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26th February
Temple entry for women : Gender Equality v/s Religious Freedom
[26th February 2026] The Hindu OpED: Balancing faith, dignity and constitutional rights?
Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.
What are carbon capture and utilization technologies?
Artificial Intelligence (AI) Breakthrough
How are India firms training LLMs?
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Middle East
India–France Sign Amending Protocol to Update DTAC
Defence Sector – DPP, Missions, Schemes, Security Forces, etc.
India Conducts VAJRA PRAHAR with US and DHARMA GUARDIAN with Japan
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Middle East
India and GCC Sign Joint Statement Launching FTA Negotiations
Women empowerment issues – Jobs,Reservation and education
Women’s Economic Opportunity Laws Only Half Enforced Globally
SC Registers Suo Motu Case Over NCERT Textbook Reference
23rd February
Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc
[23rd February 2026] The Hindu OpED: Parliament’s historic law; an extended wait for women
Freedom of Speech – Defamation, Sedition, etc.
Protecting the Freedom of speech of MPs
Artificial Intelligence (AI) Breakthrough
AI and the brain: similar in scale, different in design
Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News
Unearthing the Silent Splendour of the Hoysalas
Why Does Wildfire Smoke Swirl Only One Way?
Proteins Tweaked as Quantum Sensors Inside the Body
Textile Sector – Cotton, Jute, Wool, Silk, Handloom, etc.
Textile Mills Closure in Tamil Nadu
Black Money – Domestic and International Efforts
Enforcement Directorate Flags 8 Priority Areas for 2026
21st February
Languages and Eighth Schedule
[21st February 2026] The Hindu OpED: ‘Bhasha’ matters in India’s multilingual moment
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
Why India chose to be an observer in Trump’s Board of Peace
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Iran
Strait of Hormuz, key to global energy security, in spotlight amid Iran crisis
Panchayati Raj Institutions: Issues and Challenges
Vibrant Villages Programme Phase II launched to strengthen border areas
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
India attends U.S. Board of Peace meeting as observer
Panchayati Raj Institutions: Issues and Challenges
Bela Gram becomes Maharashtra’s first net zero village
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Australia
COAS visit to Australia strengthens defence ties
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
India joins Pax Silica for resilient electronics supply chains
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UPSC Ranker Mentorship Civilsdaily18th February
Foreign Policy Watch: United Nations
[18th February 2026] The Hindu OpED: The new world disorder, from rules to might
Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities
The 1946 Royal Navy revolt: solidarity amid sharpening polarisation
Foreign Policy Watch: India-France
India and France upgrade their ties to strategic partnership
Right To Privacy
Ramdev’s Personality Rights Plea before Delhi High Court
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Iran
Iran briefly closes the Strait of Hormuz amid US nuclear talks
Artificial Intelligence (AI) Breakthrough
AI Mission 2.0 and Expansion of Common Compute
Civil Aviation Sector – CA Policy 2016, UDAN, Open Skies, etc.
India’s First Private Helicopter Assembly Line at Vemagal
Freedom of Speech – Defamation, Sedition, etc.
Supreme Court on Fraternity & Public Speech by Constitutional Functionaries
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UPSC Ranker Mentorship Civilsdaily16th February
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Middle East
[16th Februrary 2026] The Hindu OpED: The UAE-India corridor is sparking a growth story
Renewable Energy – Wind, Tidal, Geothermal, etc.
What are bio-based chemicals and enzymes
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
Ambiguities in US-India trade deal
Food Procurement and Distribution – PDS & NFSA, Shanta Kumar Committee, FCI restructuring, Buffer stock, etc.
CBDC Based Public Distribution System Launched in Gujarat
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
Indian Origin Leaders, Immigrants and the Global Ecosystem Debate
MGNREGA Scheme
PIL Challenging VB-G RAM G Act, 2025
Electronic System Design and Manufacturing Sector – M-SIPS, National Policy on Electronics, etc.
India’s Power Generation Capacity Update
Artificial Intelligence (AI) Breakthrough
AI Impact Summit 2026
17th October
Climate Change Negotiations – UNFCCC, COP, Other Conventions and Protocols
[17th October 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: Ensure safeguards for India’s carbon market
Finance Commission – Issues related to devolution of resources
Restoring fiscal space for the states
Empower ASI to do its job
Air Pollution
Carbon Di-oxide Levels in 2024 set new records: WMO
Non-Aligned Movement (NAM)
Forest Conservation Efforts – NFP, Western Ghats, etc.
CG HC upholds cancellation of Forest Rights of Villagers
Wetland Conservation
Sustainable Aquaculture in Mangrove Ecosystems (SAIME) Initiative
Indian Missile Program Updates
Akash Missile System
15th October
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Australia
[15th October 2025 ] The Hindu Op-ed: Powering up the Australia-India clean energy partnership
Nobel and other Prizes
How innovation drives economic growth
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Afghanistan
Complacity not diplomacy-India’s engagement with Taliban
Air Pollution
Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP)
Judicial Reforms
Legal Information Management and Briefing System (LIMBS)
ISRO Missions and Discoveries
Crew Escape System (CES) in the Gaganyaan Mission
Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.
What are Climate Tipping Points?
13th October
RTI – CIC, RTI Backlog, etc.
20 years of Right to Information (RTI)
Innovations in Sciences, IT, Computers, Robotics and Nanotechnology
RRI technique yields Certified Randomness with one Qubit
Promoting Science and Technology – Missions,Policies & Schemes
Maitri II Research Station in Antarctica
Volga River
Digital India Initiatives
[pib] Bharat Taxi Initiative
Tribes in News
Tribes in news: Siddi
7th October
Judicial Reforms
[7th October 2025 ] The Hindu Op-ed: Calling out the criticism of the Indian Judiciary
The Crisis In The Middle East
Why Trump’s proposed stabilization force in Gaza will not find things easy
Nobel and other Prizes
The Nobel laurates’ work has redefined the immune system itself
Organic Farming – Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojna (PKVY), NPOF etc.
[pib] 10 Years of Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana (PKVY)
Higher Education – RUSA, NIRF, HEFA, etc.
[pib] PM-SETU Scheme
Tax Reforms
SC to examine Constitutional Validity of Securities Transaction Tax (STT)
Indian Missile Program Updates
India’s Dhvani Hypersonic Missile
New Species of Plants and Animals Discovered
News specie “Chlorophytum vanapushpam” found
3rd October
J&K – The issues around the state
[3rd October 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: Should Ladakh get statehood?
Waste Management – SWM Rules, EWM Rules, etc
Cost of convenience, health hazards a a side effect of using digital tools
US policy wise : Visa, Free Trade and WTO
Can diaspora please stand up
Mother and Child Health – Immunization Program, BPBB, PMJSY, PMMSY, etc.
50 years of Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) Scheme
Global Geological And Climatic Events
What are Flying Rivers/ Atmospheric Rivers?
Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.
Climate Models and Their Accuracy
Pulses Production – Subramanian Committee, Eco Survey, etc.
[pib] Centre approves National Pulses Mission
Roads, Highways, Cargo, Air-Cargo and Logistics infrastructure – Bharatmala, LEEP, SetuBharatam, etc.
[pib] BRO Project Swastik marks 65 years of service
Promoting Science and Technology – Missions,Policies & Schemes
SARAL tool to simplify Scientific Research Papers
30th September
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Africa
[30th September 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: SSTC is more than a diplomatic phrase
Terrorism and Challenges Related To It
An anti-terror role that defies logic
Agricultural Sector and Marketing Reforms – eNAM, Model APMC Act, Eco Survey Reco, etc.
More Women employed in agriculture, but half of them are unpaid
Gravitational Wave Observations
Laser Interferometer Lunar Antenna (LILA) Project
Water Management – Institutional Reforms, Conservation Efforts, etc.
[pib] Siphon-Based Thermal Desalination System
Foreign Policy Watch: India-SAARC Nations
Kokrajhar-Gelephu and Banarhat-Samtse Railway Lines to Bhutan
Wetland Conservation
Bihar adds 2 more Wetlands to Ramsar List
The Crisis In The Middle East
What is Wassenaar Arrangement?
World’s highest bridge opens to traffic in China
21st September
9th September
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Iran
[9th September 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: Iran and India, ancient civilizations and new horizons
Women empowerment issues – Jobs,Reservation and education
The ‘domestic sphere’ in a new India
Higher Education – RUSA, NIRF, HEFA, etc.
Ranking Pitfalls: India Rankings (2025) based on NIRF
Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc
Election of the Vice-President
Innovations in Biotechnology and Medical Sciences
Neurogenesis in the Human Brain
WHO’s Model List of Essential Medicines (EML)
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
US to update MTCR export control policies
Freshwater Aquifers found beneath the Atlantic Ocean
🔴Smash Conclave 2025 UPSC Mains Analysis and 2026 Strategy
UPSC Ranker Mentorship Civilsdaily24th July
Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc
[24th July 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: Can Presidential Reference change a judgment?
Terrorism and Challenges Related To It
The reality of the changing dimensions of warfare
Innovations in Biotechnology and Medical Sciences
Spare live animals, move to biological models
Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities
Paika Rebellion references omitted from NCERT books
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
US withdraws from UNESCO
Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.
Towards Resilient and Prosperous Cities in India: World Bank Report (2024)
Foreign Policy Watch: India-China
China commences construction of Mega Dam over Brahmaputra
Places in news: Bitra Island
Defence Sector – DPP, Missions, Schemes, Security Forces, etc.
Javelin Anti-Tank Guided Missiles (ATGMs)
Foreign Policy Watch: United Nations
‘Pact for the Future’ Agreement
Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.
Wind Stilling Effect in the Indo-Gangetic Plain (IGP)
International Space Agencies – Missions and Discoveries
Planetary Formation observed around HOPS‑315 Star
22nd July
Disasters and Disaster Management – Sendai Framework, Floods, Cyclones, etc.
[22nd July 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: Water, energy demand spotlights risk of human-induced quakes
The Crisis In The Middle East
The threat to India’s ‘great power’ status
Foreign Policy Watch: India – EU
At FTA’s heart, the promise of Global Capacity Centres
Electoral Reforms In India
Legal Status of Right to Vote
Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc
Vice-President (VP) of India
Global Geological And Climatic Events
In news: Kamchatka Peninsula
Historical and Archaeological Findings in News
In news: King Rajendra Chola I
Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc
Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of India
Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities
In news: Mangal Pandey (1827-1857)
[UPSC Mains 2025] Registration Open: All India Smash Mains Open Test 2025
All India Smash Mains Open Test 2025 Dates and Schedule Register For All India Smash Mains Open Test…18th July
Foreign Policy Watch: India-China
[18th July 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: How is China leading the green energy sector?
J&K – The issues around the state
A better terror fight with J&K police under state reins
Russian Invasion of Ukraine: Global Implications
Russian Oil: India calls out ‘double standards’
Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities
Tipu Sultan and Anglo-Mysore Wars (1767-1799)
Indian Missile Program Updates
Successful trial of Akash Prime Air Defence System
ISRO Missions and Discoveries
IIST Scientists detected Circular Polarisation near massive Protostar
Port Infrastructure and Shipping Industry – Sagarmala Project, SDC, CEZ, etc.
Machilipatnam as Ancient Port is set for big Revival
Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News
Behdeinkhlam Festival celebrated in Meghalaya
12th July
Women empowerment issues – Jobs,Reservation and education
[12th July 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: View India’s Gender Gap Report ranking as a warning
Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News
‘Maratha Military Landscapes’ included in the UNESCO World Heritage List
Telecom and Postal Sector – Spectrum Allocation, Call Drops, Predatory Pricing, etc
[pib] Sanchar Mitra Scheme
Electric and Hybrid Cars – FAME, National Electric Mobility Mission, etc.
[pib] E-Truck Incentive Scheme
North-East India – Security and Developmental Issues
What are Autonomous District Councils (ADC)?
Terrorism and Challenges Related To It
In news: International Criminal Court (ICC)
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
America is going back on all the things that made it great. India’s must seize the opportunity
Poverty Eradication – Definition, Debates, etc.
ExplainSpeaking: Why govt claims on reducing inequality in India are being contested
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Police Reforms – SC directives, NPC, other committees reports
Home Minister launches ‘Bharatpol’ for international police assistance
NITI Aayog’s Assessment
NITI Aayog completes 10 years
Higher Education – RUSA, NIRF, HEFA, etc.
More flexibility, but also greater challenges
Horticulture, Floriculture, Commercial crops, Bamboo Production – MIDH, NFSM-CC, etc.
India’s Coffee Export surpasses USD 1 Billion for first time
Innovation Ecosystem in India
Rudra High-Performance Green Propulsion System
Climate Change Negotiations – UNFCCC, COP, Other Conventions and Protocols
What is Net-Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA)?
What are the ‘Panch Pran’?
UPSC 2026/27 Enrollment Open: July Batch For UAP Mentorship 2026, 2027 | Connect with Mentor Now
The Ultimate Assessment Program to ace UPSC CSE. Trusted and Endorsed by AIR 2, Animesh Pradhan (First Attempt,…13th September
Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc
What does the dissolution of SCoS entail?
Financial Inclusion in India and Its Challenges
Is it time for India to introduce a Universal Basic Income?
Historical and Archaeological Findings in News
The Great Stupa of Sanchi
Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities
Why September 12 is observed as Saragarhi Day?
Wildlife Conservation Efforts
International Big Cat Alliance (IBCA)
Renewable Energy – Wind, Tidal, Geothermal, etc.
India to partner for European Hydrogen Week
Electric and Hybrid Cars – FAME, National Electric Mobility Mission, etc.
PM E-Drive Scheme
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UPSC preparation, IAS, UAP, Civilsdaily IAS, AIR 2, Animesh Pradhan13th February
Agricultural Sector and Marketing Reforms – eNAM, Model APMC Act, Eco Survey Reco, etc.
[13th February 2026] The Hindu OpED: Farmers’ pulse: On India and its demand for pulses
Health Sector – UHC, National Health Policy, Family Planning, Health Insurance, etc.
The hidden cost of insurance distribution
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
As multilateralism erodes, India must reframe its foreign policy
Defence Sector – DPP, Missions, Schemes, Security Forces, etc.
DAC Grants AoN Worth ₹3.6 Lakh Crore for Rafale, P-8I and Major Defence Modernisation Push
Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc
New CPI Inflation Series (Base Year 2024): Food Weight Reduced to 37%
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Pakistan
Pakistan Raises Indus Waters Issue over Sawalkot Dam
Forest Conservation Efforts – NFP, Western Ghats, etc.
Supreme Court Stays Haryana’s Aravalli Zoo Safari Project
12th February
Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc
[12th Februrary 2026] The Hindu OpED: The CPI base revision exercise measures a slice of life
Tax Reforms
Taxpayer base more than doubled in the last decade
Finance Commission – Issues related to devolution of resources
Have States gained from the 16th FC
Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News
National Song Guidelines Issued by Government of India
Modern Indian History-Events and Personalities
Deendayal Upadhyaya
Steel Industry – Current challenges, National Steel Policy 2017, etc
Carbon Capture to Drive India’s Green Steel Transition
Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News
Indian Inscriptions Found in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings
10th February
Foreign Policy Watch: India-ASEAN
[10th February 2026] The Hindu OpED: Back on track: On Malaysia India ties
Banking Sector Reforms
SC tells RBI to bring in stricter checks to stop online frauds
International Space Agencies – Missions and Discoveries
On gravity’s role on Earth’s journey through space
Foreign Policy Watch: Indo-Pacific and QUAD
India–Seychelles Joint Vision SESEL
Human Rights Issues
NHRC takes suo motu cognizance of stranded Indian workers in Dubai
ISRO Missions and Discoveries
Safe Landing Patch Identified near Mons Mouton for Chandrayaan 4
NPA Crisis
Gross NPAs of SCBs at Historic Low
New Species of Plants and Animals Discovered
New Dragonfly Species Discovered in Kerala
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Nuclear Diplomacy and Disarmament
[5th February 2025] The Hindu OpED: A turning point for nuclear deterrence
Climate Change Negotiations – UNFCCC, COP, Other Conventions and Protocols
Why carbon capture is key to achieving net-zero goal
Disasters and Disaster Management – Sendai Framework, Floods, Cyclones, etc.
NDMA’s first ever guidelines for identification of disaster victims
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Middle East
UNIFIL Suspends Activities Along the Blue Line in Southern Lebanon
Electoral Reforms In India
Removal of the Chief Election Commissioner: Constitutional Procedure
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
Project Vault: US Critical Minerals Stockpiling Initiative
Waste Management – SWM Rules, EWM Rules, etc
NAMASTE Scheme and Waste Pickers Enumeration Data 2026
Indian Air Force Updates
Solid Fuel Ducted Ramjet (SFDR) Technology Test 2026
2nd February
Government Budgets
[2nd February 2026] The Hindu OpED: Union Budget 2026-27: Pushing welfare towards the States
Higher Education – RUSA, NIRF, HEFA, etc.
Why have the new UGC regulations been stayed
Electric and Hybrid Cars – FAME, National Electric Mobility Mission, etc.
What’s ailing India’s battery scheme for EVs
Government Budgets
Union Budget 2026–27
Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc
New CPI Inflation Series and Changing Consumption Weights
International Space Agencies – Missions and Discoveries
Stealth Coronal Mass Ejection and Geomagnetic Storm
Women empowerment issues – Jobs,Reservation and education
National Commission for Women marks 34th Foundation Day
Health Sector – UHC, National Health Policy, Family Planning, Health Insurance, etc.
Menstrual Health and MHM
30th January
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Middle East
[30th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: India-Arab League: bridging cultures, creating opportunities
Capital Markets: Challenges and Developments
Why rupee challenges are primarily external
Nuclear Energy
Thorium based nuclear power key to securing energy independence
Wildlife Conservation Efforts
Shettihalli Wildlife Sanctuary
New Species of Plants and Animals Discovered
Rare Rusty spotted Cat sighted in Rajasthan
Deuteron
Water Management – Institutional Reforms, Conservation Efforts, etc.
Jal Shakti Minister interacts with WaSH Warriors
Waste Management – SWM Rules, EWM Rules, etc
Solid Waste Management Rules, 2026
28th January
Foreign Policy Watch: India – EU
India-EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA)
Industrial Sector Updates – Industrial Policy, Ease of Doing Business, etc.
[28th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: Manufacturing woes: Capital support alone will not add to battery cell manufacturing capacity
Higher Education – RUSA, NIRF, HEFA, etc.
New UGC regulations sharpen provisions against caste bias
Civil Aviation Sector – CA Policy 2016, UDAN, Open Skies, etc.
Wings India 2026: Asia’s Largest Civil Aviation Event
Oil and Gas Sector – HELP, Open Acreage Policy, etc.
Prime Minister at India Energy Week 2026
Wildlife Conservation Efforts
Pygmy Hog
Indian Army Updates
Army’s animals wing
Antibiotics Resistance
Kerala declares Bacillus subtilis ‘State microbe’
25th January
24th January
Foreign Policy Watch: India – EU
[24th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: India and the EU- a fit partnership in a divided world
Antibiotics Resistance
The antibiotic pipeline is running dangerously dry
Electoral Reforms In India
Delimitataion after 2027, redrawing power in India
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
Pax Silica and Global Tech Supply Chains
Defence Sector – DPP, Missions, Schemes, Security Forces, etc.
Long Range Anti Ship Hypersonic Glide Missile (LR AShM)
Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
US Exit from World Health Organization
Defence Sector – DPP, Missions, Schemes, Security Forces, etc.
Military Quantum Mission Policy Framework
Water Management – Institutional Reforms, Conservation Efforts, etc.
Water Bankruptcy and Global Agriculture
Parliament – Sessions, Procedures, Motions, Committees etc
National Legislative Index (NLI)
20th January
Foreign Policy Watch: Indo-Pacific and QUAD
[20th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: In a changing world, it is ‘small tables, big dividends’
Ocean Governance – UNCLOS, ISA, High Seas Teaty, etc.
India to initiate domestic framework for ratifying High Seas Treaty
Nuclear Energy
DAE’s nuclear pivot: Light water push to tap global markets, retain heavy water edge
Nuclear Energy
Indigenous Light Water Reactor Push
Electric and Hybrid Cars – FAME, National Electric Mobility Mission, etc.
Indigenous Sodium Ion Battery Development in India
BRICS Summits
BRICS Plus Naval Drills and South Africa Probe
Wildlife Conservation Efforts
Second Range wide Dolphin Survey
Start-up Ecosystem In India
Chips to Start up (C2S) Programme
13th January
Child Rights – POSCO, Child Labour Laws, NAPC, etc.
[13th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: Early investment in children, the key to India’s future
Artificial Intelligence (AI) Breakthrough
If data is the new oil, what does that make data centres?
Indian Army Updates
Bhairav Battalion: India’s New Combat Ready Force for High Speed Operations
Blockchain Technology: Prospects and Challenges
Crypto Rules Tightened: Live Selfies and Geo Tagging Mandatory for Users
Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News
Kathputli Art of Rajasthan
Dams and Hydroprojects
Show Cause Notice on Bargi Dam
9th January
Goods and Services Tax (GST)
[9th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: GSDP share as criterion for central-State transfers
ISRO Missions and Discoveries
ISRO and the next big challenge
Climate Change Negotiations – UNFCCC, COP, Other Conventions and Protocols
Despite patchy record, US climate exit will still pinch
Climate Change Negotiations – UNFCCC, COP, Other Conventions and Protocols
US Withdraws from UNFCCC and IPCC
Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.
Doomsday Glacier Destabilisation and the Future of Antarctic Ice Sheets
Roads, Highways, Cargo, Air-Cargo and Logistics infrastructure – Bharatmala, LEEP, SetuBharatam, etc.
India Becomes First Nation to Commercially Produce Bio Bitumen
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Bangladesh
India Bangladesh Ganga Water Sharing Treaty (1996)
International Space Agencies – Missions and Discoveries
White dwarf system
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Foreign Policy Watch: India-United States
[6th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: The parallel track that keeps U.S.-India ties going
ISRO Missions and Discoveries
What remote-sensing reveals about plants, forests and minerals from space
Civil Aviation Sector – CA Policy 2016, UDAN, Open Skies, etc.
Indian aviation safety, its dangerous credibility deficit
Capital Markets: Challenges and Developments
RBI Announces ₹1 Trillion OMO Purchase
Historical and Archaeological Findings in News
India Hosts 20th Session of UNESCO ICH Committee
Foreign Policy Watch: India-ASEAN
Exercise Harimau Shakti 2025
Foreign Policy Watch: India-Africa
Niger Eliminates Onchocerciasis
Climate Change Negotiations – UNFCCC, COP, Other Conventions and Protocols
Barcelona Convention COP24
3rd January
Urban Transformation – Smart Cities, AMRUT, etc.
[3rd January 2026] The Hindu OpED: Transforming a waste-ridden urban India
Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.
How rice farmers can cut methane and make money off it
Renewable Energy – Wind, Tidal, Geothermal, etc.
Energy transition will need more than chasing the sun or the wind
Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation launches new logo and mascot
Foreign Policy Watch: India – EU
Bulgaria joins the eurozone
Goods and Services Tax (GST)
Central Excise Amendment on tobacco products
Innovations in Sciences, IT, Computers, Robotics and Nanotechnology
Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited launches Voice over WiFi (VoWiFi)
2nd January
Higher Education – RUSA, NIRF, HEFA, etc.
[2nd January 2026] The Hindu OpED: Mandating student presence, erasing learning
Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.
Why does India need climate resilient agriculture
Foreign Policy Watch: India – EU
As EU carbon tax kicks in, India’s metal exports face price threat
Artificial Intelligence (AI) Breakthrough
AI Impact Summit 2026
New Species of Plants and Animals Discovered
Amazonian Stingless Bees
Health Sector – UHC, National Health Policy, Family Planning, Health Insurance, etc.
Nimesulide Ban
Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc
Market Access Support (MAS) Intervention
Defence Sector – DPP, Missions, Schemes, Security Forces, etc.
Pralay Missile
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[3rd February 2026] The Hindu OpED: Israel, the U.S and a war to build a unipolar West Asia
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2018] In what ways would the ongoing US-Iran Nuclear Pact Controversy affect the national interest of India? How should India respond to this situation?
Linkage: The question directly connects U.S.-Iran tensions to India’s energy security, strategic autonomy, and diaspora interests, which are central to the current West Asia escalation. The evolving conflict and risks to the Strait of Hormuz mirror the same geopolitical and economic vulnerabilities highlighted in the article on a shifting regional power order.
Mentor’s Comment
This article analyses the strategic logic behind the escalating Israel-Iran conflict and the deepening U.S. involvement in West Asia. It examines whether the unfolding war marks a structural shift from multipolar contestation to a potential U.S.-Israel dominated unipolar regional order.
Why in the News?
Israel and the United States have launched coordinated strikes targeting Iran’s nuclear and military leadership, triggering direct Iranian retaliation across the Gulf region. Iran has expanded the conflict by striking U.S. bases and threatening closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which nearly one-third of global oil supplies transit. The escalation signals a potential shift from limited confrontation to a broader attempt to restructure the regional balance of power in West Asia.
Has the Conflict Shifted from Tactical Deterrence to Structural Power Reordering?
- Nature of Earlier Conflict: The June 2025 12-day confrontation remained geographically contained and ended through calibrated escalation and ceasefire diplomacy.
- Limited Strategic Objectives: Earlier strikes were primarily signalling tools aimed at restoring deterrence rather than dismantling state structures.
- Expansion of Theatre: The present escalation includes cross-Gulf strikes, targeting of leadership structures, and threats to global energy chokepoints.
- Leadership Targeting: Direct strikes on senior Iranian officials indicate attempts at systemic destabilisation rather than symbolic retaliation.
- Shift in Strategic Intent: The transition reflects movement from deterrence management to possible restructuring of regional hierarchy.
Is the Conflict Aimed at Regime Change in Iran?
- Regime Change Objective: Israeli leadership has consistently viewed Iran as an existential threat due to its missile programme and support for regional militias.
- Strategic Continuity: Opposition to the 2015 nuclear deal reflected concern that lifting sanctions would strengthen Iran’s conventional and regional influence.
- Decapitation Strategy: Targeted killings of senior officials indicate attempts to destabilize leadership structures.
- Historical Precedent: Regime change attempts in Iraq (2003) and Libya (2011) reshaped power balances but produced long-term instability.
Does Iran’s Geopolitical Structure Prevent External Domination?
- Geographic Depth: Iran’s mountainous terrain and large territorial size complicate ground invasion.
- Military Capability: Advanced missile and drone networks enable retaliation across the region. For example, Iran has used precision-guided missiles and Shahed-series drones to target U.S. bases in the Gulf and Israeli-linked assets, and previously demonstrated long-range strike capability in attacks on U.S. facilities such as the Al Asad airbase in Iraq (2020).
- Asymmetric Warfare: Iran relies on proxy networks including Hezbollah and allied militias.
- Resilience After Initial Strikes: Despite decapitation attempts, Iranian leadership reorganized and expanded retaliation.
Would a Fall of Tehran Create a Unipolar West Asia?
- Balance of Power Shift: Removal of Iran eliminates the primary revisionist actor challenging U.S.-Israel dominance.
- Regional Realignment: Arab monarchies dependent on U.S. security architecture may align more firmly.
- Strategic Vacuum Risk: Collapse of central authority could mirror Iraq and Libya scenarios, creating prolonged instability.
- Geopolitical Motivation: The conflict reflects strategic interests rather than ideological liberation narratives.
How Does the Conflict Threaten Global Energy Security?
- Strait of Hormuz: Nearly one-third of global oil trade passes through this chokepoint.
- Economic Shock Risk: Closure disrupts global energy markets and affects inflation worldwide.
- Cross-Gulf Escalation: Strikes on bases in Qatar, UAE and Cyprus widen the theatre of war.
- Global Economic Linkage: Energy price spikes directly affect developing economies including India.
Does Conventional Superiority Guarantee Victory?
- Military Asymmetry: U.S.-Israel possess superior air and missile defense systems.
- Attrition Dynamics: Sustained conflict exhausts missile defense shields.
- Guerrilla Doctrine: Iran’s strategy aims to prolong conflict rather than secure quick victory.
- Strategic Uncertainty: Decisive victory depends on clearly defined objectives, not merely military power.
Conclusion
The ongoing Israel-U.S.-Iran confrontation reflects more than episodic retaliation; it signals a possible attempt to reshape the strategic architecture of West Asia. However, regime destabilisation does not automatically translate into stable unipolarity, as historical precedents in Iraq and Libya demonstrate. While military superiority may secure tactical gains, sustainable regional order depends on political legitimacy, institutional continuity, and balance-of-power equilibrium. The unfolding crisis therefore represents not merely a regional war, but a critical inflection point in determining whether West Asia moves toward hegemonic consolidation or prolonged instability with global economic repercussions.
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Marriage as partnership: HC reframes role of ‘homemaker’
Why in the News?
An issue arose from a wife’s plea for interim maintenance under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 and Section 125 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, after she left employment to care for the household and child. The trial court and appellate court denied relief, holding that her educational qualifications and certain bank transactions reflected financial independence. The Delhi High Court set aside these findings, holding that theoretical earning capacity cannot substitute proof of actual income and that unpaid homemaking constitutes a valid economic contribution within marriage.
Does Homemaking Constitute Economic Contribution in Marriage?
- Recognition of Unpaid Labour: Treats household management, childcare, and relocation support as economic inputs sustaining earning spouse’s productivity.
- Reframing of Economic Partnership: Defines marriage as a partnership model with differently manifested contributions.
- Shift from Moral to Legal Recognition: Moves unpaid domestic work from social appreciation to enforceable legal entitlement.
- Enabling Function: Establishes that homemaker’s labour facilitates earning spouse’s professional continuity, including overseas employment.
Can Educational Qualification Defeat a Maintenance Claim?
- Capacity vs Actual Income Distinction: Separates theoretical earning ability from proven earnings.
- Burden of Proof Principle: Requires evidence of stable taxable income to deny maintenance.
- Rejection of Assumptive Reasoning: Prohibits denial based solely on degrees or employability potential.
- Judicial Clarification: States that mere capability cannot ground refusal of maintenance.
How Should Courts Evaluate Re-entry Barriers After Career Breaks?
- Career Disruption Recognition: Acknowledges difficulties in workforce re-entry after caregiving breaks.
- Gendered Labour Market Reality: Recognizes structural constraints affecting women’s employment continuity.
- Realistic Assessment Standard: Mandates evaluation based on present income, not hypothetical opportunities.
- Preventive Safeguard: Prevents penalization of spouses who left employment for household responsibilities.
What Is the Scope of Maintenance under Section 125 CrPC and PWDVA?
- Social Justice Mandate: Ensures financial support for wives unable to maintain themselves.
- Interim Relief Provision: Enables monetary relief during pendency of proceedings.
- Fairness Mechanism: Treats maintenance as equitable adjustment within marital partnership.
- Protection Against Dependency Narrative: Rejects framing homemaking as voluntary economic withdrawal.
Does the Judgment Reflect a Wider Judicial Trend?
- Comparative Precedents:
- Recognizes Kerala High Court view in Kannan Nair v. Kamala Amma, that acknowledged homemaking as a financial contribution during property rights disputes.
- Aligns with Delhi High Court ruling in Saurjan Saha v. Rumpa Saha, which rejected the demand for proof of negative income.
- Judicial Continuity: Consolidates recognition of unpaid domestic labour across maintenance and property jurisprudence.
- Doctrinal Evolution: Strengthens gender-sensitive interpretation of maintenance laws.
How does recognition of unpaid domestic labour advance substantive gender justice within the institution of marriage?
- Structural Gender Inequality: Women disproportionately perform unpaid domestic labour, limiting financial independence and reinforcing economic dependency within marriage.
- Invisibility in Economic Metrics: Household and caregiving work remain excluded from GDP calculations despite enabling workforce participation of earning members.
- Substantive Equality Approach: Judicial recognition of homemaking as economic contribution advances Article 14-based equality beyond formal neutrality.
- Corrective Social Reform Role of Judiciary: Court intervention addresses entrenched patriarchal assumptions that equate worth with paid employment.
- Welfare-State Responsibility: Maintenance jurisprudence functions as a social justice mechanism ensuring dignity and economic security for non-earning spouses.
Conclusion
The ruling institutionalizes recognition of unpaid domestic labour within maintenance law. It separates earning potential from actual income and reinforces marriage as an economic partnership. The judgment strengthens substantive equality and aligns maintenance jurisprudence with constitutional guarantees of dignity and fairness.
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2023] Explain the constitutional perspectives of Gender Justice with the help of relevant Constitutional Provisions and case laws.
Linkage: The Delhi High Court judgment strengthens constitutional gender justice by recognizing unpaid domestic labour as an economic contribution under Articles 14, 15 and 21. It reflects judicial expansion of substantive equality through maintenance jurisprudence and case-law based interpretation.
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AI hallucination in Andhra trial court’s order, SC bench flags ‘institutional concern’
Why in the News?
The Supreme Court termed reliance on AI-generated fake case law by a trial court in Andhra Pradesh as “misconduct” and flagged it as an “institutional concern.” The case involved citation of non-existent judgments generated through AI tools, prompting the Court to warn that decisions based on fabricated precedents will attract legal consequences.
What is AI Hallucination?
- Definition: AI hallucination refers to the generation of false, fabricated, or non-existent information by generative AI systems while presenting it in a confident and coherent manner.
- In Legal Context: It includes creation of fake case citations, incorrect statutory references, or imaginary judicial precedents.
- Cause: Occurs because generative AI predicts text patterns probabilistically rather than retrieving verified data from authenticated legal databases.
Role of AI in Judicial Process
- Research Assistance: Supports case-law searches, judgment summarisation, and drafting. Example: The Supreme Court’s AI tool SUPACE (Supreme Court Portal for Assistance in Court’s Efficiency) assists judges by compiling relevant precedents and legal materials for faster research.
- Administrative Efficiency: Facilitates transcription, translation, and document management under the e-Courts Project. Example: The Supreme Court’s SUVAS (Supreme Court Vidhik Anuvaad Software) uses AI-based machine translation to translate judgments into regional languages to enhance accessibility.
- Access to Justice: Expands digital availability of court records and improves procedural transparency. Example: Under the e-Courts Mission Mode Project (Phase III), virtual courts and online filing systems use technology-enabled processes to reduce pendency and improve citizen access.
- Risk Factor and Verification Requirement: Mandates human oversight to prevent reliance on fabricated outputs. Example: The recent Supreme Court observation in the Andhra Pradesh trial court matter highlighted that AI-generated fake citations, if unverified, can amount to misconduct and undermine judicial credibility.
How does AI ‘hallucination’ challenge the integrity of judicial decision-making?
- Predictive Text Model: Generative AI tools such as ChatGPT operate on probabilistic language prediction rather than verified legal databases, leading to fabricated citations.
- Fabricated Case Law: In the Vijayawada trial court case, an AI-generated judgment cited “Subramani v. M. Natarajan (2013) 14 SCC 95,” which did not exist.
- Linguistic Fluency over Accuracy: AI tools prioritise coherent language construction, not factual validation.
- Judicial Consequence: The Supreme Court observed that reliance on fake judgments amounts to “misconduct” and entails legal consequences.
Why did the Supreme Court treat this incident as an ‘institutional concern’ rather than an isolated lapse?
- Systemic Occurrence: The Court noted similar instances of AI-generated “non-existent” judgments across jurisdictions.
- Supreme Court Dismissal (Feb 13, 2026): A Special Leave Petition was dismissed after the petitioner cited non-existent judgments.
- Delhi High Court (Sept 2025): Petition withdrawn after opposing counsel pointed out fabricated precedents.
- Bombay High Court (Jan 2026): Imposed ₹50,000 cost for citing a fake case; noted AI-generated drafting markers such as bullet formats and green-box highlights.
- Judicial Time Wastage: Courts described such reliance as “dumping” unverified material, resulting in waste of judicial time.
What distinguishes ‘error in good faith’ from judicial misconduct in this context?
- High Court Approach: Justice Ravi Nath Tilhari accepted the trial judge’s explanation that AI was used in good faith; refused to set aside the order solely due to erroneous citations.
- Supreme Court’s Position: Held that reliance on fake judgments is not merely an error but misconduct affecting adjudication integrity.
- Legal Threshold: The apex court emphasised accountability where fabricated precedents influence judicial reasoning.
- Institutional Discipline: The Court signaled that judicial officers must independently verify sources before relying on AI outputs.
What regulatory and policy responses have emerged within the judiciary?
- White Paper (Nov 2025): Supreme Court released “Artificial Intelligence and Judiciary,” identifying “fabrication of cases and hallucination” as primary risks.
- Risk Identification: AI may hallucinate judgments, citations, and legislative references that do not exist.
- Ethics Committees Proposal: Recommended establishing AI ethics committees within courts.
- Mandatory Verification: Directed that information obtained through AI tools must be independently verified.
- Kerala High Court (July 2025): Issued first formal AI policy permitting administrative use but mandating meticulous verification of legal citations; warned of disciplinary action.
How does this development reflect the broader tension between technological adoption and constitutional accountability?
- Digital Transformation of Courts: Judiciary increasingly integrates AI for translation, transcription, and research assistance.
- Adjudicatory Legitimacy: Judicial authority derives from constitutional fidelity and precedential accuracy.
- Professional Responsibility: Lawyers and judges remain accountable for submissions irrespective of technological tools used.
- Rule of Law Implication: Fabricated precedents undermine stare decisis and the doctrine of binding precedent under Article 141.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court’s observations underline that technological integration in the judiciary must operate within the framework of constitutional discipline and professional accountability. While AI enhances efficiency, access, and research capacity, it cannot replace judicial reasoning or due diligence. The episode reinforces that the rule of law depends not merely on digital advancement but on verified precedent, ethical responsibility, and institutional integrity.
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2023] Introduce the concept of Artificial Intelligence (AI). How does AI help clinical diagnosis? Do you perceive any threat to the privacy of the individual in the use of AI in healthcare?
Linkage: The question links AI’s utility with ethical and regulatory concerns, similar to judicial AI use where efficiency must be balanced with accountability and safeguards. The issue of AI hallucination in courts reflects the same tension between technological assistance and risks to institutional integrity.
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India–Nepal MoU on Forests, Wildlife & Climate Cooperation
Why in the News
India and Nepal signed a Memorandum of Understanding to enhance bilateral cooperation in forests, wildlife, biodiversity conservation and climate change.
Key Features of the MoU
1. Areas of Cooperation
- Forest management
- Wildlife protection
- Biodiversity conservation
- Climate change mitigation and adaptation
- Restoration of wildlife corridors
- Exchange of technical expertise and best practices
2. Focus on Transboundary Conservation
Given shared ecosystems across the India–Nepal border, the MoU emphasises:
- Landscape level biodiversity planning
- Creation of transboundary conservation landscapes
- Interlinking protected areas
- Smart green infrastructure in biodiversity hotspots
3. Key Species Identified
- The agreement prioritises conservation of: Elephant, Gangetic dolphin, Rhinoceros, Snow leopard, Tiger, and Vultures
- These species move across borders and require coordinated habitat protection.
4. Combating Wildlife Crime
- Joint action against forest and wildlife crime
- Capacity building of frontline enforcement staff
- Improved coordination between agencies
Institutional Context
- Signed between:
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- Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change
- Ministry of Forests and Environment, Nepal
[2019] Consider the following statements: - Asiatic lion is naturally found in India only.
- Double-humped camel is naturally found in India only.
- One-horned rhinoceros is naturally found in India only.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
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SC to Examine Feasibility of Mandatory NAT for Blood Transfusion
Why in the News
The Supreme Court of India has agreed to examine whether blood banks across India should compulsorily conduct Nucleic Acid Test for screening donated blood. The matter relates to ensuring safe blood transfusion as part of the right to life under Article 21.
What is NAT(Nucleic Acid Test)?
- A highly sensitive molecular technique.
- Detects genetic material of viruses.
- Screens for HIV, Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C.
- Can identify infections during the window period before antibodies develop.
- Compared to ELISA, NAT detects infection earlier and reduces risk of transfusion transmitted infections.
ELISA vs NAT
ELISA Test:
- Detects antibodies produced by the body.
- Cheaper and widely used in blood banks.
- May miss infections during early stage.
NAT:
- Detects viral RNA or DNA directly.
- More accurate in early detection.
- Higher cost and infrastructure requirement.
Legal Dimension
- Petitioner argued:
-
- Safe blood transfusion is part of Article 21 right to life.
- Failure to ensure safe blood amounts to violation of fundamental rights.
- Bench headed by Surya Kant asked whether all States can afford NAT in government hospitals.
Background Incidents
- HIV positive cases among children in Satna, Madhya Pradesh after transfusion.
- Similar allegations in Jharkhand involving Thalassemia patients.
- These cases highlight risk of transfusion transmitted infections.
Public Health Context
- Thalassemia:
-
- Inherited blood disorder.
- Patients require frequent blood transfusions.
- Increased vulnerability to contaminated blood.
- India has a high burden of Thalassemia cases.
Policy Issues Involved
- Cost effectiveness of NAT.
- Infrastructure gaps in rural and State hospitals.
- Standardisation of blood screening across India.
- Centre State coordination in health sector.
[2024] Under which of the following Articles of the Constitution of India, has the Supreme Court of India placed the Right to Privacy? (a) Article 15
(b) Article 16
(c) Article 19
(d) Article 21
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India’s Oil Imports from Russia Fall to 44 Month Low
Why in the News
India’s crude oil imports from Russia fell to a 44 month low in January 2026, while imports from Gulf countries and the United States increased. This shift comes amid West Asia conflict and rising global oil prices.
Key Data Points
- Russian oil imports in Jan 2026: 1.98 billion dollars.
- Russia’s share: 19.3% of total imports.
- Two months earlier: 27.5%.
- May 2025: 33%.
- Lowest Russian share since December 2022.
Rising Share of Other Suppliers
- Gulf Countries:
- Iraq: 16.6%,
- Saudi Arabia: 17.5% highest since April 2023
- UAE: 10.4%
- Kuwait: 6.1%
- United States: Share increased to 6.8% from 5% a year earlier.
Why the Shift Happened
- U.S. had linked tariff relief to reduction in Russian oil purchases.
- U.S. President Donald Trump removed penal tariffs citing India’s commitment to reduce Russian imports.
- Later, U.S. Supreme Court struck down the tariff mechanism.
Why It May Become Costly
1. Rising Oil Prices
- West Asia conflict pushed crude above 80 dollars per barrel.
- Every 1 dollar increase adds about 2 billion dollars to India’s annual import bill.
2. Strait of Hormuz Risk
- Strait of Hormuz is critical for Gulf oil supplies.
- Closure or disruption threatens Iraqi, Saudi, UAE and Kuwaiti exports.
3. Higher Freight Costs
- U.S. oil travels longer distances.
- Higher marine insurance and logistics costs during conflict.
Strategic Implications
- Energy security becomes more vulnerable.
- Trade deficit pressure likely if prices stay elevated.
- Rupee may face depreciation risk.
- Inflationary impact on domestic economy.
Prelims Pointers
- India imports over 85% of its crude oil needs.
- Strait of Hormuz connects Persian Gulf to Arabian Sea.
- Oil price rise affects Current Account Deficit.
- Diversification of suppliers is a key energy security strategy.
[2020] The term ‘West Texas Intermediate’ sometimes found in news, refers to a grade of (a) Crude oil
(b) Bullion
(c) Rare earth elements
(d) Uranium
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India–Canada 10 Year Uranium Supply Deal
Why in the News
Narendra Modi and Mark Carney announced a 1.9 billion dollar, 10 year uranium supply agreement during bilateral talks in New Delhi, alongside renewed efforts to conclude a Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement.
Key Highlights for Prelims
1. Uranium Supply Agreement
- Supplier: Cameco
- Quantity: ~10,000 tonnes
- Duration: 2027 to 2035
- Value: 1.9 billion dollars
- Purpose: Fuel for Indian nuclear power reactors
- Earlier deal: 2,700 tonnes between 2015 and 2020.
2. CEPA Negotiations
- Terms of Reference issued.
- Target: Conclude CEPA within 2026.
- Aim: Double bilateral trade by 2030.
3. Strategic Energy Partnership
- Covers: Uranium supply, Renewable energy, LPG, and Critical and emerging technologies
- Canada to join: International Solar Alliance and Global Biofuel Alliance.
4. Security Cooperation
- Joint Working Group on Counterterrorism to meet soon.
- Focus on violent extremism and organised crime.
Diplomatic Context
- Ties strained after allegations linked to the killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar.
- India rejected fresh allegations by Canadian agencies.
- Visit aimed at rebuilding “strategic trust”.
[2020] In India, why are some nuclear reactors kept under “IAEA Safeguards” while others are not? (a) Some use uranium and others use thorium
(b) Some use imported uranium and others use domestic supplies
(c) Some are operated by foreign enterprises and others are operated by domestic
(d) Some are State-owned and others are privately-owned
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[2nd March 2026] The Hindu OpED: Sixteenth Finance Commission-misses and concerns
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2021] How have the recommendations of the 14th Finance Commission of India enabled the states to improve their fiscal position?
Linkage: The question links directly to the Sixteenth Finance Commission debate, as both examine how devolution design affects States’ fiscal autonomy and capacity. While the Fourteenth Commission expanded untied transfers to 42%, the Sixteenth’s structural changes raise questions on continuity of fiscal empowerment and equalisation.
Mentor’s Comment
The Sixteenth Finance Commission (SFC) has retained the States’ share in the divisible pool at 41% but introduced significant changes in methodology, particularly in horizontal devolution and treatment of cesses, surcharges, and grants. The article evaluates whether the Commission has strengthened fiscal federalism or diluted equalisation principles. The issue is critical as Finance Commission transfers constitute the largest source of untied fiscal transfers to States and directly affect Centre-State fiscal balance.
Why in the News?
The SFC is in the news for redesigning the transfer framework without increasing support to States. It discontinues revenue deficit grants and adds a GSDP-based parameter while removing the tax effort criterion. Several States see reduced shares compared to the Fifteenth Finance Commission. The changes affect the largest channel of formula-based fiscal transfers and have revived debate on Centre-State financial balance.
Has vertical devolution been strengthened or diluted?
- Retention of 41% Share: Maintains States’ share at 41% of the divisible pool, continuing the post-Fourteenth Finance Commission structure.
- Decline from 42%: Reduces from the 42% recommended earlier after accounting for the reorganisation of Jammu & Kashmir.
- Rise of Cesses and Surcharges: Expands non-shareable revenue instruments, reducing the effective divisible pool.
- Absence of Reform Recommendation: Does not mandate merger of cesses and surcharges into the divisible pool.
- Grand Bargain Proposal: Suggests States accept smaller share if cesses are merged into regular taxes; lacks constitutional enforcement mechanism.
Does the redesign of horizontal devolution alter equalisation principles?
- GSDP Contribution Criterion: Introduces efficiency-linked parameter through share in aggregate GSDP.
- Income Distance Formula Modification: Uses square root of GSDP to moderate excessive impact.
- Removal of Tax Effort/Fiscal Discipline Criterion: Eliminates performance-based fiscal efficiency parameter.
- Judgmental Weight Changes: Adjusts weights of criteria without transparent normative reasoning.
- Distributional Impact: Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Bihar, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, and Rajasthan lose share; small North-Eastern States also record losses.
What is the impact of discontinuing revenue deficit and sector-specific grants?
- Revenue Deficit Grants Dropped: Discontinues gap-filling support despite inter-State fiscal disparities.
- Sector-Specific Grants Eliminated: Removes targeted interventions in priority areas.
- Shift from Normative to Formula-Based Transfers: Reduces flexibility to address cost disabilities.
- Article 275 Mechanism Underused: Limits equalisation through need-based grants despite constitutional provision.
- Ad Hoc Grants Risk: Encourages discretionary transfers outside formula-based system.
Are projections and fiscal assumptions realistic?
- High Nominal GDP Assumption: Assumes 11% nominal GDP growth from 2026-27 onwards.
- Budget Estimate Contrast: Exceeds Budget’s 10% projection.
- Overestimation Risk: Inflates projected transfer envelope.
- GST Reform Impact Ignored: Does not factor revenue effects of September 2025 GST reforms.
- Stability Concerns: Potential fiscal stress if growth assumptions underperform.
Does the Commission address structural federal concerns?
- Central Fiscal Space Concern: Notes Centre’s shrinking fiscal space.
- Cesses and Surcharges Expansion: Recognises distortion but avoids structural correction.
- Uneven State Capacity: Does not fully compensate for cost disabilities and migration-driven GSDP concentration.
- Market-Driven Capital Concentration: Ignores structural advantage of developed States in attracting capital and labour.
- Equalisation Objective Weakened: Reduces redistributive thrust compared to earlier Commissions.
Conclusion
The Sixteenth Finance Commission preserves the formal 41% vertical devolution but recalibrates the structure of transfers. The removal of revenue deficit grants and introduction of a GSDP-based contribution parameter shift the framework from strong equalisation toward efficiency-linked allocation. The expansion of cesses and surcharges continues to constrain the divisible pool. The long-term impact on fiscal federalism will depend on whether future reforms strengthen constitutional equity under Articles 270 and 280 or deepen inter-State disparities.
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How do astronauts return from space and survive re-entry
Why in the News?
India is advancing its human spaceflight ambitions under ISRO’s Gaganyaan programme, with successful Crew Escape System tests and re-entry validation experiments demonstrating safe atmospheric descent capability. Since re-entry involves extreme heat (over 1,500°C) and velocities exceeding 25,000 km/h, mastering this phase is a critical milestone that places India closer to joining the limited group of nations capable of independently returning astronauts safely from space.
What is spacecraft re-entry?
Spacecraft re-entry is the critical process of a vehicle returning from space, passing through a planet’s atmosphere to land on the surface. It is a controlled deceleration process in which a spacecraft transitions from orbital velocity to safe landing conditions.It involves using atmospheric drag and heat shielding to dissipate immense kinetic energy (approx. mph) while managing temperatures up to caused by compressed air.
Key aspects of re-entry include:
- Deceleration and Heating: As the spacecraft hits the dense atmosphere, it experiences extreme deceleration and intense heat, often creating a “wall of fire” around the craft.
- Thermal Protection: Vehicles use specialized heat shields, such as ablative materials, to protect against temperatures exceeding 1650 degree celsius.
- Methods: Re-entry can be controlled (using engines for precise, safe, or targeted landing) or uncontrolled (naturally falling back).
- Phases: It typically involves deorbiting, atmospheric entry, and landing (often using parachutes).
- Challenges: The “entry corridor” must be precisely navigated; entering too steeply causes excessive heat, while too shallow causes the craft to skip back into space
Why is Re-entry Considered the Most Critical Phase of Spaceflight?
- Orbital Velocity: Spacecraft travel at ~7.8 km/s in Low Earth Orbit, generating extreme kinetic energy during descent.
- Thermal Load: Atmospheric compression produces temperatures above 1,500°C, sufficient to melt structural metals.
- Deceleration Stress: Astronauts experience high G-forces due to rapid velocity reduction.
- Historical Precedent: Early scientific belief held that re-entry survival was impossible due to predicted structural failure from heat loads.
How Does a Spacecraft Dissipate Immense Heat During Re-entry?
- Blunt Body Design: Rounded capsule structure disperses heat around the vehicle rather than allowing penetration.
- Aerodynamic Braking (Aerobraking): Uses atmospheric drag to systematically reduce speed without propulsion fuel.
- Thermal Protection System (TPS): Shields internal structure from heat exposure.
- Ablation Mechanism: Outer material chars and erodes, carrying heat away from the capsule.
- Heat Shield Materials: Designed to prevent thermal transfer to primary structure and crew module.
What is the “Re-entry Corridor” and Why is It Crucial?
- Optimal Angle Window: Ensures safe atmospheric penetration between overshoot and undershoot limits.
- Overshoot Risk: Too shallow angle causes the capsule to skip back into space.
- Undershoot Risk: Too steep angle results in excessive heating and structural stress.
- Precision Navigation: Onboard guidance systems adjust trajectory within strict tolerances.
Why Does Communication Blackout Occur During Re-entry?
- Plasma Formation: Extreme heat ionizes surrounding air, forming an electrically charged plasma layer.
- Signal Obstruction: Plasma sheath blocks radio communication between crew and ground stations.
- Blackout Duration: Persists until velocity reduces sufficiently for plasma dissipation.
- Mitigation Strategy: Use of relay satellites and high-frequency transmission pathways through thinner plasma regions.
How Do Parachutes Enable Safe Landing?
- Terminal Velocity Reduction: Atmospheric drag alone remains insufficient for safe splashdown.
- Multi-stage Deployment: Drogue parachutes stabilize descent; main parachutes reduce final speed.
- Controlled Splashdown: Ensures low-impact landing in designated sea recovery zones.
- Landing Example: Bay of Bengal identified as primary splashdown zone for Indian missions.
How Will India’s Gaganyaan Crew Module Execute Re-entry?
- Crew Module (CM): Maintains trajectory within re-entry corridor and survives thermal stress.
- Service Module (SM): Provides propulsion during orbital phase; separates before re-entry.
- Controlled Manoeuvres: Adjusts lift-to-drag ratio for precise landing.
- Thermal Validation: Crew Module Atmospheric Re-entry Experiment validated full-scale heat shield.
- Operational Significance: Positions India among nations capable of independent human re-entry systems.
Conclusion
Safe atmospheric re-entry represents the ultimate test of a nation’s human spaceflight capability, demanding mastery over thermal protection, trajectory precision, communication resilience, and controlled descent systems. As India advances toward operationalizing Gaganyaan, successful re-entry validation will not only ensure astronaut safety but also strengthen technological sovereignty, strategic autonomy, and India’s position among leading spacefaring nations.
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2017] India has achieved remarkable successes in unmanned space missions including the Chandrayaan and Mars Orbiter Mission, but has not ventured into manned space mission. What are the main obstacles to launching a manned space mission, both in terms of technology and logistics? Examine critically.
Linkage: This GS-3 question examines the technological and logistical challenges in shifting from unmanned missions to human spaceflight. It directly links to Gaganyaan, especially re-entry systems, crew safety, and human-rated launch capability.
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New GDP Series: Why Fiscal Targets and $4 Trillion Goal Get Harder
Why in the News
The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation released the new GDP series with 2022-23 as base year, lowering nominal GDP by about 3 to 4 percent. This affects fiscal deficit ratios, debt calculations and India’s timeline to become a 4 trillion dollar economy.
What Changed in the New GDP Series
- 2023-24 growth revised down from 9.2% to 7.2%.
- Nominal GDP for 2025-26 reduced by about 3.3%.
- Real GDP now calculated using double deflation method.
- Better data sources such as GST, ASUSE, PLFS integrated.
- Lower nominal GDP means the economy is slightly smaller in rupee terms than previously estimated.
Impact on Fiscal Deficit
Fiscal deficit is calculated as a percentage of GDP.
1. Current Year Impact
- 2025-26 fiscal deficit moves from 4.4% to 4.5%.
- Past years’ ratios also rise slightly due to smaller GDP base.
2. FY27 Target Problem
- Target: 4.3% of GDP
Absolute deficit: Rs 16.96 lakh crore - To achieve this ratio:
- Nominal GDP must grow 13 to 14% next year.
- Budget assumption was only 10% nominal growth.
- This implies either: Higher growth, or Lower borrowing, or Expenditure compression.
Impact on Debt to GDP Ratio
- Debt ratio projected to rise to about 58% in 2025-26.
- Target is 55.6%.
- Lower GDP denominator pushes ratio upward.
- New GDP series makes fiscal consolidation slightly tougher mathematically.
Impact on $4 Trillion Economy Goal
- At exchange rate of about Rs 90.98 per dollar: 2025-26 GDP is around 3.8 trillion dollars.
- If nominal growth is 10% and rupee remains stable: India can cross 4 trillion dollars in 2026-27.
- However:
- Rupee depreciation can delay milestone.
- Dollar GDP depends on both growth and exchange rate.
- Nigeria example shows how currency depreciation can shrink dollar GDP even if domestic output rises.
Broader Implications
- Ratios worsen even without policy slippage.
- Government may need borrowing recalibration.
- Fiscal arithmetic becomes tighter.
- Market expectations on growth become crucial.
Prelims Pointers
- GDP can be measured by production, income and expenditure methods.
- Nominal GDP uses current prices.
- Real GDP adjusts for inflation.
- Fiscal deficit equals total expenditure minus total receipts excluding borrowings.
- Debt to GDP ratio indicates sustainability of public debt.
[2015] With reference to Indian economy, consider the following statements: - The rate of growth of Real Gross Domestic product has steadily increased in the last decade.
- The Gross Domestic product at market prices (in rupees) has steadily increased in the last decade.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2
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GST Collections Rise 8.1% to ₹1.83 Lakh Crore in February
Why in the News
Gross Goods and Services Tax collections rose 8.1% year on year to over ₹1.83 lakh crore in February 2026, indicating steady consumption and import activity.
Key Figures
- Gross GST: ₹1.83 lakh crore
- Net GST: ₹1.61 lakh crore up 7.9%
- Gross domestic revenue: ₹1.36 lakh crore up 5.3%
- Import revenue: ₹47,837 crore up 17.2%
- Refunds: ₹22,595 crore up 10.2%
- Cumulative GST collection so far this fiscal: ₹20.27 lakh crore up 8.3%.
Policy Context
- GST slabs merged into two major rates: 5% and 18%
- 40% slab retained for ultra luxury goods and tobacco
- Around 375 items saw rate cuts from September 2025
- Initial dip in November after tax cuts followed by recovery in December, January and February.
State Level Trends
Negative growth observed in:
- Tamil Nadu
- Madhya Pradesh
- Rajasthan
Below national average growth in:
- West Bengal
- Haryana
- Uttar Pradesh
- Maharashtra
Significance
- Reflects resilience of consumption demand
- Strong import growth suggests trade momentum
- Stable revenue trend despite rate rationalisation
- Indicates structural maturity of GST ecosystem
[2017] What is/are the most likely advantages of implementing ‘Goods and Services Tax (GST)’? - It will replace multiple taxes collected by multiple authorities and will thus create a single market in India.
- It will drastically reduce the ‘Current Account Deficit’ of India and will enable it to increase its foreign exchange reserves.
- It will enormously increase the growth and size of economy of India and will enable it to overtake China in the near future.
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
(a) 1 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
-
SEBI to Leverage AI and Tech to Crack Down on Market Manipulators
Why in the News
SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey said the regulator will strengthen surveillance using Artificial Intelligence and technology to curb market manipulation and cyber fraud.
Key Announcements
-
Tech Driven Surveillance
- Use of AI to detect market manipulation and suspicious trading patterns.
- Stronger enforcement against fraudulent brokers and cyber criminals.
-
SEBI Check Tool
- Integrated within UPI interface.
- Helps investors verify registered intermediaries before making payments.
- Aimed at curbing fake brokers promising unrealistic returns.
- SEBI has partnered with Bengaluru based AI firm SARVAM for multilingual awareness campaigns.
-
Investor Awareness Push
- AI based outreach pilot contacted 3.85 lakh people.
- Campaigns to caution against financial influencers promising “astronomical” returns.
- Emphasis on disciplined and long term investing.
-
Derivatives & Market Stability
- Measures introduced to cool speculation in equity derivatives.
- Focus on short duration options segment.
- SEBI says no signs of systemic instability.
-
Enforcement Record
- Action against unregistered advisors and alleged market manipulators.
- High success rate in tribunal and Supreme Court cases.
- Regulator defends combined legislative, executive and quasi judicial role.
-
Future Focus Areas
-
- Revitalising agricultural commodity markets.
- Deepening corporate bond market.
- More scientific policy making with impact assessment.
Significance
- Strengthens investor protection.
- Improves trust and transparency in capital markets.
- Reflects shift toward data driven regulation.
- Aligns with digital public infrastructure ecosystem including UPI.
[2025] Consider the following statements: I. India accounts for a very large portion of all equity option contracts traded globally, thus exhibiting a great boom.
II. India’s stock market has grown rapidly in the recent past, even overtaking Hong Kong’s at some point in time.
III. There is no regulatory body either to warn small investors about the risks of options trading or to act on unregistered financial advisors in this regard.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
(a) I and II only (b) II and III only (c) I and III only (d) I, II and III
-
-
Iran–Israel Escalation After Killing of Khamenei
Why in the News
Iran launched missile and drone strikes across Israel and parts of the Gulf after the reported killing of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in U.S. and Israeli bombardment, triggering a widening regional conflict.
What Happened
- U.S. and Israeli strikes hit targets in Tehran.
- Iran retaliated with missiles targeting Israel and Gulf states hosting U.S. forces.
- Israel vowed “non-stop” strikes on Iranian leadership and military sites.
- Casualties reported in Israel, Iran, and among U.S. personnel.
Leadership Transition in Iran
- President Masoud Pezeshkian announced an interim leadership council.
- Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said a new Supreme Leader would be chosen soon.
- Ayatollah Alireza Arafi named to interim council.
- Permanent leader to be elected by the Assembly of Experts.
Wider Regional Impact
- Explosions heard in Tel Aviv; strike reported in Beit Shemesh.
- Shrapnel and debris incidents reported in Abu Dhabi.
- Attacks extended to Oman.
- U.S. President Donald Trump warned of severe retaliation if Iran escalates further.
Strategic Significance
- Raises risk of full-scale regional war in West Asia.
- Direct involvement of U.S. forces increases geopolitical stakes.
- Implications for global oil supply and maritime security in the Gulf.
- Potential impact on India’s energy security and diaspora in the region.
[2023] Consider the following statements: Statement-I: Israel has established diplomatic relations with some Arab States.
Statement-II: The ‘Arab Peace Initiative’ mediated by Saudi Arabia was signed by Israel and Arab League.
Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements?
(a) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II is the correct explanation for Statement-I
(b) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II is not the correct explanation for Statement-I
(c) Statement-I is correct but Statement-II is incorrect
(d) Statement-I is incorrect but Statement-II is correct
-
[28th February 2026] The Hindu OpED: International law is not dead, its rules stay resilient
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2025] The reform process in the United Nations remains unaccomplished because of the delicate imbalance of East and West and entanglement of the USA vs. Russo-Chinese alliance.” Examine and critically evaluate the East-West policy confrontations in this regard.
Linkage: This question directly examines power politics within the UN system, linking to debates on institutional reform, legitimacy, and the resilience of international law. It connects themes of multilateralism, UNSC reform, and geopolitical contestation shaping global governance.
Mentor’s Comment
Debates over the resilience of international law reflect deeper tensions within the contemporary global order. While powerful states increasingly test legal limits, the institutional architecture of treaties, courts, and multilateral frameworks continues to regulate global conduct. The issue is not the disappearance of international law, but the contestation of its authority in an era of geopolitical realignment.
Why in the News?
Recent conflicts, including Russia-Ukraine war (2022), Israel’s military actions in Gaza, tensions in West Asia, and renewed U.S.-Iran hostility, have intensified debates over the effectiveness of international law. Repeated breaches of the UN Charter’s prohibition on the use of force have raised concerns about the credibility of the post-1945 rules-based global order.
What is Article 2(4) of the UN Charter?
It prohibits UN Member States from threatening or using force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, or in any manner inconsistent with UN purposes. This cornerstone of international law aims to prevent war, uphold sovereign equality, and promote peaceful dispute resolution.
Key Aspects of the Prohibition
- Scope: It prohibits the threat or use of armed force in international relations.
- Protected Interests: Actions against a state’s territorial integrity (invasion, occupation) or political independence are strictly forbidden.
- Forms of Force: Prohibited actions include direct military action, invasion, blockade, and indirect use of force through armed groups.
- Cyber Operations: Cyber attacks that cause physical damage, injury, or death are considered violations of this article.
- Exceptions: The prohibition is not absolute; lawful exceptions include authorization by the UN Security Council (Chapter VII) and inherent self-defense against an armed attack (Article 51).
Has the Prohibition on Use of Force Under Article 2(4) Lost Its Normative Authority?
- Article 2(4) of UN Charter: Prohibits threat or use of force in international relations; remains binding on all UN member states.
- Cold War Context: Despite proxy wars, the U.S. and USSR rarely abandoned legal justification frameworks.
- Post-1990 Expansion of Self-Defence: U.S. expanded interpretation of anticipatory self-defence (1990s-2000s) in Afghanistan (2001) and Iraq (2003).
- Contemporary Violations: Russia-Ukraine conflict (2022) and West Asian conflicts challenge Charter principles.
- Continuity of Norms: Even powerful states frame actions within legal narratives, indicating normative pull of law.
Does Legalisation of International Relations Constrain Powerful States?
- Legalisation Process: Institutional frameworks compel states to justify conduct within international law.
- Domestic Anchoring: International norms resonate through domestic constitutional systems.
- Agency of Weaker States: Legal frameworks enable smaller states to question powerful states in multilateral forums.
- Judicialisation: Growth of international courts institutionalises dispute resolution.
- Example: International Criminal Court prosecutions; African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights regional accountability mechanisms.
Is Contemporary Populist-Authoritarianism a Structural Threat to International Law?
- Normative Rejection: Populist regimes openly question liberal constitutional order.
- U.S. Withdrawal Trends: Exit from international agreements during the Trump presidency (e.g., Paris Agreement, WHO).
- Geopolitical Assertion: Russia and others reject Western-led normative frameworks.
- Shift from Justification to Defiance: Reduction in effort to legally justify actions.
- Risk: Weakening compliance culture in multilateral institutions.
Beyond the UN Charter, How Extensive is International Law’s Regulatory Reach?
- Trade Governance: Free Trade Agreements; India-EU negotiations ongoing.
- Maritime Governance: High Seas Treaty (2023) strengthens marine biodiversity protection.
- Global Health: Pandemic Agreement negotiations aim to enhance preparedness.
- Climate Governance: Paris Agreement institutionalises nationally determined contributions (NDCs).
- Arms Control: Chemical and Biological Weapons Conventions regulate prohibited weapons.
- Outer Space Law: Governs peaceful use and liability norms.
Do International Courts Demonstrate Institutional Resilience?
- International Criminal Court (ICC): Prosecutes genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity.
- Regional Courts: African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights strengthens regional human rights enforcement.
- Dispute Settlement: WTO dispute mechanism institutionalises trade compliance (though Appellate Body crisis persists).
- Peaceful Resolution: Courts reduce reliance on armed conflict.
- Continuity: Judicial processes operate independent of media attention.
Does International Law Operate Quietly Despite Political Breaches?
- Silent Functioning: Enables cross-border trade, aviation, communication networks.
- Everyday Governance: Facilitates migration, shipping, investment flows.
- Systemic Integration: Supports global supply chains.
- Structural Embeddedness: Law operates beyond headline conflicts.
- Institutional Persistence: Law-making processes continue despite geopolitical tensions.
Conclusion
International law faces visible strains due to geopolitical rivalries and selective compliance. However, its treaties, courts, and institutional frameworks continue to regulate trade, climate action, maritime governance, and human rights. The current phase reflects contestation and power politics, not the collapse of the rules-based international order.
-
Taliban & terror: How Pakistan came to declare ‘open war’ on Afghanistan
Why in the News?
Pakistan launched cross-border airstrikes in Afghanistan’s Khost and Paktika provinces after a surge in Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) attacks that killed nearly 274 people in recent months. The Afghan Taliban retaliated, marking one of the most direct military confrontations between the two since 2021 and signaling a breakdown of post-Taliban counter-terror coordination.
What explains the recent escalation between Pakistan and the Afghan Taliban?
- TTP Resurgence: Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan intensified attacks inside Pakistan; 274 fatalities reported in recent months.
- Safe Haven Allegations: Pakistan alleges TTP operates from Afghan soil under Taliban protection.
- Retaliatory Airstrikes: Pakistan conducted strikes in Khost and Paktika targeting alleged militant camps.
- Taliban Response: Afghan forces retaliated with mortar shelling across the border.
- Civilian Casualties: Reports indicate non-combatant deaths, escalating humanitarian concerns.
How does the Durand Line dispute complicate the conflict?
- Colonial Legacy: The 2,640-km Durand Line was drawn in 1893 between British India and Afghanistan.
- Non-Recognition: Successive Afghan regimes have questioned the legitimacy of the border.
- Border Clashes: Frequent skirmishes occur along contested stretches.
- Unregulated Movement: Porous terrain facilitates militant infiltration and smuggling networks.
Durand Line
Historical Background
- Establishment (1893): The line was drawn by Sir Mortimer Durand, a British diplomat, and Afghan Emir Abdur Rahman Khan
- Purpose: It was intended to fix the limits of their respective control and serve as a buffer zone against Russian expansionism toward British India
- Inheritance (1947): Following the partition of British India, Pakistan inherited the line as its western border. While Pakistan and most of the international community recognise it, Afghanistan has consistently refused to do so
The Dispute & Conflict
- Ethnic Division: The line cuts through the Pashtun and Baloch tribal heartlands, dividing families and communities across two nations.
- Afghan Position: Successive Afghan governments, including the current Taliban administration, reject the border as a “colonial relic” imposed under duress. They claim territories extending as far as the Indus River.
- Pakistani Position: Pakistan maintains the line is a legally binding international boundary and has fenced approximately 98% of it since 2017 to curb militancy and smuggling
Has Pakistan’s ‘Strategic Depth’ doctrine backfired?
- Strategic Depth Concept: Pakistan historically viewed Afghanistan as a buffer against India.
- Taliban Support: Islamabad extended diplomatic and logistical backing to Taliban factions.
- Blowback Effect: TTP, ideologically aligned with Afghan Taliban, now targets Pakistan.
- Policy Contradiction: Friendly regime in Kabul has not curbed anti-Pakistan militants.
Pakistan’s “Strategic Depth” doctrine:
- It is a long-standing, largely failed, security policy designed to counter India by:
- controlling Afghanistan
- providing a fallback area during conflict
- preventing a two-front threat.
- Developed in the 1980s by Gen. Mirza Aslam Beg, sought to use the Taliban as proxies to create a pro-Pakistan, anti-India regime in Kabul.
Key aspects of this doctrine included:
- Military Fallback: Creating a rear area beyond the Durand Line to regroup if India invaded.
- Control over Kabul: Installing a friendly government in Afghanistan to prevent Indian influence and negate the “encirclement” of Pakistan.
- Proxy Warfare: Nurturing the Taliban and Haqqani network to manage the Pashtun border region and use Afghan soil to project power against India.
Failure and Consequences
- By 2026, the doctrine is seen as a strategic liability rather than a benefit.
- The Taliban’s return to power in 2021 did not result in a subservient state, and Pakistan faces severe cross-border militant blowback from the Taliban.
- The policy has led to increased domestic insecurity, with Afghanistan serving as a “strategic trap” for Pakistan instead of a “strategic depth.
How does this episode reflect challenges in counter-terror strategy?
- Non-State Actor Challenge: TTP operates across borders, complicating traditional military responses.
- Intelligence Gaps: Weak coordination limits actionable counter-terror outcomes.
- Unilateral Force Doctrine: Cross-border strikes risk escalation without durable resolution.
- Humanitarian Risk: Civilian harm undermines legitimacy of counter-terror operations.
What are the implications for India and the South Asian region?
- Militant Spillover: Escalation risks strengthening transnational jihadist networks.
- Regional Instability: Prolonged conflict weakens South Asian security architecture and undermines SAARC-level cooperation.
- Refugee Pressure: Conflict may trigger cross-border displacement.
- Terror Ecosystem Risk: Fragmented militant networks may redirect focus toward India or other neighboring states.
- Central Asian Connectivity Risk: Instability threatens regional trade corridors.
- Diplomatic Leverage: India may recalibrate engagement with regional partners amid shifting Afghanistan dynamics.
Conclusion
The Pakistan-Afghanistan escalation reflects the limits of proxy-based security doctrines and the persistence of cross-border militant ecosystems in South Asia. Tactical airstrikes may offer short-term signalling but fail to address structural drivers such as porous borders, ideological linkages, and weak counter-terror coordination. Durable stability requires institutionalized border management, credible action against non-state actors, and regional security dialogue to prevent further destabilization of the South Asian strategic landscape.
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2024] India has a long and troubled border with China and Pakistan fraught with contentious issues. Examine the conflicting issues and security challenges along the border. Also give out the development being undertaken in these areas under the Border Area Development Programme (BADP) and Border Infrastructure and Management (BIM) Scheme.
Linkage: The Pakistan-Afghanistan conflict shows problems of cross-border terrorism and porous borders. This question helps compare India’s border security system with instability along the Durand Line.
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