Indian Defence Review Oct-Dec 1992 (Vol 7.4)


Book Description

IN THIS VOLUME • IDR Comment — Management of Insurgency in the North-East — Lt Gen VK Nayar • Insurgencies in the North-East: Has the Army Delivered? — Lt Gen VK Sood • The Eastern Neighbour: Myanmar — Lt Col Daljit Singh • Op Scenario Alpha: Part-II — IDR Editorial Team • Battle — Lt Gen Harbakhsh Singh • LTTE and India's Security — Lt Gen SC Sardeshpande, UYSM • Dimensions of the Gulf War on Regional States — Dr HK Srivastava • "From Caracas to Rio: The Soldier and the Environment" — Maj Gen E D'Souza • Ex-servicemen, Security and Development: Processes in the Border Districts of Punjab — Dr Rakesh Datta • The Indian Navy in the 1990s — Rahul Roy-Chaudhury • The Regime of Warships: Contemporary Naval Missions and Activities and Emerging Law of the Sea Part II — Lt BM Dimri • Computer Warfare: A Systematic Defence — Gp Capt MK Rana • Employment of Military Helicopters: Part Ill Attack Helicopters in the Subcontinent Doctrine — Brig Vijai K Nair • The Propulsion of Submarines — D Dyer • Weapons Overview: PRlTHVl SS 150 — Shankar Bhaduri VIEWPOINT • Low Intensity Conflict: Theory and Applicability in India • The Kashmiri and Palestinian Movements: Uncommon Divergences Reviews and Critiques • The Man and the Myth Reviewed by Maj Gen Afsir Karim




Indian Defence Review July-Sep 1992 (Vol 7.3)


Book Description

IN THIS VOLUME • IDR Comment — Afghanistan: A House Divided — Maj Gen Yashwant Deva • Operational Scenario Alpha: The Run up to Conflict — IDR Editorial Team • Internal Violence and the Military — Lt Gen SC Sardeshpande • Indian Air Power for the mid 1990s:Conceptual Issues — Air Marshal CV Gole • Terrorism in India: Formulating a Hostage Policy — Arjun Katoch • Ex-Servicemen - Betrayal by ‘Consensus’ — Rear Adm Satyindra Singh • Women in Uniform: Observations on some Future Problems of the Indian Armed Forces — Dr HK Srivastava • Preserving the Army’s Ethos — Lt Gen SK Sinha • Command and Leadership: Two Cardinal Principles of Soldiering — Brig Desmond E Hayde • Command Breakdown: A Case Study — Shankar Bhaduri • The Regime of Warships: Contemporary Naval Missions and Activities and Emerging Law of the Sea Part 1 — Lt BM Dimri • Armour Fire Power: Incapacitate - Do not Destroy — Maj Anil Sabharwal • Secondary Protection: Explosion Control for Future Tanks — Maj Anil Sabharwal • Motive Power for Battle Tanks: A Technology Forecast — Lt Col AG Thomas • The Operating of Software Controlled Weapon Systems — Gp Capt MK Rana VIEWPOINT • Indian Military intelligence: A Case for Change Reviews and Critiques • Counter Attack: The West’s Battle against the Terrorists Reviewed by Maj Gen Afsir Karim (Retd) • Fiza’ya: Psyche of the Pakistan Air Force Reviewed by Shankar Bhaduri




Indian Defence Review Oct-Dec Vol. 28.4


Book Description

-------------------------------------- From the Editor -------------------------------------- MILITARY: The Grid of Violence – Bharat Verma -------------------------------------- Indian Defence Review Comment -------------------------------------- EASTERN LADAKH: Can India Afford the Luxury of Inaction? – Lt Gen JS Bajwa No Human Occupant: The Growing Challenges of UAS Pilot Training – David Oliver Evolution of Ground-Based Air Defence Weapons – Air Marshal Narayan Menon Equipping Cutting Edge Infantry – Lt Gen Prakash Katoch Rise of the PLAAF: Implications for India – Gp Capt AK Sachdev Challenges Facing Civil Aviation in India – Robert S Metzger Aerospace and Defence News – Priya Tyagi Games Nations Play: Chinese Assertiveness & America’s Re-balancing – Brig Amar Cheema The Ray of Death: Directed-Energy Weapons – Gp Capt Joseph Noronha Infrastructure in the IAF: A Force Multiplier – Air Marshal Raghu Rajan Empowerment of a Power House: The Infantry Battalion – Lt Gen Gautam Banerjee Network Centric Warfare – Lt Gen Prakash Katoch Chinese Innovations – Claude Arpi




Indian Defence Review, Volume 24 (4)


Book Description

In This Volume: The Big Picture Maoists And The Armed Forces On The Spot Report The Rajapaksa Model: Of Defeating Terror, Securing Peace and National Reconciliation Defense and Aerospace Digest Rheinmetall Thales KMW Arihant: The Annihilator India-Us Relations: Future Trajectory India's Foreign Policy: A Muddle For Sixty Two Years Kargil Controversy: Sorry State Of Higher Defense Management Defense Procurements: Learning From Past Mistakes Defense Psus: The Great Betrayal Defense Purchases: Time India Asserts Itself Incursions, Now And Then Prospects For Democratization In Myanmar: Impact On India Myanmar Going Nuclear China's String of Pearls Vs India's Iron Curtain Bows, Arrows And Nuclear Weapons "Is War Around The Corner?" Return Of Jiang China's Role As Pakistan's Nuclear And Missile Patron Resurrecting Afghanistan Recollections Of The 1971 War The Fragile Af-Pak Policy Some Reflections On Our Defense Policy India's Nuclear Doctrine Line Of Actual Control Or Contention? Pakistan: Dialogue Process Will End Only In Frustration Executive Summary By B Raman Gilgit-Baltistan: Pakistani Colony India Should Suspend Work Visas For Chinese October 1: Day Of Mourning Obama Veering Towards Neutrality On Arunachal Pradesh? A Professional Departs




Indian Defence Review Jan-Mar 1992 (Vol 7.1)


Book Description

IN THIS VOLUME • Command Failures – 1947-1990: A Disheartening Continuum • South Asian Security — Lt Gen Mathew Thomas • To End with a Whimper — AP VENKATESWARAN • Pakistan’s Complicity in Terrorism in J&K: The Evidence and the Law — AG NOORANI • Defence Expenditure – Some Issues — GC KATOCH • Military Expenditure and the Poor — Air Marshal Vir Narain • The Resource Crunch & Defence Management: Sustaining and Modernising the Army in Keeping with Security Commitments — Lt Gen KK Hazari • India at the Crossroads: Issues in the Articulation of a Viable Defence Strategy — Sudhir K Arora • Nuclear Developments: Weapons and Procurement of Fissile Material — Amrita Hazarika • Operation Rhino: A Case Study — Pravin Sawhney • Some Personal Thoughts on Command — Lt Gen Mathew Thomas • The Army and the Change: Criticism and Rebuttal — Lt Gen SC Sardeshpande • Airborne Forces: Part II AB Division in its Classic Role — Maj Gen Afsir Karim • Employment of Military Helicopters: Part II The Indian Experience & Compulsions — Brig Vijai K Nair • Weapons Overview: The Artillery Division — Maj Shankar Bhaduri VIEWPOINT • What Ails the Army’s Officer Class? • Repercussions on Frequent Deployment of Armed Forces in Aid to Civil Power




Indian Defence Review Apr-June 1992 (Vol 7.2)


Book Description

IN THIS VOLUME • Commonsense Approach to Indo-US Relations • Developing Indo-US Defence Cooperation Interview with the VCOAS — Lt Gen VK Sood COMMENTS AND REACTIONS • Lt Gen IS GILL, PVSM, AVSM, MC (Retd) • Lt Gen Dr ML CHIBBER, PVSM, AVSM (Retd) • Maj Gen E D’SOUZA, AVSM (Retd) • Air Marshal VIR NARAIN, PVSM, AVSM (Retd) • The Emerging US Presidential Doctrine 1993: ‘Punitive Amerika’— Shankar Bhaduri • Indian Strategic Culture — George Tanham • Through a Minefield on Tiptoes: Defence Implications of the Evolving Indian Foreign Policy — Sudhlr K Arora • India Pakistan Reconciliation: Its Impact on International Security — Lt Gen Dr ML Chibber • An Overview of India-China Relations: From When to Where? — Surjit Mansingh • Punjab – A State under Siege — Brig HS Sodhi • Plugging the Dyke: Operation RAKSHAK in Punjab — Maj Pravin Sawhney • Private Sector Ordnance Production — Col Ashoka Purl • Air Borne Forces - Part Ill The Current Requirements — Maj Gen Afsir Karim • The Artillery Division - Part II — Shankar Bhaduri VIEWPOINT • Selection is the Name of the Game - COAS 2005 • High Himalaya: The Bayonet End REVIEWS and CRITIQUES • War in High Himalaya: The Indian Army in Crisis, 1962 Reviewed by Lt Gen IS Giu • IPKF in Sri Lanka Reviewed by Admiral JG Nadkarni




Indian Defence Review Vol 22.4


Book Description

Indian Defence Review (IDR) is India's best-known defense journal. Over the year the journal has attained the "most quoted" status by defense and security analysts worldwide. The journal offers an incisive analysis of defense and politico-security affairs focused on Asia. In This Volume: DEMOCRACY AND SECURITY - Bharat Verma (Ed) INDIAN DEFENCE REVIEW COMMENT US POODLE OR CHINESE POODLE? - B Raman INDIAN INTELLIGENCE: The Fiddling Has to Stop... - B Raman IAF: Flying into the Future - Air Commodore Jasjit Singh DEFENCE and TECHNOLOGY MONITOR AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS - IDR Research Team BLUE PRINT FOR INDIAN AEROSAPCE INDUSTRY - Air Chief Marshal Fali Homi Major ENERGIZING AEROSPACE INDUSTRY: New Opportunities for Partnerships - Chris Chadwick INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO GLOBAL PARTNERSHIPS - Richard Kirkland TURBOMECA: HIGH PROFILE PRESENCE IN INDIA BEL GIVES RS.84.96 CR DIVIDEND TO GOVT EUROFIGHTER TYPHOON IN THE RACE MALABAR: Navy Tests Her Mettle - Captain Vinay Garg VARUNA 2007 THE NEW 'MAKE' PROCEDURE: A Retrograde Step - Maj Gen Mrinal Suman WARSHIP BUILDING: Cost and Time Overruns - Vice Admiral Rajeshwer Nath CHINA: Friend or Foe? - Claude Arpi MILITARY SERVICE PAY - Lt Gen Vijay Oberoi IMAGE OF THE ARMED FORCES - Group Capt AG Bewoor TIBET: The Real Issue - Maj Gen Sheru Thapliyal PUNJAB'S PAKISTAN - RSN Singh SRI LANKAN TAMILS: Anatomy of Indian Involvement - Anand K Verma NBC DISASTERS: Prevention and Management - Lt Gen Shankar Prasad PAKISTAN: A Convoluted Script - Wilson John DEFENCE UNIVERSITY FOR INDIA: An Appraisal of the Proposition - Maj Gen Mrinal Suman B Raman: BID TO ASSASSINATE BENAZIR LTTE'S ANURADHAPURA RAID JIHADI ANARCHY IN SWAT SABOTAGE IN NWFP







A Future for Peacekeeping?


Book Description

This study challenges the easy assumption that peacekeeping as we've known it in the past will be the 'pill for every ill' in the future. A 'new world order' means new types of conflict breaking out almost anywhere in a world that is more volatile and less predictable than before. Contributors to this volume argue that we need to get back to basics; that there are sobering lessons to be learnt from Somalia, the Lebanon and Cambodia; that we need to ask some fundamental questions. Can peacekeeping be 'reformed' or must it be totally 'reinvented'? Are soldiers the best peacekeepers and, if not, who should replace them?




Military Industry and Regional Defense Policy


Book Description

Military Industry and Regional Defense Policy re-examines military industrialization in the developing world, focusing on policy-making in producer states and the impact of security perceptions on such policy-making.Timothy D. Hoyt reassesses the role of regional state sub-systems in international relations, and recent historical studies of international technology and arms transfers. Looking at Israel, Iraq and India, the three most powerful regional powers in the Cold War era, he presesnts an expert analysis of the three-sided phenomena of the regional hegemony, the regional competitor and the small over-achiever.This new book breaks away from existing literature on military industries in the developing world, which has focused on their economic and development costs and benefits. These past studies have used primitive methodologies that focus on the production of complete weapons systems - a misleading gauge in a world of growing international defense cooperation. They have also ignored empirical evidence of the impact of local military industrial production on Cold War regional conflict, and of the defence planning and concerns that drove development of indigenous military industries in key regional powers. This new text delivers an incisive new perspective.