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ID:
176010
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Summary/Abstract |
For China to realise its millennium goal, it needs to radiate its influence globally and simultaneously engage internally with the local population to ensure social stability. COVID-19 has disrupted China’s dream of showcasing to the world a model state with Chinese characteristics. Influence operations thus form the basis of curating and presenting a credible image of the Communist Party of China (CPC) besides altering the behaviour of its adversaries.
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2 |
ID:
166130
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Summary/Abstract |
The world has been devising strategy of winning without fighting. Over last three decades, terms like hybrid warfare, unrestricted warfare, asymmetric warfare, information warfare and political warfare have been used to define future warfare. At the heart of these is technology that has fuelled competitions and conflicts. The technological innovations have closely networked government, people and financial institutions. It has, for the first time, exposed people, political leadership, governance structures and economy to new generation threats emanating from non-contact warfare (NCW). Autonomous systems, miniaturisation, stealth, speed and stand-off precision strike, incognito platforms have changed the character of war. The technological developments have increased accessibility to state competitors and non-state actors, a fact that risks eroding military response capabilities. In such a dynamic and ever evolving world, non-contact warfare is being rampantly used and abused by all actors to remain ahead in the dominance race. It is imperative for India to evolve policies to thwart impending threats from NCW.
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