Pakistan's privatisation of Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) represents a critical shift in how the current government manages state-owned assets to mitigate severe financial losses. This high-stakes sale of the national carrier serves as a major test of public liability, private investment integration, and the concentration of economic power.
Indian Strategic Studies
The Profession of Arms: A Guide for Young Army Officers
It takes courage, especially for a young officer, to check a man met on the road for not saluting properly or for slovenly appearance, but, every time he does, it adds to his stock of moral courage, and whatever the soldier may say, he has respect for the officer who does pull him up.
Read Document →The Dragon's Teeth: Assessing China's Military Modernization
PLA has focused on modernising its capabilities across all warfare domains to achieve these goals. This includes land, air, and maritime operations, nuclear, space, counter-space, electronic warfare and cyberspace operations, aiming to become a fully integrated joint force.
Read Document →Transforming the PLA: A Decade of reorganisation from SSF to ISF
PRC has engaged in a sustained and broad effort to transform the PLA from an infantry-heavy, low-technology, ground forces-centric military into a high-technology, networked force with an increasing emphasis on joint operations and naval and air power projection.
Read Document →Eyes without Borders: Exploring the World of Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) in the Digital Age
Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) is gaining prominence with the rise of social media, the digital society and the vast growth of publicly and commercially available information (PAI and CAI).
Read Document →
The PLA’s Developing Cyber Warfare Capabilities and India's Options
Informationised warfare blurs the lines between peacetime and wartime. A nation in the information age cannot wait for the hostilities to break out to collect intelligence, carryout influence operations, develop antisatellite systems or design computer software weapons.
Read Document →
Galwan and After
Why did China did this when he is under tremendous pressure in all fronts, is this China's salami slice tactics being progressed rigorously, what will be new Rules of Engagement, what will be escalatory control mechanism, who has taken this decision, will there be some pressure put by China in India's North-East through insurgency.
Read Document →
India’s Joint Doctrine for Cyberspace Operations: A Critical Review
Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) General Anil Chauhan and Secretary, Department of Military Affairs, formally released declassified versions of the Joint Doctrines for Cyberspace Operations during the Chiefs of Staff Committee meeting in New Delhi.
Read Document →
Know your Enemy General(now Field Marshal) Syed Aseem Munir
Gen SA Munir's position in the hierarchy of Pakistan was not very comfortable. The state of economy, insurgency in Pakhtoonistan and Balochistan, attack on the Jaffar Express, constant protests by supporters of Imran Khan's supporters inside and outside of parliament.
Read Document →
Decoding Operation SINDOOR: Key Aspects and Implications
Precision strikes were carried out on nine sites—four in Pakistan and five in PoK—linked to anti-India terrorist groups such as the LeT, JeM and the Hizbul Mujahideen. The targeted sites included Muridke (LeT headquarters) and Bahawalpur (JeM headquarters).
Read Document →
Chinese Cyber Exploitation in India's Power Grid - Is There a linkage to Mumbai Power Outage?
The New York Times (NYT), based on analysis by a U.S. based private intelligence firm Recorded Future, reported that a Chinese entity penetrated India’s power grid at multiple load dispatch points. Chinese malware intruded into the control systems that manage electric supply across India, along with a high-voltage transmission substation and a coal-fired power plant
Read Document →15 July 2026
China’s Strategic Corridor in Pakistan: Progress, Dependency, and the Uncertain Future of CPEC
The China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) has transitioned into a long-term mechanism of strategic influence, embedding Beijing within Islamabad’s economic and political architecture. This integration deepens Pakistan's structural dependency on Chinese finance, technology, and security arrangements while advancing China's broader Eurasian ambitions through the critical Gwadar Port. Launched formally in 2015 as a flagship Belt and Road Initiative project, the corridor initially focused on addressing chronic energy shortages and expanding transport infrastructure during Phase I.
Forging the Arsenal Corridor: China–Pakistan Defense Integration and the New Strategic Supply Chain
China’s military partnership with Pakistan has transitioned from a traditional supplier-recipient relationship into a deeply integrated strategic defense alliance. This structural recalibration equips Islamabad with advanced fighter aircraft, layered air defenses, and next-generation naval platforms to offset India's conventional military superiority and secure critical maritime corridors. The bilateral cooperation aligns with Beijing's broader Belt and Road Initiative and the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, embedding Pakistan into a shared military-industrial ecosystem.
9th Aviation Brigade Likely Validates Manned-Unmanned Teaming Combat Methods
The People’s Liberation Army Air Force has advanced its manned-unmanned teaming capabilities by validating new combat methods designed to integrate piloted fighter jets with autonomous systems. Specifically, the 9th Aviation Brigade based at Wuhu Air Base in Anhui Province supported validation efforts for J-20 stealth fighters executing coordinated penetration operations.
Trump's Iran Blunder Shows Strategy Can Defeat Firepower
The United States-Iran conflict has exposed the severe limitations of military firepower when deployed without a coherent long-term strategy. Tehran executed a highly deliberate plan to survive by choking the global economy, whereas Washington failed to formulate any viable counter-strategy despite possessing overwhelming material and financial superiority in the Persian Gulf.
Iran ceasefire was always going to break – here’s why
The United States and Iran have resumed direct military conflict in the Middle East less than a month after signing a ceasefire agreement at Versailles. Following Iranian attacks on three commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, Washington launched “punishment” strikes on more than 80 targets, prompting retaliatory strikes on American bases in Bahrain and Kuwait.
Hard-Liners in Iran Want to Keep Fighting America
Iranian ultra-hard-liners are demanding a continued military confrontation with the United States following a US-Israeli campaign in February that decapitated Tehran's leadership. This political maneuvering seeks to narrow the space for diplomatic compromise by portraying negotiations as strategically dangerous. The underlying operational friction stems from contested control over vital shipping lanes passing through the strategic Strait of Hormuz.
Why Trump’s nuclear blackmail of Iran failed spectacularly
On April 7, 2026, US President Donald Trump issued an implicit nuclear threat against Iran on Truth Social, demanding an immediate ceasefire during the US-Israeli war. This escalating coercive rhetoric aimed to force Tehran into submission after intensive conventional military campaigns failed to break the strategic blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.
Europe’s New German Question
Germany and other European Union member states are rapidly increasing unilateral defense spending to secure the continent, but this isolated approach risks perpetuating a fragmented, outdated defense architecture. This lack of coordination threatens to leave the bloc permanently dependent on the United States for critical military assets and security guarantees.
Europe: a great power in the making
European Union member states are rapidly accelerating their militarisation and economic defences to counter existential security threats from Russia and industrial overcapacity from China. This strategic shift marks a decisive departure from traditional civilian governance toward active power politics as the United States becomes an increasingly unreliable security partner.
The Next Russia Threat
Russian military forces are visibly struggling on the battlefield in Ukraine as Kyiv’s strategic endurance successfully renders the ongoing invasion futile for Moscow. This tactical stagnation will not neutralize the long-term threat to European security, as the Kremlin remains deeply committed to upending the continent's security architecture even in the event of a battlefield defeat.
How Russia Learned To Adapt To Drone Warfare
The Russian military is rapidly institutionalizing drone warfare innovations to counter Ukrainian forces by establishing specialized elite units and deploying autonomous systems. In August 2024, Moscow created Rubicon, the Center for Advanced Unmanned Technologies, to target Ukrainian drone crews, electronic warfare systems, and logistics routes up to 40 kilometers behind the front lines.
Russia’s Fuel Shortages Strike Russians at Home
Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian oil refineries have damaged 20 percent to 40 percent of Russia's refining capacity, triggering severe domestic fuel shortages. These precision attacks now reach up to 2,500 kilometers inside Russian territory, forcing 56 of Russia's 89 regions to implement strict gasoline rationing measures.
Combating Terrorism Center (CTC)
- Standing With Iran: The Integrated Combat Performance of Iraqi Militias During Operation Epic Fury
- A View from CT Foxhole: Brigadier General Matthew Ross, Director, JIATF-401
- Remotely Coerced Violence: 764, The Com Network, and the Hybridization of Threats
The Invisible Munition Winning the War in Ukraine: Live Data
Ukrainian military forces are leveraging a hyper-connected digital nervous system to convert ambient civilian data into lethal kinetic targeting at machine speed. This rapid algorithmic data fusion collapses traditional linear kill chains into a continuous, highly resilient kill web. This profound operational shift marks a permanent transition from legacy platform-centric warfare to network-centric cognitive conflict on the European continent.
Ukraine’s Drone War: The Rise of Machine-Speed Adaptive Hyperwar
Ukraine’s Unmanned Systems Forces are rapidly scaling robotic military assets to counter Russian manpower advantages, establishing a twenty mile attrition belt that has transformed the frontline into a highly transparent, drone denied grey zone. These autonomous ground and aerial platforms now execute ninety percent of frontline logistics in heavily contested sectors like Pokrovsk.
The 21-Mile Chokepoint
Iranian gunboats and a drone targeted a U.S.-flagged tanker in the Strait of Hormuz on February 3, 2026, triggering an immediate spike in global oil prices despite no physical disruption occurring. This incident demonstrates how asymmetric actors can weaponize the threat of maritime interdiction to manipulate energy markets through financial transmission channels.
What precipitated a worldwide total war in the 1930s?
The global escalation of the Second World War between 1931 and 1941 is re-examined in Jonathan Fennell’s new book, Collapse: A Global History of the Second World War, 1931-1941, which analyzes how transnational radicalisation drove total war. This historical reassessment directly challenges traditional, Eurocentric narratives by examining how interconnected global economies and rapid technological innovations impacted diverse populations.
Chips, Code, and Control: Rewriting the Economics of Old Tech Wars
The United States–China technology rivalry is fragmenting into two distinct geopolitical domains, separating physical semiconductor manufacturing from highly networked artificial intelligence ecosystems. While Washington and Beijing weaponize critical hardware chokepoints like lithography and electronic design automation tools, the global software landscape remains highly collaborative through open-source models and cross-border talent mobility.
As Anthropic Fights Trump, China Steals Its AI Capabilities
The Trump Administration in mid-June imposed strict export controls on Anthropic’s advanced Mythos 5 and Fable 5 artificial intelligence models over national security concerns, triggering a major domestic legal and political dispute that threatens American technological leadership against China. This regulatory restriction followed intelligence reports indicating that the proprietary systems could be jailbroken to enable offensive cyber capabilities.
A Silent Escalation: Anti-Technology Violence Coming to the Fore
The firebombing of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s house and recent attacks on European electrical grids highlight a quiet escalation in violent anti-technology extremism. These targeted assaults on high-profile technology leaders and critical infrastructure threaten to disrupt global digital systems and accelerate copycat actions by decentralized networks targeting emerging artificial intelligence platforms.
NATO Needs a Defense Market
NATO member states must establish a unified defense market to effectively convert national resources into robust military capabilities. While increasing defense spending and reforming procurement systems are necessary steps, expanding industrial capacity remains the critical bottleneck for the alliance. Historically, rapid mobilization was possible, as seen when Canada scaled up production to build over 800,000 military vehicles during World War II.
Lab Review to Modernize R&D Enterprise – DoW Research & Engineering, OUSW(R&E)
The Office of the Under Secretary of War for Research and Engineering has finalized a comprehensive set of recommendations to modernize and reform the War Department's vast research and development enterprise. This strategic initiative aims to eliminate bureaucratic friction points and accelerate the delivery of combat-ready technologies to frontline warfighters.
Inside the Secret Factory That Supplies Ukraine’s War Drones
German artificial-intelligence defense start-up Helsing SE is mass-producing inexpensive, autonomous attack drones to supply Ukrainian forces, signaling a profound shift in global military procurement. These lightweight, 26-pound hard-foam aerial weapons represent a critical transition away from multiyear, billion-dollar government contracts toward nimbler, privately funded technology developed by agile commercial firms.
This is Feynman’s Thinking Habit. It Made Him a Genius
Richard Feynman, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist, developed a highly disciplined cognitive operating system based on first principles to master complex scientific concepts and solve intricate problems. This rigorous intellectual methodology enabled him to rewrite quantum interactions and systematically approach diverse disciplines like biology and drawing from absolute zero.
14 July 2026
India’s Digital Front: Cyber Threats, Strategic Vulnerabilities and the Imperative of a Sovereign Digital India
India's critical digital public infrastructure, including the Unified Payments Interface, faces escalating, persistent cyber threats from a coordinated Sino-Pakistani technological nexus, as detailed by MU Nair. This adversarial alliance actively probes national security architectures, aiming to exploit systemic vulnerabilities and conduct cognitive warfare below the threshold of conventional conflict.
Chinese dam near India border a ticking geological bomb, finds Beijing-backed study
China's state-run geological survey has warned that the under-construction $137-billion Medog Hydropower Station on the Yarlung Tsangpo sits directly atop the active Paizhen Fault, posing severe structural risks just 50 km from the Indian border. This 60,000-megawatt project faces significant tectonic threats in one of the Himalayas' most earthquake-prone regions.
25 Years After 9/11. The Next Global Shock Could be Infinitely Worse
Nuclear weapons use by increasingly populist world leaders represents the greatest threat of a catastrophic global shock, far eclipsing the impacts of 9/11, Covid-19, or historical terrorism. Recent military escalations, such as the 10 May 2025 Indian cruise missile strikes against Pakistani bases, highlight how compressed decision-making windows of under thirty seconds increase the risk of accidental nuclear escalation.
How the Coup Turned Myanmar Into Asia’s Deadliest Conflict—and Why the World Is Looking Away
Myanmar has collapsed into Asia’s deadliest conflict following a 2021 military coup, resulting in over 100,000 deaths and a severe humanitarian crisis. The ruling junta has intensified its campaign, executing thousands of devastating airstrikes against civilian targets like schools and hospitals to suppress widespread resistance across the country.
The end of the American way of war?
The Iran war in 2026 has severely undermined the United States' long-standing military strategy of forward defense by demonstrating that forward-deployed bases and surface ships no longer enjoy sanctuary from adversary attacks. Iranian forces successfully struck over 200 targets across the Middle East using highly accurate missiles and drones, killing seven U.S.
Strait Shooting: Hormuz to Taiwan, Lessons for Deterring China
Iran successfully disrupted global commerce and oil supplies for months in the Strait of Hormuz, frustrating the powerful U.S. military despite its tactical victories. Employing inviscous warfare tactics like mines, fast-attack swarms, drones, and boarding operations, Iran created a high-cost kill zone that the U.S. Navy and Air Force could not effectively contain.
How the Iran war will change the Middle East
The 2026 war in Iran, initiated by United States and Israeli military strikes aimed at regime change, has severely disrupted Middle Eastern security by triggering devastating Iranian retaliatory attacks on Gulf energy infrastructure and closing the strategic Strait of Hormuz. This conflict exposed the vulnerability of Gulf Cooperation Council states, which suffered extensive damage despite holding American security guarantees, and has driven these partners to aggressively pursue strategic autonomy.
Iran Is Losing Iraq: Baghdad Goes Its Own Way
Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi’s newly formed government is capitalizing on the splintering of the Popular Mobilization Forces to disarm powerful Shiite militias and assert state sovereignty. This decisive consolidation of central authority threatens to dismantle Iran's decades-long security grip over Baghdad following recent military confrontations with Israel and the United States.
A Way Out of the Iran Mess
The Trump administration faces a critical decision regarding the Strait of Hormuz following the rapid collapse of a deeply flawed memorandum of understanding signed just three weeks ago. This diplomatic failure leaves the president with four painful options to secure the vital waterway, forcing a choice between immediate confrontation and strategic retreat.
Marco Rubio Burned Down the House to Fix a Sink
United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio has abandoned his former human rights advocacy, a stark departure from his Senate tenure. Previously known for bipartisan efforts to protect human rights, Rubio now rarely mentions these principles, instead adopting the slogan, 'We are not here to play social worker.