Sunday, October 2, 2016

Why give so much cognisance to what a Khan says...??

We are a democracy and as such we are obligated to not stifle any view that is contrarian or conflicting to ours. But at least we can exercise a self imposed restraint on televising views of stupid people. Let us decide on an IQ threshold. Views of people having an IQ below a stipulated level should not be aired. 
If we could do this, at least we would be spared the tyranny of views of Salman Khan, Alia Bhatt, Mahesh Bhatt, Saif Ali, Kangana Ranout........., Robert Vadra.......Rakhi Sawant, Poonam Pan
These guys make a stupid comment and our media scampers to air it. Today it is Salman Khan, tomorrow it would be Rakhi sawant pontificating to the country on what needs to be done...Give us a break.

I can be completely wrong, but my considered belief is, anyone who can emote as directed has a diminutive cerebral capacity. And that is what these actors do, and they do it for money. If you dance on orders to save a life, like Basnati danced to save Viru's life, it is still pardonable. But not in any other situation.
Science has limitations. There is no steroid that can increase the power of the brain. So you can see, tho the body of Salman Khan is bulked up to twice of what he used to be, the size of his brain has remained same.
I feel incensed when these jokers make irresponsible statements. Money I guess gives the rich a misplaced sense of confidence to become social commentators.
Ironically, Baramullah firing is happening while I am scripting my comment.

Thursday, September 29, 2016

India Hits Back - Indeed a big Day after decades of political Indecisiveness

As facts stand, and as experts of military history would unhesitatingly corroborate, each time India has gained an upper edge in war (I deliberately refrain from saying "win"), as that was never the stated objective of any of the wars that we waged, Indian army has done it despite the political dispensation, despite the elephantine bureaucracy, despite being poorly equipped, despite not having any back up support and despite the red tape. 
And our politicians and bureaucrats, with support of media have always succeeded in appealing to our misplaced sense of nationalism, the recrudescence of which is seen both in times of a cricket match and war and in that order. The truth is, we sacrifice our soldiers for our lack to integrity, inactivity, inaction and red tape. In 1965, after having walked into Pakistan, Indian Army did not know what it was supposed to do. The objectives of war, which have to be stated before going to war, were not stated till what you can call the end of the war.
We have won wars only because of the personal valour of our soldiers. Sit with an old fauji, and he will fill you up with countless hair-raising tales of personal valour of our soldiers. In 1965, emboldened by the American magnanimity of donating Pakistan the M 47 and M48 Pattons, they misadventured to attack an unprepared India under surrogate leadership of a noble yet tentative politician called Shastri. 
We won, not because we had an equally powerful armoured division that could brave the Pattons. But we won, because our soldiers feeling so helpless against the Pattons and bereft of air support, lay with mines under tanks and blew themselves up. The Pattons - the first generation smart tanks made with light metals for smarter reaction and swifter shoot and scoot capability, while completely outsmarted the Indian Centurion Tank of British Vintage, but could not take the heat of a mine burst below it. We lost soldiers but captured tanks. The battle of Asal Uttar is testimony to this. Pakistan lost 200 tanks to the brave Indian soldier and India commemorated the feat by calling the place Patton Nagar.
I hope, this time was a paradigm shift. I hope this time a departure from the past. A win not due to personal valour, but due to military tactics, warcraft, political expediency, planning, well rigged fighting machine and clearly stated objectives of the strike. 
In our zeal for war jingoism, we must not be unmindful of the lives of our soldiers, and the plight of their families after they martyr themselves for those who create the situation for which they are martyred.
I also feel, in fact I am convinced, perhaps, the only positive aspect of our almost derelict caste system is valour. I feel, the Rajputs primed for valour from childhood, have a point to prove, and the brave Sikhs and hardy Jats will up the Rajputs, and each regiment, so loyal to its caste and so loyal to its tradition of valour, so loyal to its highly embellished regimental pedigree and its icons, misses no opportunity of leaving a legendary legacy.

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Churchill - Who says he had Foresight, Just a keen Opportunist and Risk Taker

Power will go to the hands of rascals, rogues and freebooters. All Indian leaders will be of low caliber and men of straw. They will have sweet tongues and silly hearts. They will fight amongst themselves for power and India will be lost in political squabbles. A day would come when even air and water would be taxed.”
India is merely a geographical expression. It is no more a single country than the equator.
-Winston Churchill


A man who I would, at least in the context above, consider down right stupid, and devoid of foresight - and what can be a more egregious reminder of the tyranny of his ineptitude - in handling India than the foregoing quote. But of course, he is believed in England to be the hero of the War and key in bringing Hitler down. I am also not too sure, if this so called victory over Hitler could have been achieve without the active participation of India on the side of England in the war.


A man who did his utmost in keeping India maimed and minioned for as long as possible is described as the principal proponent of free world by David Cameroon. But positions can be so divergent due to distinctive standpoints that sometimes it is impossible to make sense out of them.

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

News should not be Oprah Winfrey Show

I like Ravish Kumar's Prime Time. He makes lot more sense than any English news channel, particularly the Barkha Datta type news channels. His panelists are tempered and qualified to comment. He ensures, his panelists have some relevant experience unlike Saba Naqvi and Suhel Seth who sometimes are responding even before the question is tabled. His nasal accent also is a good reprieve from the high pitched anchoring drumming up hysteria on even mundane issues.
But his coverage  tonight on the Dalit Kabaddi issue of Gurgaon was too detailed for national television. There is no society of the world which is not afflicted with racism. Casteism is just a form of racism. And any such episode should be treated like a crime in a manner prescribed by law and justice should be meted out with greater promptness than usual, so that any retaliation restrained and political polarisation preempted. 
But a protracted coverage with gory details is just too fissiparous and is at best avoidable particularly at a time when social equations are fragile. What needs to be laboriously covered is the punishment meted out to the culprits. The justice dispensed..... or the details of the delay.....
Besides news should not become Oprah Winfrey show.

Monday, August 15, 2016

Pathetic Speech by Pranabda

I have one big issue with Indian people. We don't take public jobs seriously. We lack sincerity of purpose. We also treat others casually. A country that can beat any other of the world on accumulated intellectual capital, has a President, a career politician, who is struggling to read from the prompter and nervously fiddling with pencil throughout his eve of Independence Day speech. Why can he not spend a month in memorising a speech and deliver it immaculately to the people of his country? Why does he have to fumble and struggle to read it? Why can he not just keep it simple and speak his mind, rather than parrot a written speech? Why does he not treat the Billion strong peoples seriously and with respect? Because it is not merit that saddles you in such positions - there are multiple extraneous factors - so much of balancing that Pranabda has dextrously done all his life, to be rewarded with this position. Of course, at the route of the malaise is, that we don't treat our right to franchise seriously. If we vote for reasons other than the pure merit of the candidate, Pranabdas, Pratibha Patils and Gianijis shall be the natural outcome.

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Make RBI Governor Rajan the Chief of Niti Ayog

I used to always tell my team not to fret on non issues. Wherever you are, build robust systems and processes and get to the next level. If Rajan Guv RBI has done that, there is no need to fret, who will fill the space that he may have to vacate. If he has been able to explain, what a Central Bank needs to facilitate and monitor in an emerging economy even to his direct reports, then he has pretty much achieved what he should have, and who the mercurial Modi government or a whimsical PMO installs in Guv's saddle becomes irrelevant. 
Rajan on the other hand, loves to speak like an archetypical thinker and planner more than a rigorous executor. He might be a virtuous contender for Chief of Neeti Ayog, where the current incumbent Kant, who has to his credit achievements like running of the "Gods own country" campaign, "Incredible India" campaign and of course his own image and perception campaign, can give a run for their money to Piyush Pandey or Prasoon Joshi. Under Kant's leadership, I doubt if any solid work would be done at the Neeti Ayog. And that because, in positions where leadership is thrust from the top, teams tend to align with the leaders attitude, unlike where leadership evolves from the bottom. So today, everyone at the Ayog will be busy planning how best to showcase the work done, and not planning for the future.

Thursday, March 10, 2016

Whose Kanhaiya was he Anyways

I have never shied from expressing contrarian views. Then why should today be any different. That Kanhaiya would appeal to me was always a foregone conclusion. I hate jesters and I hate students who dabble in politics and I also hate vehemently playing to the gallery and vending half truths or blending fact with fiction. But in this case it upsets me no end to think that many an educated person is lending ears to Kanhaiya. A glib talker, with a demeanour reminiscent of his mofussil town roots, which seemingly don’t threaten his metro counterparts, he is feeding strong on the errors of commission of the BJP and the ham handed manner in which their  crack teams have handled the situation. BJP acting in concert with its youth wing the ABVP, set out to demonise a relatively unknown student but landed up heroising him.

One thing is clear, JNU is offering an easy to pursue curriculum to it's students else the time they spend in dhaba politics would certainly not be at their disposal. The manner in which they are debating stupid political issues is clearly indicative of a lack of rigor in the curriculum. And also indicative of the fact that they are basking is some pseudo intellectualism which when at its best gets you a seat in the civil service of India, by becoming a part of which, you do what the government has done to JNU, that is charge you with obsolete sections on sedition, usually not maintainable in court of law and perpetuating this vicious cycle of events.

I can never imagine students of premium technical institutions like IITs or IIMs doing what is happening in JNU. In these colleges the curriculum is so rigorous that you cannot think of anything but academics.  The narrative is completely different for humanities where lack of rigour encourages students to play truant, teachers to stay away from teaching and both to dabble in fringe politics. These streams I think all over the country have this reputation. The political parties also are eager to take student leaders under their patronage. And given that politics is one of the most lucrative professions these days - the wealth accumulated by the Gandhis, or Mayawati or Jayalalitha or that amassed by Vadra in such short span is a feat that no business man with even Buffett’s acumen can ever dream of - he who is thick skinned enough, will surely like to join it.

The above not-withstanding, I am not advocating that students should not be politically active or politically conscientious. They are future of the country, and their voice must be heard in moulding the future of the country. But main stream politics with political parties openly supporting student factions on educational campuses is a premature proposition. I think the Lyngdoh Committee also had similar recommendations. The commission was unambiguous in stating in Cl 6.3 : "Dissociation of Student Elections and Student Representation from Political Parties".

Particularly when students as a class are inherently recidivist rebels. Their brand of politics is all about rabble rousing and rowdyism. Their age is such. And this is the innate strain that they take with them when they are catapulted into main stream politics from student activism. And that precisely is the reason for our politicians behaving the way they do. Hence, one way to create a different genre of politics is by banning actual politics in these breeding grounds themselves. But to ensure, that opinion of youth is not stifled and their voices are not muffled, and their participation in the making of the future of the country is not curbed, universities must invent formats of the shadow politics. A genre of clean politics, consensual politics. politics of polite and intelligent debate, of dissent and of decent discourse.

As for Kanhaiya - the Bhumihar from Begusarai - he is savvy enough to keep shifting the goal posts with an adeptness to avoid coming in the direct line of fire. And BJP and it's youth wing ABVP stands in clay footed jeopardy to the 360 degree shoot and scoot by Kanhaiya. In his post bail speech he in a bold and brazen fashion mocked Modi and gave a completely new dimension to the whole debate. The initial issue was simple. It was about anti-India slogans. He turned the whole thing into pro and anti JNU and pro and anti development debate.  Whether he supported sloganeering that encouraged dismemberment of India and whether he memorialised Agzal Guru as martyr were clearly issues he completely skirted. On the other hand he gave a nouveau and poetic twist to Azadi reflecting bourgeois aspirations that resounded well with his audience. Punctuating his diatribe with anecdotal evidence to an audience that continuously cheered him and jeered the establishment.

Friday, February 26, 2016

The Antics of Smriti Irani

Lot of thinking people have been critical about Smriti Irani's speech due to the theatrical content and antics. They may not be wrong. I go a step further. I don't even like rhetoric. I like Just facts which also should be presented shorn of superfluous verbiage with an approach that is brutally rational. But demagoguery has existed world-wide. Hasn't it? Antics also prevail. The US Elections bear such an eloquent testimony to it. Look at Clinton and Trump how they dramatically gesticulate to the gallery and get even with each other. So why condemn Smriti?
The above notwithstanding, no one can say, she was not prepared. She had done her homework. She was thorough with her facts. She had even sequenced them properly. In a country where even the Parliament is rowdy, and rabble rousing is a pass time in which even the fully employed find time to indulge, where facts get morphed with fiction so quickly, such orchestrated rebuttals are the only way to get your point across. 
This time the walk-out was because the opposition was stumped by this sudden volley of facts, temper, emotion and sentimentalism. Kharge to khada hi raha gaya.


Thursday, February 25, 2016

The Relevance of Mahabharata

Each passing day as events unfold, I become more and more enamoured by the Mahabharata. How contextual it was then 5,000 years ago, and how so relevant it is even today. If the Mahabharata took place, why has man not learned from it, if its importance is allegorical, how could Vyas so successfully perpetuate the context.
Sonia Gandhi I would imagine is worse than Dhritarashtra. Actually, Dhritrashtrianism is usually a male trait. Women are more sensitised to the limitations of competence of their children. They may love them with their life, but unlike men for whom a child is en extension of personal ego, they are always reluctant to foist them on a platform where they will not fit or worthily justify.

Friday, February 12, 2016

I was once on a flight with RK Pachauri. I think I was traveling to Frankfurt. I was in business class and he was in First Class. I wonder, what is contributes to be able to afford first class. It is quite an irony, that not for profit organisations can always spend more than those for profit.
By qualification, he is an industrial engineer.  Some of them are hoaxes in the name of engineers. He cooked up data.
He has managed weird awards including one from the President of Somaliland. This is called being resourceful in India and you should be able to manage the people who matter. And the people who matter can be managed in India only in one way : late jaao.
I am enamoured by the bold girl who is taking up cudgels against a figure like Pachauri. I pity her for her plight, as Pachauri is one of the ugliest persons I have come across in life. A 74 year old left side hair right side combing man, trying to use his position to force sexual favours.
Men : work hard. Do sport. Build your personalities, build some character, be bold and above all, be men of conviction, and you will have girls falling all over you right from your teens. In India, mothers coax boys to just study, and pass exams or wrangle positions by sycophancy. Then they use these positions to exploit girls. A small percentage of girls is willing to make a compromise in return for a simplified life at work place, most others detest. Some take a stand like this girl did.
But what a pity, she seems to be fighting a lone battle. Women are not supporting her, and shamefully, men are also not supporting her. A man not standing up for a woman's honour is like being a tacit accomplice in the molestation of your daughter, wife or mother. 
It is always an ecosystem that is to blame, but it saddens me nonetheless.

The Judiciary needs to Work more

Since in India, Judiciary is held in high esteem, and there are cultural issues of not questioning why the Judicial system of the country is failing the country, the failure of this arm of governance has far reaching consequences. 

While exoneration of a recklessly driving Khan is widely evident failure, there are many more nuanced ones that we don't see. One example is the NPAs of various banks. Today, particularly the PSU banks are sinking due to NPAs, their plummeting stock prices too have started reflecting this, but if the judicial processes were smarter and swifter and structure of the legal system not meant to protect the defaulter, the NPAs would have been less than half. 

What you treat as NPA to a large extent depends on the judicial / legal system of the country. In our country, it is almost impossible to nail the big defaulters. Then it is upto to the system, which loan it starts to recognise as non performing, and decides to no longer chase. If judicial system was quicker, what the banks recognise as NPA today would be perhaps less than half.

But who hauls up the judiciary. They are still taking 3 months summer vacations like nursery toddlers.

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

BEATING THE RETREAT : OUR SOLDIERS ROCK

Beating the Retreat : Our Soldiers Rock 

While historically and figuratively, it is the joy of retreating to the barracks after the last bugler sounds his bugle. But literally It is a musical extravaganza that I always treat my senses to. And this years' was a pleasant departure from the past, with stiffened by training soldiers deciding to showcase their own flair for the music more than just playing colonial era martial music. So it was excellent overall, with particularly the BSF's richly caparisoned camels charming me the most. It seems, they are fighting the sun from setting. 

But in public functions, I always wonder, why our politicians who are usually plonked on the front row seats, sit with such sullen expressions on their face. These politicians who don't tire smiling out of sycophancy infront of their bosses don't even twitch much less smile even on occasions like the Republic Day parade or the beating the retreat, where one is filled with pride for valour, training and excellence of our armed forces. 

A cadaverous Pranab Mukherjee barely managed to dismount his vintage carriage and kept his left shoulder drooping in a lousy posture reeking of mental disengagement throughout the function. Modi a media marvel was so overly conscious of his mien under gaze of the cameras that he kept tracking the cameras from the corner of his eyes. The stoic Rajnath Singh stuck to his arms folded posture, with never even a finger moving to acknowledge to the harmony, tonality or timbre of the beautiful music played. The fossilised Kalraj Misra. I don't know who invites him for all functions. He is always there with a constipated expression of when this misery will end. 

But who cares. The day was carried by the soldier who did it with the flourish that is expected of him. And of course the last tune - Saare Jahaan Se Achha - as expected, played together by all bands as the grand finale stole the show.

Saturday, December 12, 2015

ON THE QUESTION OF TOLERANCE


https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BzdnGoNv7vAiRE1ScGNZMExBWTg/view?usp=sharing

Monday, November 9, 2015

A sad day for India, Lalu a convicted Politician wins

To me, the outcome of the Bihar Elections has been both discordant and grating. I am disheartened although not dismayed, as the outcome was a highly probable one. Nitish- Lalu combine had ensured vote portability. A large majority seeking development voted for Nitish, and the more parochial ones voted for Lalu. I would actually have been very pleasantly surprised if the MGB, the grand alliance, so skilfully coalesced by Nitish Kumar would have lost. That would have signalled perhaps a good departure from caste based politics to clean politics. Of course the question then would be, is BJP clean, and the answer is no.

Rabri Devi's advise to Lalu

The word communal has, due to protracted overuse by various political parties particularly the Congress, to brand the right brigade has acquired a pejorative connotation, but actually communalism is the back bone of democratic processes. A democracy is all about issues of the a community or commune, which does not mean a disperse religious group. 

Electorates world over are wise, because collective wisdom is better than individual. But it is distraughtly when collective wisdom glosses over anomalies and legitimises criminality making a travesty of a judicial system.


The latest example is Lalu Prasad Yadav leading the MGB to a landslide victory, despite the fact that he is convicted in the Fodder Scam case and was actually on bail while he was addressing rallies.

Thursday, November 5, 2015

THE REAL REASON

At IIT Kanpur, I had a Prof of Sociology, whose father in Law had been the President of India. The latter having the reputation of scholarliness, I once asked my Prof if he was in awe of not the rank - as I knew he would never be - but the scholarliness of his Father in Law.  “Just a mediocre scholar” is how he referred to his father in law, purely in his objective assessment and not out of any prejudice or disregard for the person.

That is when I learnt the term ‘mediocre scholar’. I think, all academics returning their awards are merely mediocre scholars. How can you possibly return that you have already enjoyed for so long. Something that is just a belated recognition of your erudition or contribution to society as the case may be. If this was given by a King, you could perhaps return it, but given by a democratically elected government means, it is recognition given by the people. You could perhaps return the monetary prize which ironically most scholars are not returning. 

We mostly fail to identify the root cause of the problem. All this has been triggered by the Dadri incident. I don’t understand how this incident is different from a murder of a person on the suspicion that he has stolen the neighbours hen or buffalo. I know, in villages, stealing buffaloes is not uncommon, and often leads to murders. How is Dadri different from a murder or lynching of a person who has protested on his land being encroached by a local ganglord, or, in a more urbane setting, not served a drink after closing hours of the bar, or how is this different from killing for wrong parking of a car? How is Dadri more intolerant than killing of an RTI activist for demanding information that he is entitled to by law? What provokes such reaction from the literati today? Is it triggered by a notion of elitism……

Why were awards not returned by after Godhra or Taj Bombing or the mutilation of the bodies of soldiers by Pak forces.

Have such incidents after a communal flare up never happened in India? Have such incidents never happened in any other country? Is there some government that can guarantee that it can completely curb such betrayal of human values and prevent any such madness from happening during their regimes.

What are the two issues that need to be dealt at this point of time :

1.Why do such incidents happen?
2.What is the trigger for this hue and cry now and award returning wave?

Such incidents happen, because there is a general belief in the people that there is a weak rule of law in the country regardless of the government that is in power. One can get away with impunity, should one have numbers with him. The law will be slow if not subservient to them if they have some numbers, political power or pelf backing them. In a democracy, numbers always give legitimacy to the most irrational of demands.


The trigger for the hue and cry is not the sudden deterioration of the situation. It is the silence of a PM who is otherwise so verbose that he is always talking. Earlier there was a PM who was not only dumb but docile. Now we have one, who misses not one occasion to proclaim that he is a braveheart. But his silence too may also not be without reason and may be calibrated to play to a particular constituency. And I think all protests are for that silence.

Saturday, October 24, 2015

India must create her own Silk Routes

A very large class of authors of all hues have hinted in their work that India is intellectually richer than China. And vast bodies of works which have examined the past for their historical  and allegorical importance have indicated the same. While on such issues, hard empirical data may never be available, the purpose of this blog piece of mine is not really that. While the edge India may have in that arena not-withstanding, there is clearly another where China eminently excels India today, as much it did in the past and that is Geo-Politics.
While in the blog that I penned just a few days ago, I did say, just like the Soviets, the Indian army must modernize and sweat while in peace, so that it can be galvanised into action when needed in no time, just like Russia did, to dash the American dream of hegemonising Syria. 

Having said that, I believe, more than a well oiled, fleet footed and modern fighting machine, what India needs is a make over of its egregiously week willed geopolitical strategy. In fact it needs a complete re-think and make over, something that took off well with Modi’s ascendancy, but lost steam and direction somewhere down the road.

Post the cartographic mis-adventure that the British did with India, just before they decided to leave India to her destiny, carving out an amorphous Pakistan and Bangladesh from within her, one of the most brazen exercises of creation of nation states based not on ethnicity (which is usually the case) but based on religion, a robust geo-political strategy has become an imperative for the following reasons :

1.Creating a sphere of influence so that wars don’t take place, there is peace and prosperity

2.Ensuring that the 1.25 bn and growing Indians have more land and resources tied to land to live on than to constantly jostle with each other for the same piece 

Geopolitics today is a very subtle art of diplomacy and can help create a virtual sphere of influence and an ecosystem that attenuates the pressure on finite indigenous resources.

Vietnam, Lagos and Cambodia were under the Chinese sphere of influence once upon a time. Nepal and Tibet were under the Indian sphere of influence. While India has lost both, China has gained not only them, but Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Mongolia, parts of south eastern Russia, Pakistan, PoK, several African countries and much more.

While the American sphere of influence once upon a time followed its US Dollar denominated aid, direct or indirect military intervention, the Chinese model is far more sustainable as it rode on foreign investments, trade and the Chinese diaspora, which is what I call the modern silk routes.

Despite India being the spiritual beacon for centuries to several countries of SE Asia including Japan and China, she could never create her own silk routes, and consequently failed to perpetuate her sphere of influence. Despite her people being personally more productive and innovative, the state failed them, right from the time of Nehru, when a protracted political mis-judgement inflicted a humiliating defeat on India in the 1962 Indo-China war. 


If we want to alleviate poverty and suffering from the country and if we seek to provide a basic standard of living to the poor, whose number is increasing every year, the modern silk routes that we create which help us exploit resources overseas and would be as important a factor as growing the domestic economy.

Friday, October 16, 2015

Russia fights for Hegemony

Russia under Putin is a country under a virulent warrior. While this is known that he drives her like his personal fiefdom, he also tries to lord over her neighbours, like even the mighty Czars would not have. 

The Syrian war theatre and the IS unified command, both have fuelled Russia’s immense need to one, make the brute military power that she was always known for felt again and two, even revive the hegemony that she had long lost in international matters. And this under the leadership of a man who seems to have reclaimed her for himself, as though she was always his a ominous development. 

While Putin is known to flaunt his rippling though ageing biceps, that he would do the same for his country was something that I had not imagined. Will this herald the revival of the cold war era is something that we have to wait and watch. I am certain, had it been Bush at the helm of American decision making, the Cold war would have by now been escalated to a Hot war, with the American forces standing face to face with Russians in Syria. 


What both countries - Russia and USA - have very intelligently managed is, their fight for hegemony has always been offshore - Vietnam first, then Afghanistan and now Syria. They have diligently managed to keep the war off their own grounds. Putin may well have been itching for an opportunity of this sort. He had strolled into Crimea and Ukraine and stays on unchallenged. But both these shameless incursions were localised affairs. Now he is taking USA head on under the ruse of helping the Bashar regime on invitation. 


With the annexation of Crimea, Putin added more than 2 mn Russians in one stroke to a country, demographically de-growing and reeling under a death rate of 14.7 double that of the United States. 

But there is a lesson to learn from this. When in peace, his army was sweating. And that is why he took just hours to mobilize jets into the Syrian sky, and Navy into the Caspian sea. India should also use her time of peace to rally its strength and conserve it to use later as a deterrent for border ingressions and skirmishes. I would not recommend Indian army marching into Tibet or annexing Pakistan, even though I personally believe them to be natural corollaries of acquired power, and the only way to ensure lasting peace. But the bloodshed and loss of lives that will bring this about is something that I will never be willing to swallow.