on IDR website, Parts 1 and 2, 12-13 Jul 2011).
14.  Limited War Thinking in India, Aakrosh, January 2010, 13 (46), p. 82-97.
15.  Rethinking the Pakistan Strategy, Geopolitics, May 2011.
16.  Tackling Terror Holistically, Conference Brochure, Security Watch India, 2009.
17.  India’s Nuclear Doctrine, Indian Defence Review, Oct-Dec 2009-12-30.
18.  Reflection on Conflict Duration, Indian Defence Review, 24.3, Jul-Sep 2009.
19.  Managing ‘Transformation’, South Asia Defence and Strategic Review, Sep-Oct 2009.
20.  Uncertain Course: India-Pak strategic doctrines and balance of power, Strategic Affairs, Aug 2009-12-30.
21.  Dealing with Two Fronts Needs Matching Capabilities, India Strategic (with V. Anand), Jan 2010
22.  The Grammar of War, Defence and Strategic Review, October 2012.
23.  Pakistan in India’s strategic perspective, Indian Journal of Social Enquiry, 1 (4), Dec 2009.
24.  Conflict Resolution in Afghanistan: India as Catalyst, IPCS Special
Report
, December 2011.
25.  AfPak: A Strategic Opportunity for South Asia?, IPCS Special Report, Dec 2009
26.  The Army: Missing Muslim India, Mainstream, Vol L No 27, June 23, 2012
27.   Prospects for UN Peacekeeping in Afghanistan, Mainstream, Vol L, No 38, September 8, 2012,
28.  India-Pakistan: Unlocking the Status Quo, Mainstream, L:9, 18 February, 2012.
29.  Kashmir: Whither Strategy?, Mainstream, Annual 2011, Dec 23-29, 11.
30.  India-Pakistan: Advocating Accommodation, Mainstream, L: 16, April 2012.
31.  Kashmir: The Problem with the Solution, Mainstream, March 4-10, 2011.
32.  Kashmir: Whither Strategy, Mainstream, L:1, December 2011
Book Reviews
1.   The Book Review Volume XXXIX Number 2 February 2015 Global Jihad And America: The Hundred-Year War Beyond Iraq And Afghanistan By Taj Hashmi 
2.   The Book Review, Volume XXXIX Number 4 April 2015Toppling Gaddafi: Libya And The Limits Of Liberal Intervention
By Christopher S. Chivvis 
3.   The Book Review, Volume XXXIX Number 6 June 2015, Civil Wars In South Asia: State, Sovereignty, Development, Edited by Nandini Sundar and Aparna Sundar  
4.   The Book Review Volume XXXIX Number 5 May 2015 Nuclear South Asia: Keywords And Concepts By Rajesh Rajagopalan  and Atul Mishra 
5.   The Book Review / February-March 2013 of  Asian Rivalries: Conflict, Escalation, And Limitations On Two-Level Games Edited by Sumit Ganguly and William R. Thompson, Foundation Books, New Delhi, 2011
6.   The Book Review, February-March 2013 of Internal Conflicts Military Perspectives, By V.R. Raghavan (ed.) Vij Books, New Delhi, 2012
7.   The Book Review Volume XXXVIII Number 7 July 2014 When Counterinsurgency Wins: Sri Lanka’s Defeat Of The Tamil Tigers
By Ahmed S. Hashim 
8.   The Book Review Vol xxxvii No 10 October 2013 of Afghan Endgames: Strategy And Policy Choices For America’s Longest War Edited by Hy Rothstein and John Arquilla, Cambridge University Press, New Delhi, 2013,
9.   The Book Review, Vol xxxvii No 10 October 2013 of Eating Grass: The Making Of The Pakistani Bomb By Feroz Hassan Khan, Foundation Books, Delhi, 2013
10.  When More Is Less: The International Project In Afghanistan, By Astri Sukhre, Hurst & Co, London, 2011, in The Book Review, XXXVI (5), May 2012
11.  The New Protectorates: International Tutelage And The Making Of Liberal States, Edited by James Mayall , Ricardo Soares de Oliveira, C Hurst & Co,, London, 2011, in The Book Review, XXXVI (9), Sept 2012
12.  Vortex Of Conflict: US Policy Toward Afghanistan, Pakistan And Iraq, By D. Caldwell, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2011 (First South Asian Edition 2012), in The Book Review, XXXVI (9), Sept 2012
13.  Arshin Adib-Moghaddam, A metahistory of the clash of civilisations: Us and them beyond Orientalism, Hurst, 2011 in Strategic Analysis, 35 (2), 2012, pp. 337-38.
14.  Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia: Crisis Behaviour and the Bomb by Sumit Ganguly and S. Paul Kapur, in Strategic Analysis, Volume: 34 Issue: 4, July 2010
15.  MJ Akbar, Tinderbox: The past and future of Pakistan, New Delhi: Harper Collins, 2011 in Strategic Analysis, 36 (1), pp. 169-170, January 2012.
16.  Stephen Cohen and Dasgupta, Arming without aiming, in JDS, Vol. 6, No. 1, 2012
17.  Armed Conflicts In South Asia 2011: The Promise And Threat Of Transformation, Edited by D. Suba Chandran and P.R. Chari, Routledge, New Delhi, 2012 in The Book Review, October 2012, 
18.  Talmiz Ahmad, Children of Abraham at War: Clash of Messianic Militarisms, in Strategic Analysis, September 2011, 35:5, 849-851
19.  K. Sheoran, Human Rights and Armed Forces in LIC, in Strategic Analysis, 35 (3) May 2011.
20.  Sumit Ganguly and David Fidler, India and Counter insurgency, in Pratividrohi, 2010, in
21.  Priyanjali Malik, India’s Nuclear Debate: Exceptionalism and the Bomb, in Indian Foreign Affairs Journal, Apr-Jun 2010
22.  Bharat Karnad, India’s Nuclear Policy, in Third Frame, Journal of Academy of Third World Studies, Jamia Millia Islamia
23.  Shuja Nawaz, Crossed Swords: Pakistan, Its Army and Wars Within, in  India Quarterly, July-Sep 2008
24.  Gurmeet Kanwal, Indian Army: Vision 2020, in Journal of Defence Studies, IDSA, 2 (2), Winter 2008
25.  Ayesha Jalal, Partisans of Allah: Jihad in South Asia, in  Third Frame, 2009, pp. 159-162
26.  Bharat Karnad, India’s Nuclear Policy in Defence Management, in Defence Management, Mar 2009, and Third Frame (?), pp. 204-06
27.  Wajahat Habibullah, My Kashmir: Conflict and Prospects of Enduring Peace, in Third Frame, 2010 (?), pp. 207-09.
28.  Rajesh Rajagopalan, Fighting Like a Guerilla: The Indian Army and Counter Insurgency,  in Third Frame, 1:3, Jul-Sep 2008.
29.  Jaideep Saikia and Ekaterina Stepanova (eds.) Terrorism: Patterns of Internationalisation, in Strategic Analysis, 33 (5), Sept 2009
31.  E Sridharan, The India-Pakistan Nuclear Relationship: Theories of Deterrence and International Relations,  in IPCS, ipcs.org, 21 November 2008.
32.  Manpreet Sethi, Nuclear Strategy: India’s March Towards Credible Deterrence, in Indian Foreign Affairs Journal, July-Sep 09
33.  Asseri, Anti terrorism: Saudi Arabias Role In The War On Terror, in Indian Review of Books, XXXIV (2), February 2010.
34.  Praveen Swami, India, Pakistan and the Secret Jihad: The Covert War in Kashmir, 1947–2004 (New York: Routledge, 2007) in India Quarterly 65, 3 (2009): 329–343.
35.  Carey Schofield, Inside the Pakistan Army, in Purple Beret, April 2012, p. 41.
36.  Tackling Terror Holistically, Conference Brochure, Security Watch India, 2009
Foreign Policy Journal
foreignpolicyjournal.com
1. Non-alignment 2.0 and India’s strategic direction, 28 May 2012
2.What this Year’s Maneuver Season in India Tells Us, 13 May 2015
3.Modi and the Military, 25 October 2014
4.Dissonance in India’s Strategic Doctrine, 23 August 2014
5.India’s Nuclear Doctrine Review: Don’t Leave It to the Hawks!, 11 July 2014
6.The Exit from ‘AfPak’: Don’t Blame Pakistan, June 2012
7.Kashmir: Preparing for a contingency, July 2012
8.South Asia: Pakistan holds the key, April 2012
9.Behind India’s Defence Budget, March 2012
10.           India and Pakistan: Missing NCBMs, February 2012
11.           India: For an introspective turn, Jan 2012
12.           India-Pakistan: Solving the ‘chicken or egg’ conundrum, Dec 2011
13.     Evaluating the China ‘threat’ thesis in India, Nov 2011
14.  Using military dangers gainfully, Oct 2011
15.  India, China and the US: The debate in India, Sept 2011
16.  The Muslim Question: An Understanding for Difficult Times, July 2011
17.  South Asia: Of war clouds and silver linings, June 2011
18.  Saving Pakistan, May 2011
19.  India-Pak: Justifiable pessimism, Apr 2011
20.  India-Pakistan: Nothing in the offing, Mar 2011
21.  Coping with Islamist Pakistan, Feb 2011
22.  AfPak: Talks as the way out, Dec 2010
23.  Towards the endgame in Afghanistan, Jul 2010
24.  The coming escalation in Obama’s war, Jun 2010
25.  Reconciling the AfPak conundrum, Apr 2010
26.  Getting Pakistan to bandwagon, Mar 2010
27.  India-Pakistan Dialogue: The Way Forward, February 2010
28.  India’s Inter strategic paradigm debate and Pakistan, Jan 2010
29.  Prospects of India-Pakistan Nuclear Confidence Building, Dec 2009
30.  India-Pakistan relations: Movement?, Nov 2009
31.  Obama and the Limitations of Conventional Strategy, Oct 2009
32.  Af-Pak: Opportunity for a Regional Initiative, Oct 2009
Web publications
(Other)
1.     Doctrine in Civil-Military Relations, indiandefencereview.com, 16 May 2015
2.     This year’s maneuver season in India, Eurasia Review, 12 May 2015
3.     Balancing India’s Right, The Diplomat, 15 February 2015
4.     India-Pakistan: Visualising the next round, Eurasia Review, 11 Februray 2015
5.     India and China: Nationalism and Nuclear Risk, The Diplomat 18 December 2015
6.     A More Aggressive India, The Diplomat, 10 November 2015
7.     Demystifying India’s Volte-Face on Pakistan, The Diplomat, 10 September 2014
8.     What Does India Mean By ‘Two Front’ Problem?, The Eurasia Review, 26 August 2014
9.     Limiting Nuclear War in South Asia, SP's Landforces 4/2014
10.  South Asia: Echoes From Across a Century, The Diplomat, 15 August 2015
11.  At the Conventional-Nuclear Interface, indiandefencereview.com, 9 August 2014
12.  What Does India Mean By ‘Massive’ Retaliation?, Eurasia Review, 8 August 2014
13.  NRRC: For the nuclear doctrine review, www.indiandefencejournal.com, 21 June 14
14.  Diplomatic engagement in a post nuclear use environment, www.indiandefencejournal.com, 27 May 14
15.  Pakistani nuclear first use, usiofindia.org, 23 May 14
16.  Severe indigestion from nuclear orthodoxy, The Citizen, 30 April 14
17.  India-Pakistan: Move From Cosmetic To Credible Nuclear Confidence Building Measures, countercurrents.org, 26 Feb 14; also in Kashmir Times, India-Pakistan: Nuclear Threat.
18.  Nuclear doctrinal review of the China front, usiofindia.org, 29 April 14.
19.  Storm in India’s nuclear teacup, indiandefencereview.com, 21 April 14.
20.  India-Pakistan: Distancing the spark from the nuclear tinderbox, indiandefencereview.com, 6 April 14.
Center for Land Warfare Studies, claws.in
1.Visualising Impact of Nuclear Operations at the Conventional Level, 16 Mar 2015
2.Opening up the doctrinal  space, 29 April 2015
3.Nuclear doctrine review: Three deterrence models, claws.in, 3 May
4.   The post conflict factor in nuclear decision making, claws.in, 11 Oct 13.
5.   Naval operations in an India-Pakistan context, 20 June 2012
6.   Pakistan’s military strategy: The best case scenario, 12 Jun 2011
7.   Arguing for NBC Training, 26 Aug 2011
8.   Dimensions of the MacChrystal episode, 8 July 2010
9.   India’s North East: Insurgency and Civil Services Reform, 19 April 2010
10.  Psychological opertions as key, Jan 2012
11.  Mountain Strike Corps: The nuclear dimension, Dec 2011
12.  Implications of BrahMos deployment, Oct 2011
13.  Demonstration Strikes in an India-Pakistan Scenario, 16 Feb 2010
14.  Arguing for NBC Training, Aug 2011
15.  Hatf IX and possible Indian responses, 5 May 2011
16.  The Sino-Pak ‘collusive’ threat, 31 March 2011
17.  Deterrence Stability in a Context of Strategic Instability, 11 Feb 2011
18.  Counter insurgency learning from Kashmir, 20 Jan 2011
19.  Conflict strategy for the decade ahead, 25 Dec 2010
20.  Nuclear C2: The balance agenda, 28 November 2010
21.  Appraising a Pakistani military response, 16 Oct 2010.
22.  Sociological Dimension of the ‘Transformation’  Initiative, June 2009
23.  Nuclear Use Consequences For Pakistan, Aug 2009
24.  Some Implications of the ‘Cold Start’ Doctrine, Sep 2009
25.  Building India’s Strategic Culture: A Roadmap, Oct 2009
26.  Towards A Limited War Doctrine, Nov 2009
27.  Towards a National Security Doctrine, 10 Nov 2011
28.  Kargil: Afterthoughts at the Operational Level, Dec 2009
29.  Army Deployment in Central India, Feb 2009
30.  Strategy Advocacy for Pakistan, 14 March 2010
Newspaper articles
1.        Wearing religion on their uniform sleeves, Millennium Post, 4 October 2014
Kashmir Times
2.        Kashmir and the Bomb, 29 April 12.
3.        Kashmir: More of the same, 3 July 2012.
4.        Lessons from Bandipore, 10 August 2012.
5.        AFSPA: A question of justice, 13 Feb 12
6.        Kashmir: Declaring premature victory, 4 Feb 12
7.        Acknowledging the blindspot on Kashmir, 27 Jan 2012
8.        An agenda point for the foreign secretaries, 16 June 2011
9.        Kashmir: Its now or never, 9 Dec 2011
10.     The agenda this winter, 6 Oct 2011
11.     Solving Kashmir: Is it feasible?, 19 October 2011
12.     Fixing responsibility: CI decisions and consequences, 30 Aug 2011
13.     Kashmir in the wider India-Pak scheme, 24 Aug 2011
14.     Kashmir back in the news, 10 July 2010
15.     No escaping political solution to Kashmir, 7 Aug 2010
16.     A ceasefire enabled reckoning possible, 9 Oct 2010
17.     Preliminaries towards a solution – 24 Feb 2011
18.     Domesticating the AFSPA – 28 Mar 2011
19.     A novel option for the coming summer – 13 Apr 2011
Tehelka
20.     India-Pakistan peace process, Tehelka, June 2011 
21.     Time not to let the guard down in Kashmir, Tehelka, 7 Nov 2011
22.     Deterrence has a shaky and brief shelf life, Tehelka, 3 Jan 12
23.     Smile but keep the powder dry, Tehelka, 10 April 2012
24.     A General’s unforgettable legacy, Tehelka, 31 May 2012
Financial World
25.     Why are Muslims missing from Army?, Financial World, 16 June 2012
26.     LWE: There’s a problem with the ‘solution’, 3 May 2012
27.     Tribal communities in the cross-hairs, Financial World, 9 July 2012
28.     To call out the army or not, Financial World - 2 Aug 12
29.     The sub-unit cries for army attention, Financial World, 27 Aug 2012
30.     Do we need a Chief Warlord? Opinion, The Financial World—Delhi, 10 Sep 12
31.     Kashmir, The Financial World, 13 Dec 2011
32.     A grand bargain for India and Pakistan, The Financial World, 20 June 2011
33.     Closed doors mean no dialogue, no peace, The Financial World, 13 Dec 2011.
Dawn (Pakistan)
34.     Time for the Grand Bargain, Oct 2011 – Dawn blog
35.     Afghanistan: Lets try peacekeeping, 19 Nov 2011 – Dawn blog
Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies ipcs.org
1.     Nuclear Use: Need for Thinking on Political-Level Considerations, 5 August 2014
2.     India and Pakistan: Azm-e-Nau as a Response to the Cold Start, July 2013
3.     An Indian nuclear doctrine review: A third model, ipcs.org, 30 April 14
4.     India, Nuclear Weapons and ‘Massive Retaliation’: The Impossibility of Limitation?, ipcs.org, 8 Oct 13
5.India and Pakistan: Moving Beyond CBMs, July 2012
6.     Civil-Military Relations: Questioning the VK Singh Thesis, June 2012
7.     The Missing Element in the Counter Naxal Strategy, May 2012
8.     India-Pakistan: Winds of Change, April 2012
9.     NCBMs: Scaremongering but with a purpose, Feb 2012
10.  Cold Start: One step forward, two steps back, Jan 2012
11.  AFSPA: The renewed debate, Nov 2011
12.  The direction of India’s deterrent, Sep 2011
13.  Saxena Task Force: Farewell to the Chiefs, Sep 2011
14.  Internal Security Reform: Yet another Opportunity, July 2011
15.  The Sense in Networking with Kayani, Apr 2011
16.  Implications of Indian BMD developments, Mar 2011
17.  Kashmir: A Hot Summer Ahead?, Jan 2010
18.  WikiWrecks: The US Perspective on Cold Start, Dec 2010
19.  Capping the ‘Volcano’: Indian Military Action against Pakistan?, Oct 2010
20.  AFSPA: A Practical Approach, Sep 2010
21.  J&K: Implement the Working Group Recommendations, Aug 2010
22.  General Kayani: Implications of Extension, July 2010
23.  Should India give up its NFU Doctrine?, June 2010
24.  India-Pakistan Dialogue: Going Beyond Thimpu, May 2010
25.  The New Chief and Transformation, Apr 2010
26.  India and Pakistan: Losing time, Feb 2009
27.  The Logic of the Sundarji Doctrine, Dec 2009
28.  The Obama Decision Making Model, Dec 2009
29.  The Illogic of ‘Unacceptable Damage’, Oct 2009
30.  The ‘Pause’ in India-Pakistan Dialogue, Oct 2009
31.  India's Thermonuclear Test: Bombed?, Aug 2009
32.  Talks As Strategy, Aug 2009
33.  The illogic of ‘massive’ punitive retaliation, Jul 2009
34.  Nuclear Trajectory in South Asia, Jun 2009
35.  Tackling Insurgency In Assam, May 2009
36.  The ‘Context’ of Islamism, Apr 2009
37.  Questioning ‘Compellence’ as Answer to India’s Pakistan Dilemma, Mar 2009
38.  Engaging a Reluctant Pakistan, Jan 2009
39.  Post 26/11 Strategy Recomendation For India, Dec 2008
40.  The Pay Commission Outcome as Opportunity, Oct 2008
41.  Thinking Beyond the Line of Control, Aug 2008
IDSA Website, Strategic Comments
idsa.in

1.Reopening the debate on Limited War, 29 Feb 2012
2.The Indian Army: What the stars foretell for 2012, Dec 2011
3.Tit for Tat: A Nuclear Retaliation Option, Oct 2011
4.What does Pakistan hope to achieve with Nasr?, Aug 2011
5.Afghanistan: An idea anticipating peace, June 2011
6.Pakistan’s first use in perspective, May 2011
7.Making sense of Nasr, Apr 2011
8.Ongoing revision of Indian Army doctrine, Jan 2011
9.The Arab Tumult in its wider meaning, Feb 2011
10.  Army Transformation: A radical one?, Jan 2011
11.  Political Dimensions of Limited War, March 29, 2010.
12.  The advantages of ‘Cold Start Minor’, December 13, 2010
13.  Obama’s AfPak Review should emphasise on Peace Talks with the Taliban November 23, 2010
14.  The Third Front: Military Ethics, November 4, 2010
15.  Clarifying India’s Strategic Doctrine, October 25, 2010
16.  The ‘Cold Start and Stop’ strategy, September 28, 2010
17.  Military Doctrines: Next steps, August 16, 2010
18.  Civil-Military relations: Under scan, July 14, 2010
19.  An additional dish for the India-Pakistan platter, July 5, 2010
20.  Darfur and enhancing India’s peacekeeping profile, June 2010
21.  The message from mock battles, May 7, 2010
22.  The military intelligence function in future war, February 26, 2010.
23.  Nuclear targeting caveats, April 21, 2010
24.  Ongoing revision of army doctrine, 6 Jan 2010.
25.  Nuclear implications of the two front formulation, 29 Jan 10
26.  The Army’s Subculture in the Coming Decade, December 22, 2009
27.  The Army’s decade in review, November 30, 2009
28.  India-Pakistan Conflict Outcome Probability, October 27, 2009
29.  Re-visioning the Nuclear Command Authority, September 9, 2009
30.  India’s response to the next terror attack, August 26, 2009
31.  For an Indo-Pak strategic dialogue forum, August 4, 2009
32.  The central debate in India’s civil military relations, July 6, 2009
33.  Seizing the moment: India and the ‘moderate Taliban’, June 8, 2009
34.  Exit Points and the Updation of Cold Start Doctrine, April 22, 2009
35.  Initiatives to transform the Army Officer Corps, March 5, 2009
36.  Foregrounding ‘Non-Combatant Immunity’, January 30, 2009
37.  The Post 26/11 Regional Strategic Predicament, December 3, 2008
38.  Need for clarity in India's nuclear doctrine, Oct 2008
39.  An overview of the Russo-Georgian conflict, Sep 2008
Articles in military journals (post premature retirement in 2008)

1.The Limited War concept and India’s conventional doctrines, Trishul (Staff College), XXII (2), Spring 2010
Infantry Journal
2.Limited War: A mental framework, Infantry, June 2012
3.One Star: The Organisational Responsibility, Infantry Journal, June 2013.
4.Understanding Internal Security, The Infantry (India), Dec 2008.
5.The Infantry: ‘At’ Peace while ‘in’ peace?, Infantry, 2009 (?)
6.Perspectives on Defence Challenges faced by India, Infantry (India), June 2011
7.Battalion Command: A Template, 2009 (?), pp. 10-13.
8.Strategic India: An Introduction, Infantry, 2012 (?), p. 13-19.
War College Journal
9.Understanding India-Pakistan relations, War College Journal, 2011
10.  Afghanistan: A Strategic Assessment, War College Journal, Autumn 2008.
11.  An Analysis of Grand Strategy in Operation Barbarossa, War College Journal, Spring 2008.
12.  Next Steps in India’s China Strategy, War College Journal, 2011, pp. 61-63.
Center for Land Warfare Studies
13.  Readings for Officers, Scholar Warrior, Center for Land Warfare Studies, Autumn 2010.
14.  Mizo Hills: Revisiting the Early Phase, Scholar Warrior, CLAWS, Autumn 2011.
15.  The Invisible dimension of modernization, CLAWS Journal, Winter 2010.
16.  A Perspective on Land Warfare Strategy, CLAWS Journal, Winter 2009.
USI Journal
17.  India’s Strategic and Military Doctrines: A Post 1971 Snapshot, USI Journal, Vol. CXXXIX, No. 578, October-December 2009.
18.  India’s Military Options in a Future 26/11 Scenario, Journal of the United Service Institution of India, Vol. CXXXIX, No. 575, January-March 2009.
19.  India’s Military Options in a Future 26/11 Scenario, USI Journal, Jan-Mar 2009.
Jungle Warfare and Counter Insurgency School Journal
20.  Jihad in Strategic Theory, Pratividrohi, Autumn 2009.
21.  Learning from the Mizo Hills Experience, Pratividrohi, 2010.
22.  Command Endeavour: The Regimental Way, Maratha Regiment Magazine, 2008.
23.  Counter insurgency in a conventional war scenario, Pratividrohi, Journal of Counter Insurgency and Jungle Warfare School, 2010.
24.  The Counter Insurgency Oeuvre, Pratividrohi,
Others
25.  Regimental Command, Maratha 2008, Regiment Journal
Miscellaneous and light reading
1.The Army: Why Muslims are Missing?, The Aligarh Movement, May-June 2012.
2.Taking Nuclear Warfighting Seriously, IDR, 12.1, March 2012.
3.A Plan for Bonn, Outlook blog, 5 Dec 2011
4.Muslim India: Through the Security Prism, Milligazette, Jan 2009
5.Making Cold Start Doctrine work, 2010 – Tribune, 11 Oct 2010
6.In Defence of the Chief, the Two-Front war issue, 21 January 2010, 8ak.in
7.Defending India’s Strategic Culture, Purple Beret, 28 March 2012
8.Isreal matters, but only so much, Purple Beret 
9.Inside the Pakistan Army, Purple Beret
10.  Af-Pak endgame: Implications for Kashmir, International Business Times, 11 Aug 2011.
11.  Legal warfare: The neglected dimension, IDR, Jan 2012
12.  UN Peacekeeping: Thinking out of the box, Indian Defence Review, Feb 2012
13.  AfPak Endgame: Implications for Kashmir, International Business Times, 11 August 2011
14.  ‘Limitations of military response options to 26/11’, The Front Page, Dec 2008
15.  'Brown Sahibs' to blame for Chintalnar massacre of CRPF jawans, 8ak.in (a media partner of defpro.com), Apr 2010.
16.  ‘India-Pakistan: Prospects of War’, 8ak.in, Aug 2010.
17.  ‘Kashmir: Back in the news’, 8ak.in, countercurrents.org, July 2010.
18.  ‘Sukhna Scam: Additional Dimensions’, 8ak.in, Mar 2010.
19. What to do about Pakistan?, Sahara Time, June 11, 2011
Salute
1.   Army’s role order, July 2011
2.   Soldiering: An Indian Experience by S. Sardeshpande (Book Review) – May 2010
3.   Lessons from North Cachar, May 2010
4.   Rethink the Afghan Strategy – June 2010
5.   Indian Maritime Doctrine, IHQ of MoD (Navy) (Book Review), June 2010
6.   Action for Hyderabad, July 2010
7.   Are we pedantic? July 2010
8.   The 1947-48 War had pioneered the shape of Indian policies, Aug 2010
9.   Crisis response: Changing the contours, Sep 2010
10.     Making sense of jointness – Nov 2010
11.     Poor bloody Infanteer – Nov 2010
12.     Watch out for schism – Dec 2010
13.     India in Pakistan’s threat perception – Apr 2011
14.     Not just about them – May 2011
15.     What to do about Pakistan?, June 2011
16.     Battalion Command: A Template, Feb 2010
17.     An Infanteer’s Life, April 2009
18.     The ‘Sundarji Doctrine’ Revisited, Oct 2009
19.     The ‘New’ Vision for Indo-Pak Relations, Sep 2009
20.     A Fauji Forrest Gump, 2-16 May 2009
21.     Mentoring in the time of Shortages, July 2009
22.     Stop ‘OG’, Think ‘Purple’
Publications while in army service till 2008
Articles (2006-8)
1.      Short Wars: From Desirable to Feasible, USI Journal, Jan 2008
2.      In Tribute: A Recall of the Sundarji Doctrine, USI Journal, Apr 08
3.      An Analysis of Grand Strategy in Operation Barbarossa, War College Journal, Spring 08
4.      A Brief on Research and Analysis, Educationist, 2008
5.      The Command Challenge, Maratha Regiment Journal, 08
Book Reviews
1.      Fitzgibbon, S., Not mentioned in dispatches: The History and Mythology of the Battle of Goose Green; Cambridge, Lutterworth Press, 1995; War College Journal - Autumn 2006
2.      Raman, S., Nuclear Strategy: The Doctrine of Just War; New Delhi, Manas Publication, 2006 – USI Journal, Apr-Jun 07
3.      Singh, Jaswant, A Call to Honour, New Delhi, Rupa & Co, 2006 – Defence Management, Apr 07
4.      Musharraf, P., In the Line of Fire; New York, Simon and Shuster, 2006 – The Infantry (India), Autumn 06
5.      Bammi, Y., War Against Insurgency and Terrorism in Kashmir; Dehra Dun, Nataraj Publishers, 2007 – Pinnacle Dec 07
6.      Chandran, S., Limited War: Revisiting Kargil in the Indo Pak Conflict; Omdoa Research Press, New Delhi, 2005 – War College Journal 2007 
7.      Malik, SK, Quranic Concept of War; New Delhi, Himalayan Books, 1986 – War College Journal, 2007
8.      Rajagopalan, R., Fighting Like a Guerilla: The Indian Army and Counterinsurgency, New Delhi, Routledge, 2007; The Third Frame, Autumn 08

Infantry Journal

1.   Beget the Devil’s Own Platoon, Infantry Journal, 1993.
2.   Tips on the Reading Habit, Infantry Journal, 1993.
3.   Cohesion: Bibliographical Note, Infantry Journal, 1995.
4.   Civil-Military Relations: A Theoretical Perspective, Infantry Journal, 1997.
5.   Company Command: A Template, Infantry Journal, 2000.
6.   Whither Infantry?, Infantry Journal, 2001
7.   Drill Deadens, Infantry Journal, 2002

Combat/War College Journal

1.   On the Indian Use of Force: The Critiques Reexamined, Combat Journal, Mar 2000.
2.   SAARC – The Strategic Debate in India, Combat Journal, Mar 01
3.   Self Esteem: Room for improvement, War College Journal, 2005
4.   AOR: The CT Ops Version, War College Journal, 2005
5.   An Analysis of Grand Strategy in Operation Barbarossa, War College Journal, Spring 08
Pratividrohi (Anti Terrorism Journal of the Counter Insurgency and Jungle Warfare School)
1.   Pseudo Gang Operations, Pratividrohi, 1997
2.   Rethinking Human Rights, Pratividrohi, 2000.
3.   On Military Leadership in Counter Insurgency Operations, Pratividrohi, 1998.
4.   The Army, Media and LIC, Pratividrohi, 2002
5.   J&K: The Perspectives Contrasted, Pratividrohi, 2001
6.   Peace Enforcement: The direction of the future, Pratividrohi, 2003
7.   Offensive air power in J&K; Pratividrohi, Sep 05
8.   Peacekeeping and Peaceenforcement, Pratividrohi, 2002 

Intelligence Journal (Journal of Military Intelligence School)

1.   Society and Military Intelligence: A Sociological Perspective, Intelligence Journal, 1996-97.
2.   The Pathology of Info War, Intelligence Journal, 2004

USI Journal (United Services Institution of India)

1.   The Fauji Memsahib, USI Journal, 1999.
2.   The Doctrinal Challenge, USI Journal, Jan 2000.
3.   MONUC, USI Journal, Jan 2004
4.   Short Wars: Creating Tomorrow’s Reality, USI Journal, Jan 2008
5.   In Tribute: Recalling The ‘Sundarji Doctrine’, USI Journal, Vol. CXXXVIII, No. 571, January-March 2008.

Pinnacle (Journal of the Army Training Command)

1.   The Strategic Community, Pinnacle, Mar 2003
2.   Reflection on Military Ethos, Pinnacle, Mar 2003
3.   Revolution in Military Affairs: The Sociological Perspective, Pinnacle, Sep 03
4.   Reader’s Forum:  Short Wars; Dec 07
5. Reader’s Forum: Transformation and the Officer Corps; Spring 08 (under consideration)

Others

1.   Recruiting Anecdotes, Maratha Journal, 1992
2.   A Professional’s Trekking Experience, Maratha Journal,1990
3.   The Trade Secret Unveiled, Infantry Day Supplement, The Statesman, Oct 27, 1999.
4.   CAMs and CBMs, Mainstream, July 23, 1994.
5.   Style of Command, CDM Journal, 2002
6.   Educating Future Army Officers, Educationist (Journal of the Army Education Corps), 2002
7.   A Brief on Research and Analysis, Educationist, 2008
8.   Command Endeavour: A Regimental Way, Maratha Journal, 2007

BOOK REVIEWS

USI Journal

1.   Alexis Heraclitus, Self determination of minorities in International Politics, London, Frank Cass, 1991.
2.   Anthony Giddens, The Third Way: A Renewal of Social Democracy, London, Polity Press, 1998.
3.   Anthony McGrew, Paul Lewis, Global Politics, Globalisation, and the Nation State, Cambridge, Polity Press, 1992.
4.   Avnar Cohen, Israel and the Bomb, New York, Colombia University Press, 1998.
5.   Bruce Lawrence, Shattering The Myth: Islam Beyond Violence, New Jersey, Priceton University Press, 1998.
6.   Craig Baxter, ed. Government and Politics in South Asia, Boulder, Westview Press, 1987.
7.   Ethan Kapstein, Michel Mastanduno, Unipolar Politics: Realism and State Strategies After the Cold War, West Sussex, Colombia University Press, 1999.
8.   From Surprise to Reckoning: The Kargil Review Committee Report, New Delhi: Sage Publications, 2000.
9.   Gwyn Prins, Strategy, Force Planning and Diplomatic/Military Operations, London, RIIA, 1998.
10.John Pimlott, Stephen Bayley, ed. The Gulf War Assessed, London, Arms and Armour, 1992.
11.Kedourie, E., Nationalism, Fourth Edition, Oxford, Blackwell, 1961.
12.Lawrence Freedman, Efraim Karsh, The Gulf Conflict 1990-91: Diplomacy and War in the New World Order, London, Faber, 1992.
13.Maroof Raza, Low Intensity Conflict: The New Dimension to India’s Military Commitment, Meerut, Kartikeya Publications, 1995.
14.Marshall Hodgson, Rethinking World History: Essays on Europe, Islam, and World History, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1993.
15.  Maya Chaddha, Ethnicity, Security, and Separatism in India, New York, Colombia Univeristy Press, 1997.
16.Michel Clark, Simon Seraty, ed. New Thinking and Old Realities: America, Europe and Russia, Washington, Seven Locks, 1991.
17.MK Kaw, Bureaucracy: IAS Unmasked, Delhi, Konark, 1993.
18.Morton Halperin ed. Self Determination in the New World Order, Washington DC, Carneigie Endowment, 1992.
19.Peter Paret, Understanding War: Essays on Clausewitz and the History of Military Power, New Jersey, Princeton, 1992.
20.Stephen Van Evera, Causes of War: Power and the Roots of Conflict, New York, Cornell University Press, 1999.
21.Torbjorn Knutsen, A History of International Relations Theory, Manchester, Manchester University Press, 1992.
22.Vivienne Jabri, Discourses on Violence, New York, Manchester University Press, 1996.
23.Sahadevan, P., Conflict and Peace Making in South Asia, New Delhi, Lancers Books, 2001.
24.Philpot, D., Revolutions in Sovereignty: How Modern Ideas Shaped the World, Princeton, 2001
25.Synnott, H., The  Causes and Consequences of South Asia’s Nuclear Tests, Adelphi Paper 332, London, OUP, 1999
26.Chari, PR., ed., Security and Governance in South Asia, New Delhi, Manohar, 2001
27.FitzGibbon, S., Not Mentioned in Despatches: The History and Myth of the Battle of Goose Green, Cambridge, Lutterworth Press, 2001
28.Haq, K., The South Asian Challenge, Oxford, OUP, 2002
Others
1.   Karnad, B., Nuclear Weapons and Indian Security: The Realist Foundations of Strategy, New Delhi, MacMillan, 2002 - Pinnacle, Mar 03
2.   Tellis, A., India’s Emerging Nuclear Posture: Between Recessed Deterrence and Ready Arsenal, New Delhi, OUP, 2001 – Pinnacle, Sep 03
3.   Perkovich, G., India’s Nuclear Bomb, New Delhi, OUP, 1999 - Pinnacle, 2004; Trishul, Vol XIII, No 2
4.   Stephen Cohen, The Idea of Pakistan; New Delhi, OUP - War College Journal, 2005
5.   Maududi, SA, Towards Understanding Islam, New Delhi, Markazi Maktab Islami - Trishul (DSSC Journal), Spring 2005
6.   Chadha, V., Low Intensity Conflicts in India: An Analysis, New Delhi, Sage, 2005 - The Infantry (India), 2005
7.   Fitzgibbon, S., Not mentioned in dispatches: The History and Mythology of the Battle of Goose Green; Cambridge, Lutterworth Press, 1995; War College Journal - Autumn 2006
8.   Raman, Sudha, Nuclear Strategy: The Doctrine of Just War; New Delhi, Manas Publication, 2006 – USI Journal, Apr-Jun 07
9.   Singh, Jaswant, A Call to Honour, New Delhi, Rupa & Co, 2006 – Defence Management, Apr 07
10.Musharraf, P., In the Line of Fire; New York, Simon and Shuster, 2006 – The Infantry (India), Autumn 06
11.    Bammi, Y., War Against Insurgency and Terrorism in Kashmir; Dehra Dun, Nataraj Publishers, 2007 – Pinnacle Dec 07
12.     Chandran, S., Limited War: Revisiting Kargil in the Indo Pak Conflict; Omdoa Research Press, New Delhi, 2005 – War College Journal 2007 
13.     Malik, SK, Quranic Concept of War; New Delhi, Himalayan Books, 1986 – War College Journal, 2007
14.    Rajagopalan, R., Fighting Like a Guerilla: The Indian Army and Counterinsurgency, New Delhi, Routledge, 2007; The Third Frame, Autumn 08

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Combat/ War College Journal

1.   Understanding Violence and Militancy, 1992.
2.   The Need for Curricular Innovation, 1999.
3.   Information War, 1999.
4.   Letter to the Editor on Bharat Karnad article, Autumn 06
5.   Dangers of Strategic Determinism, 2001

Infantry Journal

1.   Indo Pak War: The Fourth Round in On
2.   Pardon, but your Political Slip is Showing, 1999
3.   Comment on Book Review of Salman Khursheed’s ‘Beyond Terrorism’, 2003

USI Journal

1.   Need for a military archives, 1995.

CDM Journal (College of Defence Management)

1.   Directive Control: An Advocacy, 2002