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Bharat’s 5G Network Slicing Moment: Powerful Lessons from China’s Telecom Leap

Network slicing marks a decisive shift in Bharat’s 5G journey, moving telecom from simple speed claims to assured service quality. Airtel’s Priority Postpaid launch shows how Indian operators are beginning to address real-world congestion in traffic, concerts, markets, and public spaces. China’s more advanced standalone 5G slicing tests demonstrate the power of ecosystem coordination across…
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Indus Waters Treaty: The Fragile Pact That Survived Wars But Faces a Hard Reckoning

The Indus Waters Treaty is often celebrated as a rare India-Pakistan agreement that survived wars, terrorism crises, and decades of diplomatic hostility. This analysis explains why survival alone is not the same as success. It examines the treaty’s 1960 structure, the division of eastern and western rivers, the role of the Permanent Indus Commission, and…
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Myanmar’s Humanitarian Nightmare: Civil War, Displacement and a Nation in Pain

Myanmar’s crisis has become one of the most severe humanitarian emergencies in South and Southeast Asia. Since the 2021 military coup, millions have been displaced, poverty has deepened, and public services such as education and healthcare have suffered extensive damage. The conflict now involves the military, ethnic resistance organisations, People’s Defence Forces, and many local…
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How Maratha Power Made Space for the Sikh Empire’s Dramatic Rise in Punjab

The rise of the Sikh Empire under Maharaja Ranjit Singh was shaped by the wider collapse of Mughal authority and the fierce Maratha-Afghan struggle for North India. Maratha expansion into Delhi and Punjab weakened Mughal administrative power and challenged Afghan influence across the region. The Third Battle of Panipat was a devastating Maratha defeat, but…
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म्यांमार संकट की भयावह सच्चाई: विस्थापन, युद्ध और टूटती नागरिक सुरक्षा

म्यांमार का मानवीय संकट लाखों नागरिकों के विस्थापन, गृहयुद्ध, सैन्य कार्रवाई और टूटती संस्थाओं की गंभीर कहानी है। 2021 के सैन्य तख्तापलट के बाद देश में राजनीतिक वैधता, जातीय संघर्ष और नागरिक सुरक्षा का संकट गहराता गया है। लाखों लोग बांग्लादेश, थाईलैंड और भारत में शरण ले चुके हैं, जबकि करोड़ों नागरिक गरीबी, भय और…
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Venezuela Earthquake Relief: Indian Doctors, Ram Siya Ram, and Seva Amid Ruins

Indian medical teams reportedly established a mobile hospital in Caracas after Venezuela’s devastating June 24, 2026 twin earthquakes, treating survivors amid rising casualties and widespread displacement. The presence of Ram Siya Ram at the medical camp became a moving symbol of dharmic seva, linking clinical service with spiritual resilience. This rewritten account explains the technical…
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Why Bharat’s PL-15 Shock Demands More Than a Powerful Long-Range Missile

Bharat’s reported interest in the Russian R-37M missile is best understood as an interim response to Pakistan’s J-10C and PL-15 combination, not as a complete solution. The PL-15 challenge is rooted in networked air warfare, where sensors, datalinks, AEW&C aircraft, electronic warfare, and pilot training matter as much as missile range. The R-37M can threaten…
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Shiv Sena UBT’s Fiery Warning on BJP, China and Ram Mandir Accountability

The Shiv Sena (UBT) controversy over BJP, China, and the Ram Mandir row highlights a serious debate about political Hindutva, national security, and temple accountability. The Saamana editorial accused the BJP of inconsistency between its claims of patriotism and Hindutva and its alleged handling of Chinese incursions and Ram Mandir donation concerns. This rewritten analysis…
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Canada’s Hard Truth on Air India 182: Justice, Memory, and Khalistani Extremism

Air India Flight 182 remains the deadliest terrorist attack in Canadian history and a defining test of Canada’s counterterrorism memory. The recent acknowledgment naming Canada-based Khalistani extremists as responsible for the Kanishka bombing is significant because it confirms what India had long argued: the massacre was not an abstract aviation disaster but a terrorist conspiracy…
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Gwadar’s High-Stakes Gamble: Why Russia’s CPEC Option Alarms Bharat

Russia’s possible use of Gwadar Port is a high-stakes geopolitical issue because Gwadar is tied to CPEC, China’s Belt and Road Initiative, and Pakistan-occupied territory claimed by Bharat. The proposal offers Moscow a potential non-Western trade route at a time of sanctions pressure, while giving Pakistan diplomatic validation for its corridor strategy. However, the risks…
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BrahMos to UAE: Russia’s High-Stakes Calculus Behind Bharat’s Defence Rise

The possible BrahMos sale to the UAE highlights the changing logic of defence diplomacy in a multipolar world. Russia may approve the deal because it strengthens military-technical cooperation with Bharat while keeping Moscow relevant in a major joint weapons platform. The UAE’s interest reflects its desire for deterrence, defence diversification, and greater strategic autonomy amid…
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Bharat’s Strategic Reset: Why De-Americanising Must Not Mean Trusting China

The debate over de-Americanising Indian statecraft must be treated with historical depth rather than emotional reaction. Bharat was never fully Americanised, as its record of non-alignment, the 1971 Indo-Soviet Treaty, and repeated resistance to external pressure demonstrate. At the same time, disappointment with Washington should not lead India to romanticise China or ignore the realities…
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NASM-SR Salvo Test: Powerful Boost to Bharat’s Indigenous Naval Strike Edge

The NASM-SR salvo test marks a major advance in Bharat’s indigenous naval strike capability. By launching two Naval Anti-Ship Missile Short Range weapons in quick succession from a helicopter platform, DRDO and the Indian Navy demonstrated a more realistic and tactically demanding combat capability. The test matters because salvo firing can complicate enemy ship defences…
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Indus Waters Treaty Explained: Powerful Rivers, Partition, and Bharat’s Water Legacy

This long-form analysis explains why the Indus Waters Treaty is not merely a legal agreement but a civilisational, agricultural, and geopolitical turning point. It traces the Indus basin from Harappan water management and British canal engineering to Partition and the 1960 treaty. The piece clarifies how the Ravi, Beas, Sutlej, Indus, Jhelum, and Chenab were…
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Bharat’s Drone-Age Army: Powerful Lessons in Self-Reliant Future Warfare

Bharat’s Indian Army is entering a decisive phase of military modernisation shaped by drones, artificial intelligence, electronic warfare, cyber operations, and precision fires. General Upendra Dwivedi’s tenure is significant because it accelerated the move from manpower-heavy structures toward a more technology-enabled and future-ready force. The rapid expansion of drone and counter-drone capabilities reflects hard lessons…
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Bharat’s Urgent Sovereignty Test: AI, Starlink, and Resilient National Power

Bharat’s sovereignty challenge in the age of AI and Starlink is not limited to ownership of technology. It is about whether critical systems can continue to function during disruption, coercion, cyberattack, electronic warfare, or denial of access. The Ukraine conflict shows how commercial satellite networks can become decisive military infrastructure and also strategic vulnerabilities. Artificial…
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Bangladesh’s Hindus Face a Defining Fight for Faith, Safety and Dignity

The controversy over the proposed Shri Ram murti in Bangladesh has become a major test of religious freedom, minority rights, and state responsibility. What began as a temple development project reportedly turned into a national flashpoint after online agitation, extremist mobilisation, and public intimidation. The issue is not only about one murti, but about whether…


