First of all I must apologize for the long leave of absence. I returned from India in mid-July, took two to three weeks off and then was busy preparing my departure for the States (more on that soon). Here is a piece, however, that I published in June and forgot to put up here. As it is quite meaty, I have provided the link rather than reproduce the entire article here. It deals with AirSea Battle, the latest major innovation in American strategic thought when it comes to offsetting Chinese anti-access and area denial strategies in the Western Pacific.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj86iEdnOfjy-9aquH8Um4Li4RbvoMAoY7iDANag-JU_1SQPC6UsUjLQ-5mQtdf_iGjNf9fxXga6yJhpUxymjwyW11QB4iODEK7CDpweZ7oMYV9uLbwx6eC05lYb8Bes_FQ4s4DirdKzYY/s400/airsea.jpg)
Here is the summary:
AirSea Battle, the latest brainchild of the Pentagon, may seem far removed from the Indian military’s preoccupations. After all, India has only just initiated its transition to network-centric warfare, and the conflict scenarios it faces in the Indian Ocean Region do not seem to bear much resemblance to those currently rippling through the WPTO. Nevertheless, Indian strategists may well find that many of the tactical quandaries faced today by the US carrier fleets cruising through the Asia Pacific are destined to become those of the Indian Navy in the not-too-distant future. Pakistan’s troubling mimicry of Chinese naval strategy, whether it be through its emphasis on A2/AD or on subsurface warfare, would indicate that it too will attempt in time to offset India’s growing conventional and technological edge by brandishing its own “assassin’s mace”. Hopefully, by then, India will have devised its own AirSea Battle concept, enabling it to parry the blow and reassert sea control.
And, if you're still interested, here is the link:
http://www.idsa.in/issuebrief/AirSeaBattleConceptanditsRelevancetoIndia_irehman_070710
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