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Is decentralization the future of all military strategy, or is it specific to weaker states facing stronger adversaries?

This writeup questions whether this is a universal trend or niche adaptation.  Is decentralization the future of all military strategy, or is it specific to weaker states facing stronger adversaries?  This is a profound strategic question that touches on the very evolution of warfare. The short answer is:  Decentralization is becoming a universal imperative, but the  degree  and  method  of decentralization differ based on power status. It is no longer just a niche adaptation for the weak; it is rapidly becoming the  dominant paradigm for all military powers , including the strongest (US, China, Russia, NATO). However, the motivations and implementations diverge significantly. Here is an analysis of whether decentralization is the future of  all  strategy or just a tool for the weak. 1. The Universal Driver: Why Everyone is Decentralizing Regardless of whether a state is strong or weak, three technological and strategic reali...
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Iran's Decentralised Mosaic Defence: Assessment of the Lessons Learned and Future Scenarios

By Nagesh Bhushan  Iran’s current military doctrine, often referred to as  “Decentralised Mosaic Defence”  (or simply “Mosaic Defence”), represents a strategic shift designed to ensure the regime’s survival and operational continuity in the face of a potential war with the United States or Israel. Articulated publicly by Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in early 2024 and refined through 2025–2026, the strategy is a direct response to two decades of observing U.S. military campaigns, which Iran believes rely heavily on “decapitation strikes” against leadership and centralized infrastructure. Core Philosophy: Resilience Through Fragmentation The central premise of the Mosaic Defence is that a centralized command structure is a vulnerability. If the enemy destroys the capital, kills senior commanders, or severs communication hubs, the entire war effort collapses. Instead, Iran has moved toward a  fully distributed command hierarchy . Autonomous Nodes:  Milit...

The retiring type

By Nagesh Bhushan How India's Supreme Court judges may be trading favorable rulings for comfortable post-retirement sinecures — and what the data reveal about justice for sale New Delhi  |  Mar 2026 Corruption, as any economist will tell you, is fundamentally a story about incentives. Bribe a customs officer and she waves your container through. Offer a politician a directorship and he tweaks the regulation. The logic is ancient and depressingly universal. What is rarer — and considerably more alarming — is when the same logic appears to grip the apex court of the world's most populous democracy. A paper published in the  Journal of Law and Economics  by Madhav Aney and Giovanni Ko of Singapore Management University, and Shubhankar Dam of the University of Portsmouth, makes a disquieting argument. Studying 652 judgments of the Supreme Court of India between 1999 and 2014, the authors find statistical evidence that some judges ruled in favour of the government...

Detective Work in the Courtroom: How Math Uncovered a Judicial Secret

♦️ The Mystery: Do Judges Trade Rulings for Jobs? In a robust democracy, the judiciary acts as the ultimate neutral referee. However, researchers Madhav S. Aney, Shubhankar Dam, and Giovanni Ko uncovered a pattern in the Supreme Court of India that suggested the referee might be playing for the home team. They observed a frequent "revolving door" where retiring justices were quickly appointed to prestigious government positions. This raised the specter of a "Quid Pro Quo"—the suspicion that judges were systematically trading favorable verdicts for post-retirement career security. The researchers deconstructed this mystery into two measurable questions: 1.       The Incentive:  Do judges respond to the temptation of future appointments by ruling in favor of the government? 2.       The Reward:  Does the government actually follow through by appointing the specific judges who ruled in its favor? While the "ruling-for-jo...