In the landscape of Indian democracy, numerical strength is often viewed as the primary currency of power. However, the political journey of upper caste voters over the last three decades offers a different lesson: how cohesion, geographic concentration, and strategic alignment can turn a "modest share of the electorate" into a dominant political force . Below is an analysis of how this demographic has evolved into a "durable pillar" for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and what this reveals about modern electoral strategies. 1. Influence Beyond Numbers: The Power of Cohesion While upper castes do not form a numerical majority in India, their influence is amplified by their concentration in key states and their high level of cohesion . By voting as a relatively unified bloc, this demographic has ensured that it remains a central priority for national political strategy. This teaches us that a group’s impact is determined not just by its size, but by its...
The Lavrov Axiom: How a war designed to prevent nuclear proliferation became its most powerful accelerant
By Nagesh Bhushan THE LESSON, it turns out, was always hiding in plain sight. In 1992, General Krishnaswamy Sundarji — former Chief of Army Staff of India and one of Asia’s most prescient strategic thinkers — reflected on the Gulf War with characteristic bluntness: “The lesson of the war is: don’t fight the United States unless you have nuclear weapons.” He was speaking about 1991. He might as well have been writing the epitaph for the 2026 Iran-US-Israel War. History’s greatest ironies tend to be structural rather than accidental. The 2026 war was justified, in no small part, as a preemptive strike to eliminate Iran’s nuclear programme and prevent a nuclear-armed Iran from destabilising the Middle East. Within a fortnight, it has achieved the precise opposite. It has become the most powerful advertisement for nuclear deterrence in the post-Cold War era — a masterclass in how coercive counter-proliferation guarantees the outcome it seeks to prevent. Russian Foreign Minister Serge...