Introducing Saumitra’s poetry to an English relishing readership is like reliving its flavor a few years ago in Hindi when these very poems caught the print eye of an eminent publisher, Bharatiya Gyanpith. Saumitra’s selection was not only published from there but also awarded the ‘Yuva Puruskar’ and these poems have been expertly translated by Dhiraj Singh who gives a Midas touch of his pen when moving from one language to another. Saumitra is, by profession an engineer and by passion, a poet. He has moved away from India, but his sensibility is filled with boyhood memories and tender moments of his youth. With an economy of words, he expresses himself in short verses that look like a map of his moods. All aspects of nature find expression with Saumitra so much so that he emerges as a friend of live landscapes, changing skies and the smell of raw mangoes. He has a Wordsworthian involvement with nature and with the simple sweet voice of humanity. The translation by Dhiraj Singh is equally sensitive and soulful, conveying the author’s creativity convincingly. To quote the very first poem- ‘Every tree Calls out to her But she chooses Her tree and sits on it She chooses and sits And that is all There is to it.’ At first sight these may appear to be single–focus expressions but page after page you come across sensitive lines like these you are bound to feel involved. ‘I am a bird Let me laugh In your skies Have fun in the furrows of Your fields And your shimmering Irrigation ponds’ Poetry is not a sealed-off entity of nature alone. We live in an urban world and our concerns are city-bred. Then what impacts our young poet to focus on greener landscapes. Actually this appears to be Saumitra’s retort to the mechanized, mundane metro culture that leaves us myopic to personal pleasures and the bounty of nature. - Mamta Kalia
Resource extraction and conflicts over natural resources are a global phenomenon, including in India. This book explores the process of state formation through developmental intervention in the resource-rich areas of Jharkhand in eastern India which are inhabited by the indigenous Ho community. The cultural practices and livelihoods of Indigenous tribes, like the Ho community in Jharkhand, are deeply linked with the local ecology. The conflict in Jharkhand is intertwined with state development projects and capitalist interventions. This book examines the history of these projects and the issues of territorialisation, dispossession, accumulation, and marginalization which communities have been fighting against for many decades. It examines the process of development policies and projects shaping and restructuring the resource-rich ecology in the region and addresses the interrelated issues of development-induced dispossession, resistance, ecological transformation, governance, illegalities, and state-building. It focuses on the questions: what do development projects bring to the Ho community; what induces them to resist and negotiate; and how state decentralization schemes and local governance in resource conflict areas strengthen State capacities? The book highlights the consequences on the livelihoods and cultural practices of the local people because of ecological transformation and everyday resistance. Comprehensive and important, this book will be of interest to students and researchers of anthropology, sociology, political ecology, social work, development studies, ecology, developmental sociology, indigenous studies, law, and economic anthropology.
Two issues that dominated the debates of the strategic community in the first quarter of this year were; ‘Make in India’ energetically marketed at the Aero-India Show and the Defence Budget. The Defence Budget is looked at intently to get the general emphasis of the government on security. Brig Gurmeet Kanwal has debated this lucidly. Maintaining a large standing armed force requires more than mere day-to-day support. An ill-equipped large force mired with equipment hollowness is not a guarantee for security but in a future war will be cannon fodder for the adversary. Someone will have to be held accountable to the nation for this debilitating lapse. Or take a conscious decision to reduce its size if this country cannot afford a well equipped large armed force!!! Preparing an armed force on a long-term basis requires a deeply considered perspective of its future role in the national security scheme and the road map for its implementation. The absence of a doctrine and the hesitation of establishing a single point of contact on all matters military have been well debated in this issue. Generals Harwant and Banerjee and Colonel Achutan look at the aspects of doctrine. ‘Make in India’ has been the didactic theme of this Government. It needs to be spelt out in clear terms and not left to the (mis-)interpretation of the bureaucracy. Make in India will be feasible only when the basic industrial manufacturing has notched up a number of counts and the manpower skills to go with it are matching. Currently it is more theoretical than implementable. The articles Dr Misra, Air Marshal Kukreja and Group Captain Noronha address these issues with particular reference to the aero-space industry. Two articles relate to the major current event on PM Modi’s visit to China; the first is on Tibet and the second on the boundary issue. Cyber space is emerging the next frontier; Gen Davinder Kumar has generated an excellent discussion on the issue. Col Harjeet has looked at the implications of social media on security. As a first Claude Arpi has documented a diary highlighting prominent issues relating to China’s PLA in this first quarter. This will now be a regular feature in the print edition. Wishing all our readers a worthwhile professionally invigorating reading experience.
The history of Foreign Language Teaching in India arrived at a point of transformation with the liberalization of Indian politics and economics since 1991. Although the Indians had experienced the learning of English as a foreign language due to their colonial past, the need to learn other European/Romance/Germanic languages has intensified with the growing linkage of India with the developed and developing countries in the post-Cold War era. In response to this intensified need for learning foreign languages, many new foreign programs of study/curricula have been introduced in Indian schools (especially those with international curriculum). The central objective of this book is to shed light on the specific challenges of teaching Spanish language through foreign curricula in India. The book performs a qualitative study not only to investigate the problems of teaching Spanish language but also to design suggestive measures to resolve these pedagogical problems.
Twitter is a household name, discussed for its role in national elections, natural disasters, and political movements, as well as for what some malign as narcissistic “chatter.” The first edition of Murthy’s balanced and incisive book pioneered the study of this medium as a serious platform worthy of scholarly attention. Much has changed since Twitter’s infancy, although it is more relevant than ever to our social, political, and economic lives. This timely second edition shows how Twitter has evolved and how it is used today. Murthy introduces some of the historical context that gave birth to the platform, while providing up-to-date examples such as the #blacklivesmatter movement, and Donald Trump’s use of Twitter in the US election. The chapters on journalism and social movements have been thoroughly updated, and completely new to this edition is a chapter on celebrities and brands. Seeking to answer challenging questions around the popular medium, the second edition of Twitter is essential reading for students and scholars of digital media.
Today, every member of a business entity, at all the levels of management, has to deal with technology while performing his or her job responsibilities. As a result, from entry level executive to the level of CEO, all the members of an organization encounter technology on a daily basis. Today's students and tomorrow's executives have to take the advantage of technology; they must know how to use technology efficiently and effectively. Appropriate application of IT is one of the primary keys to efficient and effective business operation as we are into the 21st century. The present book attempts to provide the required foundation in the area of Information Technology. 'Foundations of I.T.' is designed for computer and management students with no particular background in Computers or Information Technology. The book not only covers the basic and fundamentals of IT but also deals with advance concepts and structures comprehensively. The present book will be useful in understanding the fundamentals, applications and major roles, IT play in various walks of life daily. The present text also focuses on the technological changes and trends that are revolutionizing the various knowledge areas under business management. The role and applications of information technology in business have been extensively discussed in the present book. Attempt has been made to follow 'non-technical' and 'simple-to-understand' approach throughout the text. The present text also serves as a course and textbook particularly for the papers of Information Technology and Computer Fundamentals of MBA, BBA, MCA, BCA, B. Sc. (IT), PGDCA, M.Com etc., being run by various colleges and universities.
Improve design efficiency and reduce costs with this practical guide to formal and simulation-based functional verification. Giving you a theoretical and practical understanding of the key issues involved, expert authors including Wayne Wolf and Dan Gajski explain both formal techniques (model checking, equivalence checking) and simulation-based techniques (coverage metrics, test generation). You get insights into practical issues including hardware verification languages (HVLs) and system-level debugging. The foundations of formal and simulation-based techniques are covered too, as are more recent research advances including transaction-level modeling and assertion-based verification, plus the theoretical underpinnings of verification, including the use of decision diagrams and Boolean satisfiability (SAT).
IN THIS VOLUME: From the editor : • Is the World Coming Apart at the Seams? – Lt Gen JS Bajwa - Editor Indian Defence Review • Militarisation of Space: Imperatives for India – Air Marshal Anil Chopra • Terrestrial Electronic Warfare: The IAF’S Unexplored Option? – Sqn Ldr Vijainder K Thakur • The Rafale is finally on IAF inventory – Air Marshal Dhiraj Kukreja • Advances in Military Helicopters – Gp Capt AK Sachdev • Trends in Aerial Weapons: Smart and Lethal – Gp Capt Joseph Noronha • AMCA and LCA MK II: Challenges and Options – Air Marshal Anil Chopra • INDIA’S AEROSPACE INDUSTRY: Structure, Strategies, Policies and the Road Ahead – Prof (Dr) SN Misra • 70 Years of China’s Independence: Its Message to the World – Danvir Singh • Orientations of National Defence–II – Lt Gen Gautam Banerjee • Relevance of Arthashastra in the 21st Century – Vice Admiral MP Muralidharan • Time for a Final Payback! – Sudip Talukdar • Is Pakistan Mainstreaming Lashkar-e-Toiba Again? – Dr V Balasubramaniyan & Dr SV Raghavan • North East Peace Accords – Lt Gen Prakash Katoch • Aerospace and Defence News – Priya Tyagi • Thales: A Proud Partner of the Indian Air Force – Mr Emmanuel de Roquefeuil • Attack on Saudi Oil Facilities: An Assessment – Air Marshal Dhiraj Kukreja • India must support Iran not clerics regime – RSN Singh • Book Reviews
IN THIS VOLUME: The World after the 19th Party Congress - Lt Gen JS Bajwa (Editor) ------------------------------------------- INDIAN DEFENCE REVIEW COMMENT : Indian Military Doctrine: An Analysis - Gp Capt Johnson Chacko ------------------------------------------- Surface Air Defence Missile Systems: Potent and Relevant - Air Marshal Anil Chopra Force Multipliers for the IAF: Enhancing Aerial Power and Reach - Gp Capt Joseph Noronha Modernisation of the IAF’S Helicopter Fleet - Gp Capt AK Sachdev LCA Tejas: Still a Long Way - Air Marshal Anil Chopra The Nuances of Air Threat and its Implications - Lt Gen VK Saxena Integrated Simulators for Training of Mechanised Forces: The Way Ahead - Maj Gen Rajiv Narayanan The Space Race, The Cold War - Martand Jha Oil - Is it a Dyaing Resource? - Air Marshal Dhiraj Kukreja Electronic Warfare: Emerging Trends in Technology - Col Subhasis Das Will jihad kill China-Pakistan Economic Corridor!!! - RSN Singh Fifth-Generation Fighter Aircraft for the IAF: A Mirage or Reality? - Gp Capt Joseph Noronha Role of the IAF in a Two-Front War - Gp Capt AK Sachdev Army to get its own Apaches Attack Helicopters - Lt Gen BS Pawar Aerospace and Defence News - Priya Tyagi Rise of China: An Enigma - Col Anil Athale Logjam in Indigenous Aircraft Production - Prof SN Misra Infantry’s Day as it Was - Danvir Singh Battleground Afghanistan - Lt Gen Prakash Katoch North Korea and South China Sea Flashpoints: Are worthwhile Options left on US Table? - Maj Gen SB Asthana Central Armed Police Forces: Do we really care? - Rakesh Kr Sinha To ‘Act East’, Act in the North East India First! - Col Anil Athale The New Line-up in China’s Defense Forces - Claude Arpi Virtual Currencies: Bitcoin as an Emerging Terror Financing Threat to India - Dr SV Raghavan J&K: The Sacrifice of Past Generations should not go in Vain - Col Jaibans Singh
“Fate of Eight” is a thriller about eight people whose lives are entwined through the three key milestones of one's life: Birth, Marriage, Death. Diya, Mira, Pratima, Radhika are the four strong ladies with traits designed by God herself, and whose destinies were linked to the unique personalities of four other men – Venkat, Guru, Jagdambe, and Rahim. Birth, marriage, and death are the common and the final destiny points for this chosen group of eight. The four ladies find love amongst the four men but for some the love is reciprocated and for some it is not, and for some it leads to marriage, which might not be lasting! In parallel, there are the natural and some “created” bonds of siblings from within this group – not all of them though survive the trials of destiny! Finally, who in this group of eight will be linked together in the eventual final destination of death? This fast paced entertainer will leave you hooked, and guessing till the last: who are the final three “pairs” amongst the protagonists with the respective “linkages” to birth, marriage, and death!
7 Prices for 7 Vices is a unique collection of seven short revenge stories created around the seven cardinal sins. Each story involves a character who has committed one of the seven sins and has inflicted suffering on an unsuspecting victim. Will the victims extract their revenge? The elements of karma and mercy are not at play this time! Its purely about the genius of the human mind creative and evil to serve cold justice to those who deserve it! And how! Nothing can stop the hand of justice no geographical boundaries, no generational gaps, no personal attachments, no physical timelines, and no moral roadblocks for sure! The stories are not suited for the weak of heart nor for those who seek rationality in revenge. A soul hurt by the sin of another only seeks revenge before logic of the mind or conscience of the heart!
Story 1 Two brothers, Jogi and Munna Yadav, are two extraordinary guys leading ordinary lives. Fate intervenes and the proverbial Seven Deadly Sins - Pride, Covetousness, Gluttony, Anger, Lust, Envy and Sloth - impact and shape their lives - paths in very different ways, often proving to be virtues rather than sins. Both brothers reach the pinnacle of success, albeit via tangentially different paths. Jogi gets married to the dusky and ambitious Hansika, while Munna to the simple, but sweet, Neelima. Life has only just begun to smile on them, but will it continue to . or will the deadly fangs of past sins extract their pound or flesh? Story 2 Taking lessons in the Gita from his friend Krish, Arjat fights on with adversities of life - being orphaned a an early age and then having been adopted by his uncle, Brij. His friends KC and the love of his life, his wife Jasmin, are his pillars if strength in Arjat's perpetual fight with circumstances. until one of the pillars crumbles under pressure. Arjat is charged with the murder of his ex-boss, but his staunch supporters, his karma and the grand design of the Universe come to his rescue, though not before claiming their dues and revealing hidden surprises and twists in the take, which completes his amazing journey, rendering the lessons learned from Gita well-realized.
Introducing Saumitra’s poetry to an English relishing readership is like reliving its flavor a few years ago in Hindi when these very poems caught the print eye of an eminent publisher, Bharatiya Gyanpith. Saumitra’s selection was not only published from there but also awarded the ‘Yuva Puruskar’ and these poems have been expertly translated by Dhiraj Singh who gives a Midas touch of his pen when moving from one language to another. Saumitra is, by profession an engineer and by passion, a poet. He has moved away from India, but his sensibility is filled with boyhood memories and tender moments of his youth. With an economy of words, he expresses himself in short verses that look like a map of his moods. All aspects of nature find expression with Saumitra so much so that he emerges as a friend of live landscapes, changing skies and the smell of raw mangoes. He has a Wordsworthian involvement with nature and with the simple sweet voice of humanity. The translation by Dhiraj Singh is equally sensitive and soulful, conveying the author’s creativity convincingly. To quote the very first poem- ‘Every tree Calls out to her But she chooses Her tree and sits on it She chooses and sits And that is all There is to it.’ At first sight these may appear to be single–focus expressions but page after page you come across sensitive lines like these you are bound to feel involved. ‘I am a bird Let me laugh In your skies Have fun in the furrows of Your fields And your shimmering Irrigation ponds’ Poetry is not a sealed-off entity of nature alone. We live in an urban world and our concerns are city-bred. Then what impacts our young poet to focus on greener landscapes. Actually this appears to be Saumitra’s retort to the mechanized, mundane metro culture that leaves us myopic to personal pleasures and the bounty of nature. - Mamta Kalia
Introducing Saumitra's poetry to an English relishing readership is like reliving its flavor a few years ago in Hindi when these very poems caught the print eye of an eminent publisher, Bharatiya Gyanpith. Saumitra's selection was not only published from there but also awarded the 'Yuva Puruskar' and these poems have been expertly translated by Dhiraj Singh who gives a Midas touch of his pen when moving from one language to another. Saumitra is, by profession an engineer and by passion, a poet. He has moved away from India, but his sensibility is filled with boyhood memories and tender moments of his youth. With an economy of words, he expresses himself in short verses that look like a map of his moods. All aspects of nature find expression with Saumitra so much so that he emerges as a friend of live landscapes, changing skies and the smell of raw mangoes. He has a Wordsworthian involvement with nature and with the simple sweet voice of humanity. The translation by Dhiraj Singh is equally sensitive and soulful, conveying the author's creativity convincingly. To quote the very first poem- 'Every tree Calls out to her But she chooses Her tree and sits on it She chooses and sits And that is all There is to it.' At first sight these may appear to be single-focus expressions but page after page you come across sensitive lines like these you are bound to feel involved. Poetry is not a sealed-off entity of nature alone. We live in an urban world and our concerns are city-bred. Then what impacts our young poet to focus on greener landscapes. Actually this appears to be Saumitra's retort to the mechanized, mundane metro culture that leaves us myopic to personal pleasures and the bounty of nature. - Mamta Kalia
Protocols used in Molecular Biology is a compilation of several examples of molecular biology protocols. Each example is presented with a concise introduction, materials and chemicals required, a step-by-step procedure and troubleshooting tips. Information about the application of the protocol is also provided. The techniques included in this book are essential to research in the fields of proteomics, genomics, cell culture, epigenetic modification and structural biology. The protocols can also be used by clinical researchers (neuroscientists and oncologists, for example) for medical applications (diagnostics, therapeutics and multidisciplinary projects).
This book provides a guide to Static Random Access Memory (SRAM) bitcell design and analysis to meet the nano-regime challenges for CMOS devices and emerging devices, such as Tunnel FETs. Since process variability is an ongoing challenge in large memory arrays, this book highlights the most popular SRAM bitcell topologies (benchmark circuits) that mitigate variability, along with exhaustive analysis. Experimental simulation setups are also included, which cover nano-regime challenges such as process variation, leakage and NBTI for SRAM design and analysis. Emphasis is placed throughout the book on the various trade-offs for achieving a best SRAM bitcell design. Provides a complete and concise introduction to SRAM bitcell design and analysis; Offers techniques to face nano-regime challenges such as process variation, leakage and NBTI for SRAM design and analysis; Includes simulation set-ups for extracting different design metrics for CMOS technology and emerging devices; Emphasizes different trade-offs for achieving the best possible SRAM bitcell design.
IN THIS VOLUME: From the editor : • Is the World Coming Apart at the Seams? – Lt Gen JS Bajwa - Editor Indian Defence Review • Militarisation of Space: Imperatives for India – Air Marshal Anil Chopra • Terrestrial Electronic Warfare: The IAF’S Unexplored Option? – Sqn Ldr Vijainder K Thakur • The Rafale is finally on IAF inventory – Air Marshal Dhiraj Kukreja • Advances in Military Helicopters – Gp Capt AK Sachdev • Trends in Aerial Weapons: Smart and Lethal – Gp Capt Joseph Noronha • AMCA and LCA MK II: Challenges and Options – Air Marshal Anil Chopra • INDIA’S AEROSPACE INDUSTRY: Structure, Strategies, Policies and the Road Ahead – Prof (Dr) SN Misra • 70 Years of China’s Independence: Its Message to the World – Danvir Singh • Orientations of National Defence–II – Lt Gen Gautam Banerjee • Relevance of Arthashastra in the 21st Century – Vice Admiral MP Muralidharan • Time for a Final Payback! – Sudip Talukdar • Is Pakistan Mainstreaming Lashkar-e-Toiba Again? – Dr V Balasubramaniyan & Dr SV Raghavan • North East Peace Accords – Lt Gen Prakash Katoch • Aerospace and Defence News – Priya Tyagi • Thales: A Proud Partner of the Indian Air Force – Mr Emmanuel de Roquefeuil • Attack on Saudi Oil Facilities: An Assessment – Air Marshal Dhiraj Kukreja • India must support Iran not clerics regime – RSN Singh • Book Reviews
This book provides a guide to Static Random Access Memory (SRAM) bitcell design and analysis to meet the nano-regime challenges for CMOS devices and emerging devices, such as Tunnel FETs. Since process variability is an ongoing challenge in large memory arrays, this book highlights the most popular SRAM bitcell topologies (benchmark circuits) that mitigate variability, along with exhaustive analysis. Experimental simulation setups are also included, which cover nano-regime challenges such as process variation, leakage and NBTI for SRAM design and analysis. Emphasis is placed throughout the book on the various trade-offs for achieving a best SRAM bitcell design. Provides a complete and concise introduction to SRAM bitcell design and analysis; Offers techniques to face nano-regime challenges such as process variation, leakage and NBTI for SRAM design and analysis; Includes simulation set-ups for extracting different design metrics for CMOS technology and emerging devices; Emphasizes different trade-offs for achieving the best possible SRAM bitcell design.
IN THIS VOLUME: Are Nuclear Weapons Losing their Sheen of Strategic Deterrence? - Lt Gen JS Bajwa (Editor) INDIAN DEFENCE REVIEW COMMENT : Protecting Critical National Assets: Integrated Security Solutions - Maj Gen AK Mehra ------------------------------------------- Unpredictable Security Environment: Need for An Integrated Military Approach - Brig Narender Kumar Remembering a Hero in Bicentenary Year! - Col Anil Athale The Strategic Bomber of Tomorrow: Stealth Spells Success - Gp Capt Joseph Noronha The F-35 Programme: Lessons for the Aviation Industry - Air Marshal Anil Chopra Taking the Bull by the Horns: A Case for Pro Active Defense to Counter Potential Chinese Aggression - Brig Deepak Sinha How Worrisome is PLAAF Presence in Tibet? - Gp Capt AK Sachdev The PLA Army: Vision 2025 - Maj Gen Sheru Thapliyal India’s Quest for Replacement of the Ageing: MiG 21 Fleet of the IAF - Danvir Singh Revamping the Combat Fleet of the IAF - Gp Capt AK Sachdev Creating an Indian Weapons Industry: The Total Matrix Approach - Prof Prodyut Kumar Das Artificial Intelligence in Aviation - Air Marshal Anil Chopra What Was Wikileaks All About?: A Classic Case of Cyber Security - Martand Jha China’s Interest in the South China Sea - Jayadeva Ranade The Dream Corridor - Claude Arpi Make in India - Indian Style - Air Marshal Dhiraj Kukreja Aerospace and Defence News - Priya Tyagi Skilling Gaps In Defence Sector: For ‘Make in India’ - Dr JP Dash and BB Sharma 10 Para (SF) - Mustaffa of Desert Warfare - Sumit Walia Dealing With Maoist Insurgency: Focused Approach Required - Lt Gen Prakash Katoch Anglo-Maratha Struggle for Empire: The Importance of Maritime Power - Col Anil Athale If India does not survive, then who would? - RSN Singh
This book entitled “Agroforestry forClimate Resilience and Rural Livelihood” would help the readers to gain knowledge on importance of agroforestry for climate change and providing ecosystem services through many ways. This is a testimony and a ready reckoner to help to solve the challenges of climatic vagaries and resource degradation of natural resource bases. The compilation would certainly provide the steps that should be taken to meet the twin objective of climate resilience and livelihood security through adoption of agroforestry models. This book would definitely be helpful forpolicy makers, planners, academicians, students and scientists to suggest the technologies and strategies to the farmers for enhancing their productivity, economic stability, meeting nutritional security under the changing climatic scenario. The key features includes the idea of ecosystem services relevance in present day context, which otherwise was being neglected. The voluminous compilation will act as a boost for farmers to adopt agroforestry system in their pursuit for better environmental management and resilience against the climate change.
IN THIS VOLUME: Doklam: India at an Inflection Point in its Quest for Regional/Global Power Status - Lt Gen JS Bajwa (Editor) Directed Energy Weapons: Game Changer Or A Damp Squib? - Gp Capt Joseph Noronha Advances in Technology: Battlefield Helicopters - Gp Capt AK Sachdev Space: The Force Multiplier For Air Power - Air Marshal Anil Chopra MiG-35, F-16, Gripen or Better Choice? - Sumit Walia Look Long, Look Deep: China’s Airborne Warning and Control Systems - Gp Capt Ravinder Singh Chhatwal Our Armed Forces: Do We Take Them Seriously? - Sanjiv Khanna China’s ‘Contentious’ Path To War? - Anant Mishra Balancing Politics and Power: Prognosis of China’s Military Build-up - Lt Gen Gautam Banerjee Embrace the Future of Kashmir - Lt Gen Subrata Saha Resurgence of Ulfa (I) in Assam: Implications for Internal Security - Indrajit Sharma & Dr N Mohandas Singh Naval Combat Systems: Evolution and Future Perspectives - Cmde Arun Kumar Aerospace and Defence News - Priya Tyagi Deepening India-Israel Ties: Changing Landscape of the Indian Defence Sector - Ketan Salhotra Indo-Israel Relations: Make with India - Tamir Eshel Strategic Partnership with Private Players: An Overview - Danvir Singh Pax Britannica Whittled Down to an Island Kingdom: (Intrigues that Built an Empire: Intrigued by Wheels of History) - Lt Gen PG Kamath North Korea - A Delinquent State? - Air Marshal Dhiraj Kukreja The Offset Policy - A Decade in Retrospect - Dr SN Misra Pakistan for Balochistan, not Balochis - RSN Singh Army’s Battlefield Support System: Fielding Initially Planned by 2017 could take Another Decade - Lt Gen Prakash Katoch China has done India a Favor - Dr Amarjit Singh Shekatkar Committee Report: Genuine ‘Reforms’ or Cosmetic ‘Re-grouping’? - Gp Capt TP Srivastava Who made North Korea a nuclear power? Dr A.Q. Khan? - Sumit Walia
IN THIS VOLUME:- • India Under a Hybrid Attack? – Lt Gen JS Bajwa • Artificial Intelligence in Military Aviation – Air Marshal Anil Chopra • FDI in Defence Manufacturing-26-49-100 percent – Air Marshal Dhiraj Kukreja • Equipment Sustainability: Key to Army’s Operational Readiness – Lt Gen NB Singh • The F-21 will Truly be a Game-Changer for the Indian Air Force, Indian Industry and India-US Strategic Ties – William L. Blair • Indo-US Defence “Make in India” Aviation Initiative – Air Marshal Anil Chopra • Indo-Israel Defence: Cooperation and Future Prospects – Gp Capt AK Sachdev • IAF’S Unmanned Capability: Prospects for Indigenisation – Gp Capt AK Sachdev • Smoke! Smoke on the Horizon: CNS Shandong (山东) – Dr Sundaram Rajasimman • Defence for the $5 Trillion Indian Economy – Navneet Bhushan • Approaches to Carrier Warfare: A Comparative Perspective – Dr Sundaram Rajasimman • De-radicalization: Chief of Defence Staff Hit the Bull’s Eye – RSN Singh • Strengthening India’s Ability: To Prevent Future Wars – Col JK Achuthan • Is China-Myanmar Economic Corridor turning out to be another CPEC for India? – Maj Gen SB Asthana • Countering UAS/UAV: Recent Developments – Lt Col Nikhil Kapoor • London Bridge to Kashmir and Beyond: What Makes Jammu & Kashmir So Important? – Philip B Haney & JM Phelps • Aerospace and Defence News – Priya Tyagi • Defence Expo 2020: The Ultimate Display of Military Technology – Danivr Singh
IN THIS VOLUME: Profiling Future Wars - Indian Context - Lt Gen JS Bajwa (Editor) The Indian Air Force In A Two-Front WAR - Air Marshal Anil Chopra Air Power For Special Operations: The Need For ‘Jointness’? - Gp Capt AK Sachdev LCA Tejas: Time to Go Indigenous? - Gp Capt Ravinder Singh Chhatwal Unmanned Fighters And Beyond - Air Marshal Anil Chopra Kim Jong-Un Springs A Surprise - Air Marshal Dhiraj Kukreja Drone Swarm Attacks - What India Must Prepare For - Lt Gen Prakash Katoch Hackers On The Rampage: Are We Ready? - Gp Capt TP Srivastava Attack By Infiltration And Annihilation Of 32 Baluch - Lt Gen JBS Yadava War With Pakistan Is Inevitable - Dr Amarjit Singh Challenges of Setting up Defence Corridor for Make in India - Dr JP Dash & Devinder Kumar Aerospace and Defence News - Priya Tyagi Self Reliance In Defence Production: A Mirage - Air Marshal Dhiraj Kukreja North East: Asia’s Conundrum - Lt Gen PG Kamath Military Diplomacy: A Vital Tool For Furthering National Interests - Lt Gen Kamal Davar Dragon’s Flight: China’s Advances In Aerospace Technology - Gp Capt Joseph Noronha Indo-Israel Defence Cooperation: The Road Ahead - Prof (Dr) SN Misra Indo-French Relations: Will The Partnership Take A Step Further? - Claude Arpi Indo-French Naval Diplomacy - Danvir Singh Sri Lanka On The Verge Of Another Ethnic Strife - Rakesh Kr Sinha Crisis In The Maldives: India’s Options - Cmde Arun Kumar Power Brokers of Kashmir Crush Nationalist Voice - Brig Anil Gupta
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