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Arming Without Aiming Indias Military Modernization 2nd Ed Cohen

  • SKU: BELL-11803746
Arming Without Aiming Indias Military Modernization 2nd Ed Cohen
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Arming Without Aiming Indias Military Modernization 2nd Ed Cohen instant download after payment.

Publisher: Brookings Institution Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.26 MB
Pages: 248
Author: Cohen, Stephen P.;Dasgupta, Sunil
ISBN: 9780815704027, 9780815704300, 9780815724926, 9781282748804, 9781299055971, 0815704305, 0815724926, 1282748807, 1299055974
Language: English
Year: 2010
Edition: 2nd ed

Product desciption

Arming Without Aiming Indias Military Modernization 2nd Ed Cohen by Cohen, Stephen P.;dasgupta, Sunil 9780815704027, 9780815704300, 9780815724926, 9781282748804, 9781299055971, 0815704305, 0815724926, 1282748807, 1299055974 instant download after payment.

India's growing affluence has led experts to predict a major rearmament effort. The second-most populous nation in the world is beginning to wield the economic power expected of such a behemoth. Its border with Pakistan is a tinderbox, the subcontinent remains vulnerable to religious extremism, and a military rivalry between India and China could erupt in the future. India has long had the motivation for modernizing its military—it now has the resources as well. What should we expect to see in the future, and what will be the likely ramifications? In Arming without Aiming, Stephen Cohen and Sunil Dasgupta answer those crucial questions.
India's armed forces want new weapons worth more than $100 billion. But most of these weapons must come from foreign suppliers due to the failures of India's indigenous research and development. Weapons suppliers from other nations are queuing up in New Delhi. A long relationship between India and Russian manufacturers goes back to the cold war. More recently, India and Israel have developed strong military trade ties. Now, a new military relationship with the United States has generated the greatest hope for military transformation in India.
Against this backdrop of new affluence and newfound access to foreign military technology, Cohen and Dasgupta investigate India's military modernization to find haphazard military change that lacks political direction, suffers from balkanization of military organization and doctrine, remains limited by narrow prospective planning, and is driven by the pursuit of technology free from military-strategic objectives. The character of military change in India, especially the dysfunction in the political-military establishment with regard to procurement, is ultimately the result of a historical doctrine of strategic restraint in place since Nehru. In that context, its approach of arming without strategic purpose remains viable as India seeks great-power accommodation of its rise and does not want to

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