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The Indian Air Force which was initially created as an independent
military force proved to be an independent and versatile component
of India's military power in 1971 War. This book provides
insightful essays and material to critically review and revalidate
some of the continuing concepts and approaches to the planning and
execution of military operations. This edited version delves into
the national interest protection and legitimate compulsions for
India to go into war. The compilation also lays out the canvass for
a comparison study with the one in 1965. The analyses on military
strategy of Pakistan and avenues of shortcoming in joint planning
bring out important lessons in force employment. The aggressive
dimensions of offensive actions by all the three Services have been
well documented. The 1971 War proved the heroism, steadfastness and
courage of junior leadership that, incidentally, has also been the
hallmark during Kargil in 1999. Despite frequent criticisms on
jointness, instances of combined resoluteness and mutual trust
during 1971 War contributed immensely to the victory. Valuable
lessons can be inferred from instances where objectivity in
political decisions brought about judicious outcomes through
demonstrable use of military power. The book also provides a few
analytical horizons on the background framework of Simla Agreement
and certain events in the past that could have developed a
different template for history. Air power may be difficult to
understand but an evaluation of the purpose, cost and expected
gains as evident from various instances of history including 1971
War would bring an end to many irreconcilable and inchoate debates.
This book makes for a compelling read for those in quest of
understanding the competence of air power and its dominant
influences to shape victory.
A potential competition exists between India and China, and there
is also no doubt that China started the war. Highlighting the
mistakes made by India rather than empirically analysing the
available data can be regarded as the primary causes for the
confusion that exists today. Though complete details and evidence
of the developments are available and documented, few of us have
attempted to draw up a pragmatic and realist analysis. The
consequences of that war have yet to die down entirely and are
frequently raked up with issues on recent developments which are
not widely dissimilar to those of 1962. China is a complex country.
To understand this rapidly progressing nation is even more
difficult. There are many perceptions on this country and many of
them are formed on account of some international events and China's
growing assertiveness. It may be far-fetched to expect for a
paradigm change in stance and motive which could give China an
uncertain negotiating position. This edited volume provides the
reader an excellent blend of the historical run-up to the
aberration, the military developments and consequences. It is also
provides useful material to understand the geographical boundary
issues between India and China and developing Chinese strategies
both on the political and military front.
Just think: the last combat aircraft designed by the 74-year old
HAL (Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd) with its expansive infrastructure
was in the 1950s - and it was an excellent aircraft. Thirty years
later an ad-hoc, interim institution called ADA (Aeronautics
Development Agency) was set to design the LCA (Light Combat
Aircraft) under the DRDO management. Thirty years later the
aircraft has yet to enter service although the Indian Air Force has
ordered 40 aircraft knowing they do not meet the qualitative
requirements set in the early 1980s, leave alone the 21st century
Even the primary trainer for rookie pilots has just begun to be
imported. Obviously something is wrong for a long time; and
obviously it is a systemic problem. This volume sets out to
historically examine and present a balanced understatement of the
facts. Some of the leading experts in the profession of aerospace
identify the problems. The reader is left to form his judgment and
what appears an obvious solution. The Air Force is the most
concerned stakeholder in the quality and quantity of military
aircraft; but it seems to have been left on the sidelines in the
process of to be criticised as being against indigenisation. We
recognise that India is way behind the developed countries --- and
China now, in design and development of military aviation. We don't
have to go far to find the way ahead. Ninety-five percent of the
Indian Navy's warships and submarines are designed and manufactured
in the country (though many systems inside, like its missiles, may
be acquired from the best in the world). The reason is starkly so
simple that South Block itself does not notice it Naval Head
Quarters contain within its organisation under the leadership and
the Chief of Naval Staff, the Directorate of Naval Design as well
as the Controller of Warship Production besides the other
supporting organisations like WESEE etc. Hence when the indigenous
INS Delhi sailed out in the 1990s, the international community
began to look at Indian Navy with new respect. Why can't similar
system be established for the Army and the Air Force? Read the
volume to ask your questions and mull over possible solutions.
There is an apparent global power shift from the West to the East,
essentially due to the rise of India and China and, as a
consequence, the US has called for greater presence in the East in
the midst of a major economic crisis and huge defence cuts. Many,
after the Cold War, considered the international order to be
unipolar; however, the rise of India and China, with Russia, Japan
and South Korea assuming significant roles, appears to indicate a
shift to a polycentric global order. Hence, the Indo-Russia
dialogue assumes critical importance in the 21st century as a
result of new evolving power centres and the relative decline of
some older ones. The proceedings of the seminar highlight the
requirement of a new relationship based on the Indo-Russia
framework rather than on the earlier Indo-Soviet model in the midst
of the changing regional strategic landscape. The book also draws
attention to the shift in the US policy in East Asia. The economic
and military rise of China and India; the lacklustre economic
performance of Japan; the emergence of India as a nuclear weapon
power; and the relative decline of US credibility as a security
provider have altered the strategic landscape of the region.
China's assertiveness and North Korea's emergence as a nuclear
power are challenging the US presence in the region and, therefore,
forcing the US defence policy to 'Look East'. .is book brings out
an exciting analysis of future Indo-Russia relations based on
defence, civil nuclear energy, space and science and technology.
"ATL Server: High Performance C++ on .NET" is the only book on
the market written by the same people who created the ATL Server
library. Crivat, Grewal, Kumar and Leeall members of the ATL Server
teamprovide a comprehensive look at the ATL Server library, which
was designed for building high-end web applications and web
services.
You won't find such in-depth information written anywhere else.
(Even books about ISAPI do not provide insight on the very library
designed to simplify its development!) From foundation concepts, to
deeper discussion about extensibility and customization, "ATL
Server: High Performance C++ on .NET" covers everything you want to
know about the ATL Server framework.
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Enough (Paperback)
Jasjit Singh and Nirbhey Thakur
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R467
Discovery Miles 4 670
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Unleash the power of Apache Oozie to create and manage your big
data and machine learning pipelines in one go About This Book *
Teaches you everything you need to know to get started with Apache
Oozie from scratch and manage your data pipelines effortlessly *
Learn to write data ingestion workflows with the help of real-life
examples from the author's own personal experience * Embed Spark
jobs to run your machine learning models on top of Hadoop Who This
Book Is For If you are an expert Hadoop user who wants to use
Apache Oozie to handle workflows efficiently, this book is for you.
This book will be handy to anyone who is familiar with the basics
of Hadoop and wants to automate data and machine learning
pipelines. What You Will Learn * Install and configure Oozie from
source code on your Hadoop cluster * Dive into the world of Oozie
with Java MapReduce jobs * Schedule Hive ETL and data ingestion
jobs * Import data from a database through Sqoop jobs in HDFS *
Create and process data pipelines with Pig, hive scripts as per
business requirements. * Run machine learning Spark jobs on Hadoop
* Create quick Oozie jobs using Hue * Make the most of Oozie's
security capabilities by configuring Oozie's security In Detail As
more and more organizations are discovering the use of big data
analytics, interest in platforms that provide storage, computation,
and analytic capabilities is booming exponentially. This calls for
data management. Hadoop caters to this need. Oozie fulfils this
necessity for a scheduler for a Hadoop job by acting as a cron to
better analyze data. Apache Oozie Essentials starts off with the
basics right from installing and configuring Oozie from source code
on your Hadoop cluster to managing your complex clusters. You will
learn how to create data ingestion and machine learning workflows.
This book is sprinkled with the examples and exercises to help you
take your big data learning to the next level. You will discover
how to write workflows to run your MapReduce, Pig ,Hive, and Sqoop
scripts and schedule them to run at a specific time or for a
specific business requirement using a coordinator. This book has
engaging real-life exercises and examples to get you in the thick
of things. Lastly, you'll get a grip of how to embed Spark jobs,
which can be used to run your machine learning models on Hadoop. By
the end of the book, you will have a good knowledge of Apache
Oozie. You will be capable of using Oozie to handle large Hadoop
workflows and even improve the availability of your Hadoop
environment. Style and approach This book is a hands-on guide that
explains Oozie using real-world examples. Each chapter is blended
beautifully with fundamental concepts sprinkled in-between case
study solution algorithms and topped off with self-learning
exercises.
If the Dakota transport aircraft of the Indian Air Force (IAF)
flying from Delhi with troops of the Indian Army had not landed at
Srinagar on the morning of October 27, 1947, the history and
geography of the subcontinent may well have been different! Or if
the four Hunter fighters had not destroyed the bulk of Pakistani
tanks at Longewala in 1971, the road to Jaisalmer for their armour
thrust was wide open. The history of the Indian Air Force over the
past 75 years is replete with such incidents and actions which had
seminal implications for the country's defence. The list of such
historical landmarks in the history of our defence from the defence
of Imphal in 1944 to Kargil is long. Air forces are unique in the
sense that they are the only national military institution
exclusively devoted to military operations in the aerospace
continuum. The Indian Air Force is no different. But its operations
take place away and beyond the optical horizons of even the army
jawans, leave alone the civilians. The mind pays less attention to
what the eyes don't see - out of sight, out of mind is so true
about the functioning of air forces. But their dominant role in
modern warfare, the high costs of aerospace power, and a host of
other factors demand closer attention to their role in modern
defence and the protection of national interests in pursuit of our
foreign policy. Air forces don't win wars by themselves; and no one
in the Indian Air Force has ever claimed it. But no war can be won
without them. We learnt that seminal lesson the hard way when we
did not use the potent force of lAF's combat fleet in the
Sino-India War of 1962 since the decision-makers at the very top
did not understand air power and its role in national defence. And
37 years later it still took some vacillation in the summer of 99
before the air force was allowed to reduce the enemy's ability to
fight and make the task of our army that much easier during the
Kargil War. The air force has the unique capability to shape and
influence operations on land and sea; and this makes it the
dominant force in national defence. Land and naval forces, vital to
national defence for a variety of reasons, cannot interfere with
air operations except at the edges when they are able to employ
some elements of air power in extension of land and maritime
operations. It is from this perspective that this study - or rather
an interpretative essay reflecting on the significant issues and
events of the past 75 years - approaches the challenges the Indian
Air Force faces in the coming decades. IAF combat forces levels
have slumped while its commitments are growing rapidly in
consonance with our expanding economic and political interests well
beyond our territorial boundaries. The author, a leading expert in
national defence, brings his vast experience and knowledge of air
operations in peace and war to suggest some guidelines in this
volume for the future defence of India from the skies.
While deterrence was pursued through the threat of causing
grievious hurt, vying with annihilation, diplomacy sought to
construct a framework where the powerful sought to retain their
advantage while pressing for reducing that of the adversary or
completley dnying it to others.
Contributed articles presented at an international conference held in 1999.
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