Russia ready to boost oil, LNG to India | Nicobar tribal relocation plan sparks concern | Kerala's Development Decade | Iran may lose battles, not the war | Fera Of The Foreign | U.S.-China reset: 5 ways India must respond | Viral video, crime without end | Rupee pressure goes beyond crisis | In Bengal, EC needs SC prod | New space age: frontiers, challenges | India’s 3rd nuclear sub: why it matters
RUSSIA READY TO BOOST OIL, LNG TO INDIA
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Amid disruptions caused by the U.S.–Israel conflict with Iran in West Asia, concerns over global oil supply chains and fertilizer availability have intensified.
- Russia has assured India of steady increases in oil and LNG supplies, along with continued fertilizer exports.
- Russian Deputy PM Denis Manturov visited India and held discussions with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and key ministers.
- The visit aligns with preparations for the upcoming BRICS Summit (hosted by India) and the India–Russia Annual Summit (2026).
- Russia reported a 40% increase in fertilizer exports to India, with plans for joint urea production projects.
Key Points
- Energy SecurityRussia is willing to expand crude oil and LNG exports to India.
- India has increased reliance on discounted Russian crude post-2022 geopolitical shifts.
- Fertilizer CooperationRussia increased supply of mineral fertilizers by ~40%.
- Joint project for carbamide (urea) production under development.
- Strategic EngagementTalks covered trade, connectivity, nuclear energy, industrial cooperation, and space collaboration.
- Emphasis on strengthening ties before BRICS and bilateral summit.
- Multilateral CoordinationIndia–Russia– China (RIC) grouping to coordinate positions in:
- BRICS
- Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO)
- United Nations
- Focus on issues of the Global South.
- Diplomatic EngagementsMeetings with External Affairs Minister, Finance Minister, NSA.
- Parliamentary exchanges between Russian and Indian legislative leaders.
Static Linkages
- India imports ~85% of its crude oil needs (Economic Survey).
- Fertilizer sector is critical for food security and MSP-linked agriculture system.
- Urea is the most widely used nitrogenous fertilizer in India.
- BRICS represents major emerging economies accounting for ~40% of global population.
- Energy security is a core component of national security and economic stability.
- Diversification of energy sources is part of India’s energy policy strategy.
Critical Analysis
- Advantages
- Ensures stable energy supply during global disruptions.
- Secures fertilizer availability → supports agriculture.
- Strengthens India–Russia strategic partnership.
- Concerns
- Risk of overdependence on Russia.
- Exposure to Western sanctions pressure.
- Contradicts climate commitments (fossil fuel dependence).
- Challenges
- Payment mechanisms (rupee–ruble trade).
- Balancing strategic autonomy vs global alignment.
Way Forward
- Diversify energy sources (Middle East, renewables).
- Promote domestic fertilizer production & nano-urea.
- Strengthen strategic petroleum reserves.
- Continue multi-alignment diplomacy.
NICOBAR TRIBAL RELOCATION PLAN SPARKS CONCERN
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- The Union government’s ₹92,000-crore Great Nicobar Island (GNI) mega infrastructure project has triggered concerns among the Nicobarese tribal community.
- A draft “Comprehensive Tribal Welfare Plan” proposes relocation of tribal families from project-impacted/tsunami-affected areas.
- Confusion persists regarding: Exact relocation sites Number of affected families
- The Tribal Council of Great and Little Nicobar has raised objections citing lack of clarity and consultation.
- The community had withdrawn consent in 2022, alleging non-settlement of forest rights.
- The issue is under judicial scrutiny in the Calcutta High Court, where the Centre must prove free, prior, informed consent (FPIC).
Key Points
- Project Features:International container transshipment terminal
- Greenfield airport
- Township and power infrastructure
- Relocation Plan:₹42.52 crore allocation over 24 months
- Covers 62 Nicobarese families
- Includes housing, land development, and infrastructure
- Ambiguities:Conflicting references to
- relocation:
- To existing settlements (Rajiv Nagar, New Chingenh)
- To Pulobhabi (ancestral site) Inconsistent data:
- 62 homes to be upgraded vs only 30 new houses planned
- Community Concerns:Fear of permanent displacement from ancestral lands
- Lack of clarity on project boundaries
- Demand for return to pre-2004 tsunami villages Government Position:Claims project will not displace tribes
- Yet draft plan explicitly mentions relocation
Static Linkages
- Article 244 & Fifth/Sixth Schedule – Protection of tribal interests (though A&N not under Sixth Schedule, spirit applies)
- Forest Rights Act, 2006 (FRA):
- Recognition of individual & community forest rights
- Mandatory Gram Sabha consent for diversion
- Panchayats (Extension to Scheduled Areas) Act, 1996 (PESA) principles (though not directly लागू in A&N, relevant for tribal self-governance norms) Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)
- Notification, 2006 – clearance for large infrastructure projects
- Island Coastal Regulation Zone (ICRZ) norms
- 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami – led to displacement of Nicobarese communities
Critical Analysis
- Positives:
- Strategic location near global shipping routes
- Economic and infrastructure development
- Enhances India’s maritime security
- Concerns:
- Incomplete implementation of FRA, 2006
- Questionable free, prior, informed consent
- Risk of cultural displacement
- Ecological sensitivity of island ecosystem
- Administrative opacity
Way Forward
- Complete forest rights settlement before project execution
- Ensure free, prior and informed consent
- Provide clear, transparent rehabilitation plan
- Balance strategic needs with ecological sustainability
- Strengthen tribal participation in decision-making
KERALA’S DEVELOPMENT DECADE
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Kerala has witnessed rapid economic and social development (2016–2026) despite fiscal constraints imposed by the Union framework.
- The State has sustained a formal planning process even after the dissolution of the Planning Commission.
- Major initiatives include KIIFB-funded infrastructure projects, Kerala Bank consolidation, and welfare expansion.
- Kerala claims to have eliminated extreme poverty (2025) and strengthened human development indicators significantly.
- Concerns remain regarding fiscal federalism, GST regime constraints, and borrowing limits.
Key Points
- Economic GrowthGrowth rates comparable or higher than national average.
- Expansion across primary, secondary, and tertiary sectors.
- Rise of MSMEs, IT ecosystem (147% increase in value).
- Infrastructure DevelopmentOver 1,200 projects via KIIFB.
- Major projects: Vizhinjam Port, Kochi Metro, Water Metro.
- Improved connectivity through highways and electrification.
- Human DevelopmentInfant Mortality Rate: ~5 per 1,000 (global standards).
- Universal school education with zero dropout (elementary level).
- First fully digital school education State.
- Social WelfareNear-universal Public Distribution System (PDS).
- 75% elderly covered under pensions. Gender Budget >20% of plan outlay.
- Health & Social SecurityKarunya Arogya Suraksha Scheme (₹5 lakh coverage).
- Strong response to Nipah and COVID-19.
- Women EmpowermentKudumbashree model for livelihoods and local governance.
- High female literacy and life expectancy.
- Governance InnovationsDecentralised planning through local governments.
- Internet access recognized as a basic right (K- FON initiative).
- Fiscal ConstraintsReduced fiscal autonomy due to:
- GST centralisation
- Decline in divisible pool share (cess/surcharge rise)
- Conditional transfers and borrowing restrictions
Static Linkages
- Directive Principles promoting welfare state and social justice
- Concept of cooperative federalism
- Role of Finance Commission and fiscal transfers
- Importance of human capital (education & health) in development
- Decentralisation via local self-government institutions
- Public Distribution System as food security mechanism
- Inclusive growth and social sector expenditure
Critical Analysis
- Pros
- High human development indicators
- Strong social security system
- Effective decentralised governance
- Balanced growth with inclusion
- Cons
- Rising public debt and fiscal stress
- Dependence on welfare-driven expenditure
- Limited heavy industrial base
- Constraints from central fiscal policies
Way Forward
- Ensure fiscal sustainability & transparency
- Boost industrialisation and private investment
- Strengthen cooperative federalism
- Promote innovation-led growth sectors
- Rationalise welfare spending
IRAN MAY LOSE BATTLES, NOT THE WAR
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- Donald Trump addressed the nation (April 1) regarding the ongoing U.S. military strikes on Iran, justifying them as efforts to curb Iran’s nuclear and regional power ambitions.
- No announcement of escalation (e.g., ground invasion) or ceasefire; ambiguity persists in U.S. strategy.
- Iran has demonstrated resilience despite sustained attacks, retaining capacity for retaliation and escalation.
- The conflict has widened regionally, impacting energy infrastructure and global oil supply chains, particularly through the Strait of Hormuz.
- Global concerns rise over economic instability, geopolitical fragmentation, and prolonged conflict dynamics.
Key Points
- Strategic vs Tactical OutcomesU.S. may achieve tactical military success but lacks a clear pathway to strategic victory.
- Regime change in Iran unlikely without large-scale ground invasion.
- Iran’s Strategic AdvantagesStrong institutional backing by Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
- Decentralised command structure ensures survival despite targeted strikes.
- Ability to conduct horizontal escalation across West Asia.
- Energy GeopoliticsStrait of Hormuz handles ~20–25% of global oil trade (Energy security concern).
- Disruption triggers inflation and impacts energy-importing countries like India.
- Global & Regional DynamicsNATO allies reluctant to fully support U.S. actions.
- Gulf countries vulnerable to retaliation despite hosting U.S. bases.
- Emerging alternative diplomatic platforms (e.g., regional groupings).
- Economic ImplicationsOil price volatility → Inflationary pressures globally.
- Asian economies (India, China, Japan) highly exposed.
Static Linkages
- Strait of Hormuz as a critical choke point in global trade routes
- Balance of Power theory in international relations
- Concept of Proxy Wars in West Asia
- Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) framework
- Role of OPEC in global oil markets
- India’s energy import dependency (~85% crude oil imports)
- Principles of Just War and sovereignty
Critical Analysis
- Positives
- Curtails nuclear proliferation risks
- Reinforces deterrence
- Negatives
- No clear end-goal → prolonged conflict
- Strengthens hardliners in Iran
- Global oil shocks → inflation
- Challenges
- Escalation into regional war
- Energy supply disruption
- Weak multilateral diplomacy
Way Forward
- Revive nuclear diplomacy (JCPOA-type framework)
- Ensure maritime security in Hormuz
- Diversify energy sources (India focus)
- Promote multilateral conflict resolution
FEAR OF THE FOREIGN
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- The Union Government introduced amendments to the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 2010 in the Lok Sabha on March 25, 2026.
- The Bill proposes creation of a “designated authority” to take control of assets of organisations whose FCRA registration is cancelled or lapses.
- The move has faced criticism from civil society, NGOs, and opposition leaders for being opaque and arbitrary.
- The Bill has been temporarily stalled due to protests, but not withdrawn.
- Concerns have been raised especially by organisations involved in education, healthcare, and religious services.
Key Points
- Designated Authority:
- Empowered to seize, manage, and dispose of assets created using foreign funds.
- Applies once FCRA licence is cancelled or not renewed.
- Automatic Asset Transfer:
- No requirement of judicial determination or adjudicatory process.
- Immediate takeover raises due process concerns.
- Expansion of Executive Power:
- Government both grants and revokes FCRA registration, creating potential conflict of interest.
- Evolution of FCRA:
- 1976: Original Act (Emergency era context).
- 2010: Re-enacted with stricter compliance norms.
- 2020: Amendments tightened restrictions (e.g., ban on sub-granting, Aadhaar requirement).
- Opacity Concerns:
- Lack of transparency in cancellation/non- renewal data.
- Parliamentary oversight allegedly limited.
- Selective Regulation Allegation:
- Claims of uneven application of rules across organisations.
Static Linkages
- Rule of Law requires equality before law and non- arbitrariness (Art. 14).
- Right to form associations under Art. 19(1)(c) (subject to reasonable restrictions).
- Doctrine of Natural Justice: audi alteram partem (right to be heard).
- Separation of powers and need for judicial review.
- Concept of eminent domain vs private property rights (Art. 300A).
- Role of civil society in welfare state functions.
- Regulatory governance must ensure transparency and accountability (2nd ARC).
Critical Analysis
- Arguments in Favour
- Prevents misuse/diversion of foreign funds.
- Strengthens national security framework.
- Ensures regulatory control over NGOs.
- Arguments Against
- Violates natural justice (no hearing).
- Enables executive overreach.
- Risk of selective targeting.
- Undermines civil society functioning.
- Reduces transparency and accountability.
Way Forward
- Introduce mandatory judicial/quasi-judicial oversight.
- Ensure transparent criteria for cancellation.
- Publish FCRA-related data regularly.
- Balance security concerns with democratic freedoms
- Strengthen institutional accountability mechanisms.
U.S. -CHINA RESET: 5 WAYS INDIA MUST RESPOND
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- The evolving dynamics of United States–China relations are undergoing structural transformation beyond leadership personalities.
- The U.S. is recalibrating its strategy—shifting focus from ideological rivalry to economic competition and prioritising domestic concerns and the Western Hemisphere.
- China is leveraging stability to strengthen technological self-reliance, renewable energy dominance, and global supply chain leadership.
- The ongoing West Asian conflict (Iran war) has exposed U.S. unpredictability and enhanced China’s image as a restrained actor.
- These developments are shrinking India’s strategic space and complicating its foreign policy choices.
Key Points
- U.S.–China relations are becoming less confrontational in tone but competitive in substance.
- The Indo-Pacific may lose primacy in U.S. strategy; transactional diplomacy may increase.
- China has:
- Diversified energy imports
- Built large strategic petroleum reserves
- Dominated renewable and green-tech supply chains
- Global transition: Petrostates → Electrostates (renewable-driven geopolitics).
- India faces:
- Reduced salience in both Washington and Beijing
- Risk of U.S.–China deals affecting its interests
- Growing technological dependence risks (AI, supply chains)
- Emergence of bipolar AI ecosystem dominated by U.S. and China.
- Continued strength of China–Pakistan nexus with tactical U.S.–Pakistan thaw.
Static Linkages
- Balance of Power theory in international relations
- Strategic autonomy in foreign policy
- Energy security and diversification (Economic Survey insights)
- Non-alignment vs multi-alignment evolution
- Concept of deterrence (asymmetric warfare)
- Globalisation vs de-risking and supply chain resilience
- Renewable energy transition and climate commitments (Paris Agreement)
- Role of strategic petroleum reserves
Critical Analysis
- Pros
- Opportunity for India as an independent pole
- Renewable transition benefits India
- Cons
- Reduced importance of India globally
- Risk of U.S.–China strategic deals
- Technological dependence risks
- China’s dominance in green tech
- Challenges
- Managing LAC tensions Bridging tech gap
- Maintaining neighbourhood influence
Way Forward
- Build indigenous tech & AI ecosystem
- Ensure dual de-risking strategy
- Strengthen defence and border infrastructure
- Deepen selective global partnerships
- Revive Neighbourhood First & Act East
- Invest in renewables and supply chains
VIRAL VIDEO, CRIME WITHOUT END
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Recent cases involving sexual abuse and circulation of explicit videos (e.g., allegations linked to Prajwal Revanna, Nashik godman, Goa councillor’s son) have sparked national concern.
- Viral circulation of abuse videos has intensified trauma for victims, raising questions on digital sexual violence.
- Judicial recognition of “virtual rape” in State of West Bengal vs Animesh Boxi highlighted that recording and circulation of sexual abuse is an extension of the crime.
- Increasing use of John Doe orders by courts to curb online dissemination of such content.
Key Points
- Sexual violence extends beyond physical assault to recording and online dissemination.
- Circulation of abuse videos leads to:
- Violation of privacy, dignity, and bodily autonomy
- Perpetual trauma (“crimes in perpetuity”)
- Social stigma, isolation, and underreporting
- Digital platforms amplify harm through:
- Trolling, doxxing, rape threats
- Permanent digital footprint
- Legal challenges:
- Reluctance of police to register FIRs
- Victim-blaming during trial
- Burden on victims to track and report content
- Judicial innovations:
- Recognition of virtual rape
- Use of John Doe orders for content removal
Static Linkages
- Article 21 – Right to life includes dignity, privacy (expanded in Justice K.S. Puttaswamy vs Union of India)
- Article 14 & 15 – Equality and protection against discrimination
- Information Technology Act, 2000:
- Section 67, 67A – Punishment for publishing/transmitting obscene material
- Indian Penal Code (IPC):
- Section 376 – Rape
- Section 354C – Voyeurism
- Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2013 – Expanded definition of sexual offences
- NCERT (Sociology) – Patriarchy, gender inequality, stigma
- ARC Reports – Emphasis on citizen-centric and sensitive policing
Critical Analysis
- Positives
- Judicial recognition of digital dimension of sexual violence
- Use of John Doe orders to curb anonymity online
- Growing discourse on right to be forgotten
- Concerns
- Legal framework still reactive, not preventive
- Burden of proof and action lies disproportionately on victims
- Weak enforcement by police and intermediaries
- Persistent patriarchal attitudes in investigation and trial
- Cross-border nature of internet complicates regulation
- Stakeholder Issues
- Victims: trauma, stigma, lack of support
- State: enforcement gaps, capacity issues
- Digital platforms: accountability vs free speech debate
- Society: voyeurism and moral failure
Way Forward
- Enact clear legal framework on “right to be forgotten”
- Strengthen intermediary liability under IT rules
- Establish fast-track cyber forensic units
- Ensure gender-sensitive policing and judicial processes
- Promote digital ethics awareness and accountability
- Provide psychological and legal aid support systems for victims
- Develop AI-based proactive detection and takedown systems
RUPEE PRESSURE GOES BEYOND CRISIS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- The Indian rupee has crossed the ₹95/$ mark in March 2026, hitting record lows.
- Over the past ~16 years, the rupee has depreciated at an average annual rate of ~4.6%.
- Persistent current account pressures due to high import dependence (especially energy) and trade deficit.
- Rising global crude oil prices and geopolitical tensions (West Asia) have intensified external vulnerabilities.
- Capital flows (FDI and FPI) have turned volatile, with phases of net outflows.
- The Reserve Bank of India has intervened in forex markets to smooth volatility but not to fix a target exchange rate.
Key Points
- India runs a structural trade deficit, with merchandise trade deficit rising to $27.1 billion (Feb 2026) from $14.4 billion (Feb 2025).
- Heavy reliance on imported crude oil increases vulnerability to global price shocks.
- Capital inflows are unstable:
- Net FDI turning negative due to repatriation.
- Portfolio flows (FPI) showing volatility and outflows.
- RBI intervention:
- Acts as a buffer against volatility, not against long-term depreciation.
- Has been a net seller of dollars since 2022 in some phases.
- Exchange rate acts as a shock absorber for external imbalances.
- Export base remains narrow and concentrated, limiting resilience.
Static Linkages
- Exchange rate determined by demand and supply of foreign exchange (NCERT Macroeconomics).
- Balance of Payments (BoP) identity: Current Account + Capital Account = Overall Balance.
- Persistent Current Account Deficit (CAD) leads to currency depreciation pressure.
- Role of foreign exchange reserves in stabilizing currency (RBI reports).
- Elasticity approach & Marshall-Lerner condition for trade balance adjustment.
- Energy security linked to import dependence (~85% crude oil) (Economic Survey).
- Managed float exchange rate system followed by India.
Critical Analysis
- Positives
- Improves export competitiveness Helps adjustment of BoP
- Acts as automatic stabilizer
- Negatives
- Imported inflation (fuel, fertilizers) Higher CAD in short term
- External debt burden increases Investor sentiment weakens
- Challenges
- High energy import dependence Export concentration
- Volatile capital flows (FPI dominance)
- Limited effectiveness of RBI intervention
Way Forward
- Diversify exports (products + markets)
- Promote manufacturing (PLI schemes)
- Shift toward stable FDI inflows
- Reduce oil dependence (renewables, green hydrogen)
- Strengthen forex reserves
- Improve logistics & competitiveness
IN BENGAL, EC NEEDS SC PROD
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Electoral rolls in West Bengal are under revision ahead of elections, with ~60 lakh voters marked “under adjudication”.
- Delay in tribunal hearings (set up in Kolkata) has left many voters uncertain about their status.
- Protests erupted in Malda after alleged deletions from electoral rolls.
- Concerns of large-scale disenfranchisement due to prolonged verification processes.
- Questions raised over the role of the Election Commission of India and judicial oversight by the Supreme Court of India.
Key Points
- Article 326 guarantees universal adult suffrage (voting rights for all eligible citizens).
- Electoral roll revision conducted through Special Intensive Revision (SIR).
- Around 60 lakh voters under adjudication, risking exclusion before elections.
- Appointment of 8,100 central government employees as micro-observers raised concerns about federal neutrality.
- Deployment of judicial officers for adjudication without strict timelines has delayed resolution.
Static Linkages
- Article 324: Superintendence, direction, and control of elections vested in Election Commission.
- Article 326: Elections based on adult suffrage. Representation of the People Act, 1950: Preparation and revision of electoral rolls.
- Representation of the People Act, 1951: Conduct of elections.
- Concept of “free and fair elections” – part of Basic Structure (as per judicial interpretation).
- Electoral Registration Officer (ERO) – statutory authority for electoral rolls.
- Model Code of Conduct – ensures level playing field during elections.
Critical Analysis
- Issues
- Mass disenfranchisement risk
- Administrative opacity
- Trust deficit in electoral process
- Weak grievance redressal Justifications
- Need to remove bogus/duplicate voters
- Ensuring electoral integrity
- Core Conflict
- Integrity of rolls vs Inclusiveness of democracy
Way Forward
- Time-bound disposal of voter disputes
- Transparent verification mechanisms
- Strengthen ERO accountability
- Tech-enabled roll management with safeguards
- Judicial monitoring in sensitive cases
NEW SPACE AGE: FRONTIERS, CHALLENGES
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Artemis Program recently launched a crewed mission aimed at preparing for future human landing on the Moon.
- Unlike the Apollo Program, the current mission does not involve immediate lunar landing.
- The mission is part of the Artemis Accords signed by 50+ countries, including India.
- It reflects a shift from Cold War rivalry (USA– USSR) to emerging Sino-US competition in space.
- Focus is on Moon’s South Pole exploration, especially water-ice deposits.
Key Points
- Artemis aims to:
- Establish sustainable human presence on the Moon.
- Use lunar resources (water ice → oxygen + hydrogen fuel).
- Develop technologies for future Mars missions.
- South Pole significance:
- Permanently shadowed craters contain water ice (ISRO & NASA findings).
- Timeline:
- Human landing targeted around 2028.
- Competes with China’s planned lunar missions
- Artemis Accords:
- Promote peaceful use, transparency, interoperability, and data sharing.
- Non-binding framework (soft law).
- Multi-stakeholder model:
- Collaboration between space agencies, private sector, academia.
- Moon as:
- Scientific archive (unchanged surface → early solar system evidence).
- Launchpad for deep-space missions.
Static Linkages
- Outer Space Treaty, 1967:
- Space is the “province of all mankind”.
- No sovereignty claims allowed.
- Concept of Global Commons.
- Role of ISRO in lunar exploration (e.g., Chandrayaan-3).
- Cryosphere and water ice in extreme environments.
- Hydrogen as a clean fuel (Energy transition).
- International cooperation vs strategic rivalry in global governance.
Critical Analysis
- Pros
- Promotes international cooperation
- Boosts New Space economy (private sector)
- Enables long-term space exploration (Moon → Mars)
- Scientific understanding of solar system
- Cons
- Artemis Accords:
- No binding enforcement
- No dispute resolution mechanism
- Exclusion of:
- Risk of:
- Space militarisation
- Resource competition
- Fragmentation of global space governance
Way Forward
- Strengthen global space governance under UN framework
- Create:
- Binding norms
- Dispute resolution mechanisms
- Ensure inclusive participation (all space powers)
- Promote space as global commons
- India:
- Leverage Artemis participation
- Enhance ISRO capabilities & private sector role
INDIA’S THIRD NUCLEAR SUB: WHY IT MATTERS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- India inducted its third nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine, INS Aridaman, enhancing sea-based nuclear deterrence.
- This marks the first time India has three operational SSBNs, strengthening second- strike capability.
- The development reinforces India’s status among a select group of countries (US, Russia, China, France) possessing a nuclear triad.
- The submarine is part of India’s long-term indigenous nuclear submarine programme involving DRDO and international collaboration (notably Russia).
Key Points
- INS Aridaman Features:Approx. 7,000- tonne SSBN with improved stealth and endurance.
- Equipped with 8 vertical launch tubes, nearly double its predecessors.
- Capable of carrying:
- K-15 SLBM (~700 km range)
- K-4 SLBM (~3,500 km range)
- Advanced nuclear reactor enabling long- duration submerged operations.
- Earlier SSBNs:INS Arihant (2016) – first indigenous SSBN.
- INS Arighaat (2024) – technologically upgraded successor.
- Strategic Significance:Ensures credible second-strike capability under India’s No First Use (NFU) doctrine.
- Enhances survivability due to stealth and mobility of submarines.
- Complements land-based (Agni missiles) and air-based (Rafale, Su-30MKI) delivery systems.
- Future Plans:Development of next SSBN with higher missile capacity.
- Indigenous SSN (attack submarine) programme underway.
- Project-75I for conventional submarines with AIP technology.
Static Linkages
- Nuclear deterrence theory – concept of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD)
- No First Use Policy and credible minimum deterrence
- Types of submarines: SSBN, SSN, SSGN
- Ballistic missile systems and ranges (short, intermediate, intercontinental)
- Role of pressurised water reactors in naval propulsion
- Maritime security and Indian Ocean strategic importance
Critical Analysis
- Pros:
- Strengthens deterrence credibility
- Enhances survivability (stealth)
- Boosts indigenisation and DRDO capability
- Improves India’s strategic position in Indo-
- Pacific Cons:
- High cost and maintenance burden
- Risk of regional arms race
- Limited fleet vs global powers
- Partial technology dependence
Way Forward
- Expand SSBN fleet for continuous at-sea deterrence
- Accelerate indigenous reactor & propulsion tech
- Strengthen command & control systems
- Develop SSN fleet for tactical superiority
- Maintain NFU credibility + strategic restraint