Changing Patterns of Warfare between India and Pakistan

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A01=Muhammad Saeed Uzzaman
A01=Rizwana Abbasi
Artificial Intelligence
artificial intelligence warfare
ASAT
Asia
Author_Muhammad Saeed Uzzaman
Author_Rizwana Abbasi
BMD
BMD System
Category=GTU
Category=JPH
Category=JPWS
Category=JW
China's BRI
Compellence
Compellence Strategy
Conflict
Counter-space Capabilities
Counterforce
Counterforce Strategies
Crisis
crisis stability mechanisms
Cyber
Deterrence
Deterrence Stability
deterrence stability in South Asia
Diplomat
Disruptive
Disruptive Technologies
Doctrine
Domain
Drone Technology
Dynamic
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fissile Material Stockpiles
Hypersonic Weapons
Impact
India
India's Nuclear Posture
Indian Nuclear
Insurgency
ISPR
Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant
Lahore Declaration
LAWS
Lethal Autonomous Weapon Systems
Military
Minimum Deterrence
MIRV
Missile
missile defence systems
Modern
Net Security Provider
New
NGO
NSG Waiver
Nuclear
nuclear deterrence theory
Nuclear Overhang
Overt Nuclearization
Pakistan
Pakistan's Deterrence
Proliferation
Security
South Asian security
Stability
Strategic
Strategy
Submarine
Surgical Strike
Technologies
Technology
unmanned aerial vehicles
Violence
Warfare
Weapon
Worst Case Scenario Analysis

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032374116
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 May 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Changing Patterns of Warfare between India and Pakistan analyzes how advanced nuclear technologies and the advent of disruptive technologies have affected the evolving conflict between India and Pakistan.

Advanced nuclear technologies such as nuclear submarines, aircraft carriers, ballistic missile defence systems (BMDs), multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicles (MIRVs), anti-satellite weapons (ASAT); and disruptive technologies such as hypersonic weapons, artificial intelligence (AI), lethal autonomous weapons (LAWs), unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) / drones and space-based and cyber technologies have all complicated crisis dynamics and the domain of warfare in the region. Further, the employment of India’s compellence strategy is an indication of a change in its stance that demonstrates smart/surgical strikes are now more likely. The phenomenon of surgical strikes raises the question of how disruptive technologies will be used to gain direct/indirect military control and hence challenge the existing status quo and deterrence stability. Against this backdrop, the authors predict how this conflict may develop in the future and evaluate the ways to stabilize deterrence and regulate the militarization of artificial intelligence and disruptive technologies between India and Pakistan.

This book will be of interest to all those researching and working in the fields of security studies, strategic studies, nuclear policy, deterrence thinking and proliferation/non-proliferation aspects of the nuclear weapons programme within South Asia and beyond. It will also be relevant for the academic community, policy-makers, diplomats, members of international non-governmental organizations (INGOs), professional research institutes and organizations working on India–Pakistan relations.

Rizwana Abbasi is an associate professor of Security Studies at the National University of Modern Languages (NUML), Islamabad, Pakistan. Previous publications include Building a Road to Nuclear Disarmament: Bridging the Gap Between Competing Approaches (2021), Nuclear Deterrence in South Asia: New Technologies and Challenges to Sustainable Peace (with Zafar Khan, 2020), and Pakistan and the New Nuclear Taboo: Regional Deterrence and the International Arms Control Regime (2012).

Muhammad Saeed Uzzaman is a lecturer and PhD scholar at NUML, Rawalpindi, Pakistan. His work has been published in many refereed research journals. He also works as a consultant and has conducted numerous projects in collaboration with various civil society organizations.

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