Context
- The article analyses India’s need to strengthen deterrence against China by reforming its defence-industrial base, doctrinal choices, and enabling military capabilities.
- Source: The key to India’s multi-domain deterrence, capabilities, The Hindu
Hard choices in defence strategy
- Strategic dilemma: India faces a widening capability gap with China and must decide what to buy, build, and prioritise amid rapidly evolving technology
- Technology-doctrine gap: Technological change is outpacing doctrinal evolution, complicating long-term defence planning
- Deterrence objective: India must reconceptualise doctrinal and technological choices to build credible deterrence against the PLA
Three strategic approaches
Bold approach:
- Technological leapfrogging: Invest in entirely new war-fighting technologies
- Risk factor: Failure could create capability gaps and weaken deterrence
- Industrial limitation: India lacks scale and speed in production to match China
- Potential gain: Success could reduce the capability gap
Conservative approach:
- Integration strategy: Combine emerging technologies with existing systems
- Focus areas: Cyber, space, and electronic warfare to digitise battlespace
- Outcome: Improves efficiency but does not shift balance of power
- Suitability: More relevant for short conflicts (e.g., with Pakistan)
Middle-path approach:
- Hybrid model: Retain legacy platforms while investing in enabling layers
- Core concept: Build capabilities gradually toward multi-domain operations (MDO)
- Challenge: MDO is difficult to define and operationalise
- Outcome: Leads to evolution into a syncretic multi-domain force
Concept of enabling layers in warfare
- Command and Control (C2): Centralised coordination of military operations
- ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance): Real-time battlefield awareness
- Strike layer: Integration of missiles, aircraft, and drones for deep strikes
- Close-battle layer: Tanks, artillery, and infantry for frontline combat
- Logistics layer: Infrastructure, supply chains, and rear-area support
- Nuclear deterrence: Compensation for conventional asymmetry with China
Systemic challenges in India’s deterrence posture
Industrial limitations:
- Structural issue: Defence-industrial base not designed for speed and scale
- Key gaps: Missiles, munitions, drones, ISR and C2 networks, legacy platforms
- Requirement: Expansion through private sector participation
Procurement inefficiencies:
- Constraint: Existing system restricts rather than enables military evolution
- Reform need: Faster, adaptive procurement aligned with technological needs
- Budget strategy: Increase spending with prioritisation of key deterrent capabilities
Institutional coordination:
- Alignment need: Synchronisation of R&D, industry, doctrine, and military structure
- Strategic clarity: National security institutions must define deterrence goals collectively
- Political-military interface: Military must communicate costs of inaction and trade-offs
Reforms for defence-industrial strengthening
Policy reforms:
- Administrative changes: Reduce red tape and ensure budgetary stability
- Contractual support: Provide long-term contracts for specialised platforms
- Private sector role: Recognise efficiency advantages over government sector
Time sensitivity:
- Shrinking window: Delay in reforms may worsen capability gaps
- Incremental gains: Gradual improvements can yield long-term benefits
Fixing critical enabling layers
C4ISR vulnerability:
- Weakness: India’s C4ISR systems are underdeveloped
- Strategic importance: “The side that can see can fight”
- Requirement: Affordable, expendable ISR platforms in large numbers
Electronic warfare integration:
- Capability need: Cyber, space, and electronic warfare to degrade enemy ISR
- Layered approach: Enhance own ISR while disrupting adversary’s systems
Strike and battlefield integration:
- Deep strike: Missiles, aircraft, and drones to disrupt enemy depth
- Frontline combat: Coordinated use of tanks, artillery, and infantry
Logistics and sustainment:
- Importance: Integrated logistics essential for prolonged conflict
- Infrastructure: Supply chains and rear-area systems must be robust
Nuclear dimension:
- Strategic role: Nuclear deterrence compensates for conventional gaps
- Balance factor: Necessary against a nuclear adversary like China
Industrial capacity and deterrence gap
Missile inventory gap:
- China advantage: Large missile stockpile and high production capacity
- India’s risk: Limited surge capacity in prolonged conflict
Production imperative:
- Policy need: Incentivise defence production through targeted investments
- Strategic risk: Weak industrial base may embolden China in prolonged war scenarios
Doctrinal and structural considerations
Focus shift:
- Priority change: Move beyond service-specific acquisitions to system-wide capability building
- Enabling layers: Central to effective deterrence
Theatre-isation limitation:
- Structural reform: Theatre commands alone insufficient
- Requirement: Deep doctrinal convergence to support multi-domain capability
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