Indian Power Projection: Ambition, Arms and Influence (Whitehall Papers)
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.74 (662 Votes) |
Asin | : | B073FQ3H4M |
Format Type | : | |
Number of Pages | : | 206 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2014-01-14 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
About the AuthorShashank Joshi is a Senior Research Fellow of the Royal United Services Institute in London and a Research Associate at the Changing Character of War Programme at Oxford University. He is also a PhD candidate in the Department of Government, Harvard University. He received his BA from Gonville and Caius College, University of Cambridge and his MA from Harvard, where he was a Kennedy Scholar. He has lectured frequently at the UK Defence Academy and to other diplomatic, military, and academic audiences in the UK and abroad. He specialises in international security in South Asia and the Middle East, with a particular interest in Indian foreign and defence policy. His work has been published in a varie
He has lectured frequently at the UK Defence Academy and to other diplomatic, military, and academic audiences in the UK and abroad. His work has been published in a variety of peer-reviewed and policy journals, and in British, American and Indian newspapers.. Shashank Joshi is a Senior Research Fellow of the Royal United Services Institute in London and a Research Associate at the Changing Character of War
India is growing into one of Asia’s most important military powers. It draws extensively on the lessons of modern expeditionary operations, and considers how India’s growing interests might shape where and how it uses these evolving capabilities in the future. Indian Power Projection assesses the strength, reach and purposes of India's maturing capabilities. But India is still seen as a land power focused on long, disputed and militarised borders with Pakistan and China rather than the global military force it was in the first half of the twentieth century under British rule. India’s defence posture will continue to be shaped by local threats, rather than distant interests. Its defence budget has more than doubled in the past decade, and it imports more arms than anyone else in the world. Is this changing? India is acquiring increasing numbers of key platforms – aircraft carriers, amphibious ships, refuelling tankers and transport aircraft – that are extending its reach to the Indian Ocean littoral and beyond. Indian leaders remain uncomfortable with talk of military intervention and expeditionary warfare, associating these with colonial and superpower excess. This study finds that Indian power projection is in a nascent stage: limited in number, primarily of use against much-weaker adversaries, and deficient in some key supporting capabilities. But most accounts of this build-up have been impressionistic and p