by Ravi Sankar Varma Nadimpalli
Recently, India hosted the heads of 23 nations and 10 ministerial representatives for the first International Solar Alliance (ISA) summit, which is expected to give a boost to India’s ambitions to lead global sustainable development. The Delhi summit was co-hosted by President Ram Nath Kovind and his French counterpart, President Emmanuel Macron. This is also the first time an international and inter-governmental organisation has set up its headquarters in India.
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6 April 2018
NIA’s Naga Terror-Funding Probe Reveals Insidious Role Of Top Bureaucrats, Politicians And Church Elders
by Jaideep Mazumdar
An NIA probe revealed that Zeliang was personally involved in the collection of ‘taxes’ on behalf of the NSCN(K), with the state’s top officers allegedly collecting crores of rupees from government officials and businessmen and routing the money to the terror outfit. Former Nagaland chief minister T R Zeliang, on whose behalf the Christian church and clergy campaigned vigorously for the assembly polls held last month, is likely to be arrested by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) for his role in funding Naga terror outfits like the S S Khaplang faction of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (NSCN-K). The NIA has been probing the role of politicians, bureaucrats and others – including so-called ‘Church elders’ – in funding the NSCN(K) and some other Naga terror outfits.
The Taliban Have Gone High-Tech. That Poses a Dilemma for the U.S.
By THOMAS GIBBONS-NEFF and JAWAD SUKHANYAR
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The Trump Administration’s New Afghan Problem: The Islamic State
By Sudha Ratan
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How Bangladesh vanquished diarrhoea
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Trade war escalates as China says it will impose tariffs on 128 U.S. exports, including pork and fruit
President Trump imposed $60 billion in annual tariffs against Chinese products, following through on his longtime threat. (The Washington Post) The Chinese government plans to immediately impose tariffs on 128 U.S. products, including pork and certain fruits, a direct response to President Trump’s recent moves to pursue numerous trade restrictions against Beijing. If U.S. goods become more expensive in China, Chinese buyers could opt to purchase products from Europe, South America or elsewhere, though White House officials have routinely discounted the likelihood of this. Beijing’s move could force Trump to decide whether to follow through on expansive trade restrictions he had hoped would crack down on China even if Beijing is now threatening to harm U.S. companies that rely on Asian markets for buyers.
China and North Korea: Past, Present, and Future
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China’s AI ambitions are driving US innovation. So what’s America’s hold up?
By: Joe Gould
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China’s AI ambitions are driving US innovation. So what’s America’s hold up?
By: Joe Gould
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China Slaps Tariffs on 128 U.S. Products, Including Wine, Pork and Pipes
By Chris Buckley
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China Has a Super Slick Plan to Crush the U.S. Air Force in a War
China’s Domestic Security Spending: An Analysis of Available Data
By: Adrian Zenz
On February 1, 2018, China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) revealed a stunning 92.8 percent increase in its domestic security spending: from 30.05 billion RMB in 2016 to 57.95 billion RMB in 2017 (Xinjiang Net, 3 February). Within a decade, this figure has increased nearly ten-fold, up from 5.45 billion RMB in 2007. This most recent increase is arguably a direct result of the extreme securitization measures implemented by the region’s Party Secretary Chen Quanguo, who unleashed unprecedented police recruitment and police station construction drives (China Brief, 14 March 2017; China Brief, 21 September 2017). However, what is the context of these seemingly staggering figures? How does Xinjiang’s domestic security spending compare to per capita counts in other provinces, to China’s national average, or to other nations? Do XUAR spending increases reflect the built-up of a massive police state, or are they merely reflective of a necessary process of catching up, since China in general and its west in particular featured an under-resourced security apparatus in the early 2000s (China Policy Institute Analysis, February 14 2018)?
When America Stands up to China
By Xie Tao
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Russia and China Are Now Building Weapons Together
Dave Majumdar
Countering Illicit Funding of Terrorism: A Congressional Approach
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The Counterterrorism Yearbook 2018
By Sofia Patel
Three key factors defined the terrorist threat landscape in 2017: the international coalition’s military dismantling of Islamic State’s (IS) caliphate, and their return to a nebulous insurgency structure; increased IS activity in South East Asia catalysed by the battle for Marawi; and the potential resurgence of al-Qaeda. These developments have in turn shaped the evolution of international counterterrorism (CT) agendas at local, regional and international levels. The challenges include the prospect of returning foreign fighters, the sustained threat of lone actor attacks, and the capacity of ‘virtual attack planners’. There’s no single way to address these issues and different regions/countries have developed their own policy and operational responses that reflect local socio-political developments. In addition, factors such as proximity to conflict, porous borders, low-levels of governance and corrupt state regimes have a tangible impact on how CT policy and practice is implemented.
How an Outraged Europe Agreed to a Hard Line on Putin
By STEVEN ERLANGER
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Can Jim Mattis Hold the Line in Trump’s ‘War Cabinet’?
By ROBERT F. WORTH
One morning in mid-November, while answering routine press questions about aircraft carriers off the Korean Peninsula and de-confliction zones in Syria, Jim Mattis quietly hinted at something far more important. The United States would not be withdrawing its forces from Syria after the anticipated defeat of ISIS, as President Trump had been promising since his inauguration. Instead, the defense secretary suggested that American forces not only would remain but could even expand their role. “We’re going to make sure we set the conditions for a diplomatic solution,” Mattis said. “You need to do something about this mess now. Not just, you know, fight the military part of it and then say, ‘Good luck on the rest of it.’ ”
RUSSIAN TACTICAL NUKES ARE REAL: BY DR. MARK SCHNEIDER
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Patriot Missiles Are Made in America and Fail Everywhere
BY JEFFREY LEWIS
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What Turkmenistani President’s Visit to Gulf Means for TAPI Pipeline Project
By: Rauf Mammadov
Turkmenistan’s President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow visited the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait in mid-March as part of a campaign to revive a long-stalled natural gas pipeline from his country to Pakistan and India (Neftegaz.ru, March 16). The visit occurred three weeks after a February 23 groundbreaking ceremony marking the latest effort to put the Turkmenistan–Afghanistan–Pakistan–India (TAPI) pipeline back on track. The ceremony, held on the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan border to initiate the second stage of the pipeline—which will run through Afghanistan—was a high-profile affair. In attendance were Berdimuhamedow, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, Pakistani Prime Minister Shahid Khaquan Abbasi and India’s Minister of State for External Affairs Mobashar Jawed Akbar (RBK, February 23).
Russian Siloviki Fight for Control of Still-Illegal ‘Private’ Military Companies
By: Paul Goble
One of the clearest indications of the potential importance of any new innovation is the level to which various power centers fight to control it. As such, it is quite significant that the Federal Security Service (FSB) as well as Russian military intelligence (GRU) have both been stepping up their efforts to gain control over the country’s private military companies (PMC). These entities are still technically illegal in Russia. And yet, mercenary forces have been a noteworthy part of Russia’s military operations abroad, and they are frequently trained and commanded by the Ministry of Defense. Clearly, the country’s two main intelligence agencies believe PMCs are going to play an ever more important role in Russian actions beyond its borders and want to make sure that they, rather than the defense ministry, control them.
French: France's Tool for Global Power Projection
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Early Warning Tools Needed for Chem-Bio Defense
By Vivienne Machi
The Pentagon’s Secret, Permanent Wars
Two months after the lethal ambush in Niger that killed four American troops in October, U.S. forces were involved in another skirmish in the central African nation with militants linked to the Islamic State. If this story sounds unfamiliar, that’s because it was first reported last week, fully three months after the battle. Pressed for an explanation of the delay at a Defense Department briefing Thursday, chief Pentagon spokesperson Dana White offered a stunning justification: U.S. “troops are often in harm’s way, and there are tactical things that happen that we don’t put out a press release about,” she said. “We also don’t want to give a report card to our adversaries. They learn a great deal from information that we put out.”
OVERCOMING THE DEATH OF MOORE’S LAW: THE ROLE OF SOFTWARE ADVANCES AND NON- SEMICONDUCTOR TECHNOLOGIES IN THE FUTURE DEFENSE ENVIRONMENT
Andrew Coyne: The pessimists might be right, social media may have plunged us into a new dark age
Andrew Coyne
The Cambridge Analytica scandal is the latest in a series of incidents that, taken together, have contributed to a rising sense of alarm over the effects of social media — on human behaviour, on civil discourse, on democratic politics. A growing number of commentators have concluded that social media — shorthand for Facebook, Twitter and Google — are more a force for harm than good, whether in their own lives or society at large. Certainly the effects are not trivial. Whether or not you think the more underhanded uses of social media — fake news, Russian bots, or the exploitation of improperly obtained personal data to compile detailed psychological profiles of tens of millions of voters — decided the course of the last U.S. presidential election, they plainly were of some importance, or those responsible would not have gone to such lengths to deploy them.
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Has Cyber driven us MAD?
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‘Cyber bullets’ were once a spy tool but may soon scan Wi-Fi networks for the Army
By: Mark Pomerleau
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What every utility CEO should know about blockchain
By Kimberly Henderson, Emily Knoll, and Matt Rogers
Bitcoin has attracted wide interest in recent months, but it’s blockchain—the technology that underpins bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies—that has the potential to remake important aspects of the utility industry. Leading utilities have begun to ask how they could take advantage of these uses while withstanding threats from blockchain-enabled challengers. The emergence of blockchain introduces a new measure of uncertainty at a time when the industry is changing rapidly due to renewable and distributed energy, energy efficiency, energy storage, and digitization.
The Seven Deadly Sins of Social Media
TODD ROSENBLUM
The Facebook-Cambridge Analytica data exploitation crisis seems to be waking up a new wave of Americans to the fundamental downsides of our purposeful addiction to social media providers. Russia’s information war, designed to foment domestic unrest, exposed more of us to the reality of online manipulation, but many viewed this as a willful attack by an outsider, not reflective of a base problem with the social media platform business model. This week’s outing of how and why Cambridge Analytica extracted vital, personal information on more than 50 million Americans for political reasons amplifies how dangerous the fundamental business model is to our national cohesion.
How a new Army team plans to modernize the network
By: Mark Pomerleau
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Enhancing the grunt: Sophisticated new tech means greater responsibility, heavier load
By: Shawn Snow
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How to Start a War in 5 Easy Steps
BY STEPHEN M. WALT
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Skeptics Ask: Can Army Field Armed Robots By 2024?
By SYDNEY J. FREEDBERG JR
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