Algorithmic Speed and The Future of Lethality

By |2026-05-12T10:05:58-10:00May 11, 2026|Categories: Watson, Edge|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |

Multi-Domain Operations (MDO) are emerging as the U.S. military’s answer to China’s system-centric approach to warfare, which seeks to disrupt and paralyze the connective architecture of joint operations. The chapter argues that deterrence in the Indo-Pacific will depend less on platform dominance than on the ability to integrate forces, fuse information, and sustain resilient, allied-enabled command and control through CJADC2 across contested multi-domain environments.

Multi-Domain Operations in System-Centric Warfare

By |2026-05-12T10:01:11-10:00May 11, 2026|Categories: Kim, Edge|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |

Multi-Domain Operations (MDO) are emerging as the U.S. military’s answer to China’s system-centric approach to warfare, which seeks to disrupt and paralyze the connective architecture of joint operations. The chapter argues that deterrence in the Indo-Pacific will depend less on platform dominance than on the ability to integrate forces, fuse information, and sustain resilient, allied-enabled command and control through CJADC2 across contested multi-domain environments.

Seizing the Orbital High Ground

By |2026-05-11T05:51:35-10:00May 11, 2026|Categories: Edge|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |

Space superiority has become indispensable to sustaining U.S. lethality and deterrence in an era of competitive multipolarity. The chapter examines how the United States, China, and Russia conceptualize and contest the orbital domain, highlighting the technologies, vulnerabilities, and resilient architectures that will determine who commands the ultimate high ground in the Indo-Pacific.

New Security Nexus Perspective: The Cage of Equidistance

By |2025-12-09T13:03:16-10:00September 9, 2025|Categories: Tekwani, Security Nexus, news|Tags: , , , , , , , , , |

India’s bid to remain equidistant between Russia, China, and the U.S. is no longer sustainable. This Security Nexus article explores how strategic autonomy risks becoming constraint.

Security Nexus Perspective Calls for Stronger U.S.-India Defense Production Ties

By |2025-12-09T13:03:17-10:00April 9, 2025|Categories: Tekwani, Security Nexus, news|Tags: , , , , , , , , , |

A Security Nexus perspective, “Deterrence Needs a Factory: Fixing the U.S.–India Industrial Gap,” by Shyam Tekwani, professor at the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies, argues that while strategic alignment between the United States and India has advanced, their defense industrial cooperation remains underdeveloped. The essay highlights how both countries share mutual goals—resilient supply chains, forward deterrence, and defense innovation—yet continue to fall short on implementation. Tekwani urges both nations to shift from high-level dialogue to ground-level execution, including co-investment in manufacturing and defense technologies.

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