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Article
11 Feb 2026
Why in news?
The Opposition has moved a no-confidence motion against Om Birla, the Lok Sabha Speaker. Parliamentary sources said the motion will now be examined and processed as per established rules.
The move follows criticism from the Congress and other parties, who accused the Speaker of not permitting the Leader of Opposition to quote from or discuss former Army Chief M M Naravane’s unpublished memoir.
The Opposition also objected to the Speaker’s claim that PM Modi could have been attacked inside the House, calling it unwarranted and contentious.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker: What the Constitution Allows?
- When Does the Lok Sabha Speaker or Deputy Speaker Vacate Office?
- Procedure to Remove the Lok Sabha Speaker or Deputy Speaker
- Past Precedents of No-Confidence Motions Against Lok Sabha Speakers
- Guidelines Governing a No-Confidence Motion Against the Speaker
- Speaker’s Role During Consideration of Removal Motion
Removal of the Lok Sabha Speaker: What the Constitution Allows
- The Lok Sabha Speaker (or Deputy Speaker) can be removed from office, but only through a strict constitutional process.
- Under Article 94(c) of the Constitution, removal is possible by a resolution passed by a majority of all the then members of the Lok Sabha.
- The provision applies only to the Lok Sabha, not the Rajya Sabha, and the procedural requirements are stringent, reflecting the high threshold set for removing the presiding officer of the House.
When Does the Lok Sabha Speaker or Deputy Speaker Vacate Office?
- Article 94 of the Constitution lays down the conditions under which the Speaker or Deputy Speaker of the Lok Sabha vacates office:
- Cessation of membership (Article 94(a)): They automatically vacate office if they cease to be a member of the Lok Sabha.
- Resignation (Article 94(b)): They may resign at any time by submitting a written resignation.
- Removal by resolution (Article 94(c)): They can be removed through a Lok Sabha resolution passed by a majority of all the then members of the House.
- These provisions ensure both stability and accountability of the presiding officers.
Procedure to Remove the Lok Sabha Speaker or Deputy Speaker
- A member seeking removal must submit a written notice to the Secretary-General of the Lok Sabha.
- The notice may be jointly signed by two or more members, but the resolution cannot be moved unless at least 14 days’ notice is given.
- After receipt, a motion for leave to move the resolution is listed in the List of Business in the members’ names.
- The date fixed must be any day after the 14-day notice period, following which the House may consider the motion as per rules.
Past Precedents of No-Confidence Motions Against Lok Sabha Speakers
- No-confidence motions have been moved against the Lok Sabha Speaker on three occasions—in 1954, 1966, and 1987.
- For such a motion to proceed, it must be supported by at least two Members of Parliament, and 50 members must stand in support, fulfilling the House’s quorum.
- The procedure is governed by Rules 200–203 of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha.
- Historically:
- 1954: G V Mavalankar, the first Speaker, faced a motion
- 1966: Motion against Hukam Singh
- 1987: Motion against Balram Jakhar
- In all three cases, the motions failed, and none of the Speakers were removed from office.
Guidelines Governing a No-Confidence Motion Against the Speaker
- Under Rule 200A of the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha, a no-confidence motion against the Speaker must meet strict content and conduct requirements.
- The resolution must be specific in its charges, clearly and precisely worded, and free of arguments, inferences, ironic expressions, imputations, or defamatory statements.
- Additionally, once the motion is admitted for discussion, the Member(s) who submitted it are not permitted to make a speech, underscoring the procedural rigor governing such motions.
What Follows If a No-Confidence Motion Is Admitted?
- If a no-confidence motion is admitted, members supporting it must rise in their places.
- If at least 50 members stand, the presiding officer declares that leave is granted and schedules the motion for a day within 10 days.
- If fewer than 50 members rise in support, the presiding officer declares that the member “has not the leave of the House”, and the motion does not proceed further.
- Additionally, any resolution for the removal of the Speaker or Deputy Speaker submitted without the required notice is not taken up, ending the process at the preliminary stage.
- On the appointed day, the resolution is listed in the business of the House and taken up for discussion.
- The mover(s) may be allowed to speak for up to 15 minutes, subject to the presiding officer’s permission. The debate must be strictly confined to the charges stated in the resolution.
Speaker’s Role During Consideration of Removal Motion
- While a removal motion is under discussion, the Speaker continues in office and, as a Member of the Lok Sabha, retains the right to participate and speak in the proceedings.
- The Speaker is entitled to vote in the first instance on the resolution or related matters, but cannot exercise a casting vote in the event of a tie.
Article
11 Feb 2026
Why in news?
Earlier this month, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art (NMAA) announced it will return three historic bronze sculptures to the Government of India, acknowledging they were illegally removed from temple settings.
The artefacts include: Shiva Nataraja (Chola period, ca. 990); Somaskanda (Chola period, 12th century); Saint Sundarar with Paravai (Vijayanagar period, 16th century).
The decision aligns with a global push for restitution of looted or illicitly trafficked cultural property to Asian countries such as Cambodia, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and Thailand. As part of this broader effort, the United States returned 297 Indian antiquities in 2024 alone.
Of the three bronzes, two will be physically repatriated to India, while the Shiva Nataraja will remain at the Smithsonian on a long-term loan. The return follows detailed provenance research that traced their unlawful removal, underscoring growing institutional accountability in global museum practices.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- The Three Bronzes: Sacred Origins and Iconography
- How the Three Bronzes Entered the Smithsonian’s Collection?
- Why the Smithsonian Is Returning the Bronzes?
- What Restitution Means for India?
The Three Bronzes: Sacred Origins and Iconography
- All three sculptures were sacred processional bronzes, traditionally carried during temple rituals, reflecting the refined bronze-casting traditions of South India.
- These were not decorative objects but living icons central to worship and ceremonial life.
- Shiva Nataraja: Lord of the Dance
- The Shiva Nataraja bronze originated from the Sri Bhava Aushadesvara Temple in Tamil Nadu’s undivided Thanjavur district.
- It portrays Shiva as “Lord of the Dance”, performing the ananda tandava (dance of bliss), symbolising cosmic creation, preservation, and destruction.
- Somaskanda: The Divine Family
- The Somaskanda bronze traces its provenance to the Visvanatha Temple in Mannargudi, Tamil Nadu.
- It depicts:
- Shiva seated with Parvati (Uma)
- Their son Skanda, who may sit between or dance around them
- Notably, the NMAA sculpture is missing Skanda.
- According to experts, Skanda was often cast separately and was typically the first figure to be lost or separated.
- Archival photographs show Skanda was already missing by 1959.
- Crucially, provenance research revealed that buried or damaged bronzes could later be reinstalled in temples, challenging earlier scholarly assumptions that burial meant permanent removal from ritual use.
- Saint Sundarar with Paravai: Devotion in Bronze
- The third sculpture depicts Saint Sundarar and his wife Paravai, originally from a Shiva temple in Veerasolapuram village, Tamil Nadu.
- The couple were influential Shaivite saints, credited with spreading Shiva worship in eighth-century southern India, and are deeply revered in Tamil religious tradition.
- Living Icons, Not Museum Objects
- According to the NMAA, such images were:
- Housed in dedicated shrines for most of the year
- Once annually subjected to elaborate ritual bathing (abhisheka) using water, milk, yogurt, honey, sandalwood paste, and sacred ash
- Then dressed in ceremonial robes
- According to the NMAA, such images were:
How the Three Bronzes Entered the Smithsonian’s Collection?
- The three bronzes had been part of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art (NMAA) collections for decades.
- They came under scrutiny during a systematic provenance review, which revealed gaps and inconsistencies in their documentation, according to the museum’s provenance team.
- The bronzes were acquired during a period when museum collecting standards were less stringent.
- Today, NMAA requires documentary proof of legal export, assessed against the UNESCO 1970 Convention, alongside export permits, seller consent, and a complete ownership trail, factoring in colonial and geopolitical contexts.
- A 2023 collaboration with the French Institute of Pondicherry photo archives confirmed that the bronzes were photographed in situ in Tamil Nadu temples between 1956 and 1959.
- The Archaeological Survey of India subsequently reviewed the findings and confirmed the sculptures were removed in violation of Indian law.
- While the exact circumstances of removal remain unclear, the museum established that the bronzes appeared in US markets or collections after the 1950s and passed through dealers linked to illicit antiquities.
- There is no evidence of lawful export from India.
Why the Smithsonian Is Returning the Bronzes?
- The Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art (NMAA) stated that the decision reflects its commitment to responsible stewardship of cultural heritage and greater transparency.
- NMAA began its restitution efforts in 2002, making it one of the earlier US museums to address issues of illicitly acquired cultural property.
- The institution acknowledges that many artefacts were transferred over the past two centuries without the consent of local communities.
What Restitution Means for India
- Restoring Legal and Cultural Ownership - Restitution ensures that India regains legal title over artefacts that rightfully belong to it. While ownership returns to the Government of India, objects may remain on long-term loan, allowing them to be displayed internationally while acknowledging their true origin.
- Ethics and International Goodwill - The provenance research and return process reflect ethical museum practice and foster diplomatic goodwill. Restitution signals recognition of historical wrongs and builds trust between source nations and global institutions.
- Opportunities for Cultural Collaboration - Repatriation can open doors to long-term cultural partnerships.
- For example, after returning three sculptures to Cambodia—one remaining on loan—the museum collaborated on a five-year exhibition project in 2023.
- Such arrangements allow source countries to showcase their heritage globally through structured cooperation.
- Expanding Global Cultural Presence
- For India, restitution does not necessarily mean withdrawal from global spaces. Instead, it can:
- Strengthen India’s cultural diplomacy
- Promote curated international exhibitions
- Ensure wider global engagement with Indian heritage
- For India, restitution does not necessarily mean withdrawal from global spaces. Instead, it can:
Article
11 Feb 2026
Context:
- An air force’s combat effectiveness rests on advanced weapon systems, trained personnel, and a reliable supply chain working in sync.
- The Indian Air Force operates a mixed fleet of Russian, Western, and indigenous fighters, with the Tejas adding to the portfolio.
- Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) handles repair and overhaul for all fighters, making its role critical—but its overloaded order book, government work culture, and delivery/quality concerns have drawn scrutiny, including from the Comptroller and Auditor General of India.
- Against this backdrop, reports that the development contract for five prototypes of the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) may be awarded to a private player—excluding HAL—aiming to create a second aircraft manufacturer are broadly welcome.
- However, the shift raises serious professional and execution risks that require careful consideration as decisions are finalised, to ensure timelines, quality, and integration with the IAF’s operational needs.
The Complexities of Private Participation in Fighter Aircraft Development
- Private Players as First-Time Developers
- One key concern is that the three shortlisted private entities, despite being major industrial players, would effectively be first-time developers of a fighter aircraft.
- The technical and organisational demands of designing, building, and testing a fifth-generation fighter prototype are far greater than those involved in producing helicopters, ships, or aerospace components.
- Historical Precedent: HAL’s Integrated Model
- Historically, India’s fighter development followed an integrated, single-agency model. Aircraft like the HF-24 Marut were:
- Designed by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL)’s Aircraft Design Bureau
- Built, tested, upgraded, and weapon-integrated within the same organisation
- Supported through series production and lifetime spares by HAL
- Similar end-to-end models applied to trainer aircraft such as the HT-2 and HJT-16.
- Historically, India’s fighter development followed an integrated, single-agency model. Aircraft like the HF-24 Marut were:
- Tejas: A Hybrid Development Structure
- The Tejas programme marked a shift to a hybrid model:
- Design and development led by the Defence Research and Development Organisation’s Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA)
- Series production and lifetime support handled by HAL
- This split already introduced coordination challenges between design and manufacturing.
- The Tejas programme marked a shift to a hybrid model:
- Implication for AMCA
- Moving AMCA prototype development entirely to private players represents a further departure from past practice.
- The absence of prior fighter-development experience and the fragmentation of design, testing, production, and long-term support raise questions about execution risk, timelines, and system integration.
Singular Control and Execution Challenges in the AMCA Programme
- Ownership and Accountability Gaps
- In earlier programmes, both Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) and the Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA) functioned under the government, ensuring singular control by the Ministry of Defence.
- In the AMCA model, with ADA as designer and a private firm as executor, questions arise over project ownership, accountability, and authority during prototype testing and eventual production.
- Infrastructure Concentration in Bengaluru
- Over eight decades, HAL has built extensive infrastructure—tools, rigs, hangars, and production facilities—centred in Bengaluru.
- The IAF has been deeply embedded in this ecosystem, contributing test aircrew and operational feedback through its Aircraft and Systems Testing Establishment, co-located with HAL.
- For Tejas, a dedicated National Flight Test Centre was created at ADA, alongside nearby DRDO labs specialising in avionics and electronic warfare—all within a tight geographic cluster.
- Replicating this ecosystem elsewhere would require huge capital, land acquisition, and time, raising doubts about feasibility for a private AMCA developer.
- Design–Manufacturing Integration Risks
- Aircraft development globally relies on close fusion between designers and production engineers—from design boards to flight testing and upgrades.
- As prototypes fly, manufacturing lines are simultaneously readied so production can begin immediately after certification.
- Expecting a private entity to simultaneously test prototypes and build a fifth-generation manufacturing ecosystem—without an assured production order and with a contract limited to five prototypes—poses significant financial and execution risks.
- Test Aircrew Bottlenecks
- Testing a futuristic fighter requires highly trained test pilots and engineers. India has only one test pilots school, with limited throughput.
- A private AMCA developer would need multiple trained test aircrew from the outset, creating a critical bottleneck in manpower.
- A Pragmatic National Approach
- Given that ADA, the National Flight Test Centre, and IAF test units are all based at HAL Airport, Bengaluru, it would be logical for a private AMCA developer to co-locate within this ecosystem.
- An out-of-the-box proposal is to co-opt parts of HAL’s public-funded real estate and facilities—including hangars and testing infrastructure—for the private entity.
The Issue of Location: Where AMCA Should Be Built
- For a strategic programme like the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA), the location of the production facility is critical.
- Past decisions—such as placing the C-295 aircraft factory in Vadodara, Gujarat, close to international borders—should not be repeated for frontline combat aircraft.
- AMCA production should be located deep in the hinterland, with strong connectivity and proximity to HAL’s Bengaluru airfield, India’s aviation hub.
- Co-location would enhance security, testing efficiency, infrastructure sharing, and coordination with existing design, flight-test, and manufacturing ecosystems essential for a fifth-generation fighter programme.
Article
11 Feb 2026
Why in News?
- The Union Government has notified amendments to the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021.
- It will strengthen regulation of AI-generated (synthetic) content and drastically reduce takedown timelines for unlawful material.
- The amendments (effective February 20, 2026) aim to curb the spread of non-consensual deepfakes, intimate imagery, and unlawful content, while reinforcing platform accountability under the IT Act, 2000.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Key Amendments at a Glance
- Safe Harbour and Intermediary Liability
- Administrative Changes
- Trigger Events - The Global Deepfake Crisis
- Governance and Constitutional Dimensions
- Key Challenges
- Way Forward
- Conclusion
Key Amendments at a Glance:
- Sharp reduction in removal timelines:
- For example,
- For Court/Government-declared illegal content takedown timeline reduced to 3 hours (from earlier 24–36 hours).
- Similarly, for non-consensual intimate imagery/deepfakes it is 2 hours (earlier 24 hours), and for other unlawful content from 36 hours to 3 hours.
- Rationale: Earlier timelines were seen as ineffective in preventing virality. The government argues tech companies possess sufficient technical capacity for faster removal.
- Concerns: Determining “illegality” within 2–3 hours is operationally difficult. Risk of over-censorship and precautionary takedowns. Increased compliance burden for intermediaries.
- For example,
- Mandatory Labelling of AI-generated content:
- Legal definition of “Synthetically Generated Information (SGI)”: Audio, visual or audio-visual content artificially created, generated, modified, or altered using a computer resource in a way that makes it appear real or indistinguishable from authentic events or persons.
- Important features:
- AI-generated imagery must be labelled “prominently.”
- The earlier proposal requiring 10% of image space to carry the label has been diluted.
- Platforms must seek user disclosure for AI-generated content, proactively label content if disclosure is absent, and remove non-consensual deepfakes.
- Exclusions: Routine editing and quality-enhancing tools (e.g., smartphone touch-ups) are excluded — narrowing the scope from the draft October 2025 version.
Safe Harbour and Intermediary Liability:
- What is Safe Harbour? Under Section 79 of the IT Act, 2000, intermediaries are protected from liability for user-generated content, provided they exercise “due diligence.”
- Amendment impact:
- If an intermediary knowingly permits, promotes, or fails to act against unlawful synthetic content, it may be deemed to have failed due diligence.
- This may result in loss of safe harbour protection, significantly increasing regulatory pressure on platforms.
Administrative Changes:
- The amendment partially rolls back an earlier rule that limited States to appointing only one officer for issuing takedown orders.
- Now, States can designate multiple authorised officers, addressing administrative needs of populous States.
Trigger Events - The Global Deepfake Crisis:
- The urgency follows global controversies, including AI platforms generating non-consensual intimate images of women.
- Such incidents raise privacy concerns, gender dignity issues, pose threats to democratic discourse, and misrepresents real-world events.
- This places the reform within a broader international debate on AI governance and platform accountability.
Governance and Constitutional Dimensions:
- Article 19(1)(a) – Freedom of Speech: Overbroad or rushed takedowns may chill legitimate expression. Short timelines increase risk of defensive over-removal.
- Article 21 – Right to Privacy and Dignity: Faster removal of non-consensual deepfakes strengthens protection of individual dignity.
- Federal implications: Allowing multiple State officers enhances decentralised enforcement.
Key Challenges:
- Determining illegality within 2–3 hours: Legal ambiguity, law enforcement communications may lack clarity.
- Risk of over-censorship: Platforms may make mistakes on the side of removal - could undermine free speech and digital innovation.
- Compliance burden on Big Tech: Real-time moderation requires high-end AI tools and human review. Smaller platforms may struggle disproportionately.
- Verification mechanisms: Ensuring authenticity of user declarations. Deploying “reasonable technical measures” without privacy violations.
Way Forward:
- Clearer illegality standards: Develop structured guidance for platforms, and standardised digital takedown protocols.
- Independent oversight mechanism: Appellate or review authority to check arbitrary takedowns.
- Strengthening AI detection tools: Promote indigenous AI detection systems under India’s AI mission.
- Harmonisation with Digital Personal Data Protection Act: Ensure consistency in privacy and consent standards.
- Capacity building for States: Training authorised officers in cyber law and AI governance.
Conclusion:
- India’s amended IT Rules reflect a decisive shift toward proactive regulation of AI-driven misinformation and digital harm.
- By these amendments, the government seeks to protect privacy, dignity, and public order in an era of rapidly advancing generative AI.
- However, the reform also raises critical concerns. So, the long-term success of this framework will depend on calibrated enforcement, technological readiness, and institutional safeguards against overreach.
Article
11 Feb 2026
Why in the News?
- India’s aviation sector is under scrutiny following repeated operational disruptions, safety incidents, and declining service reliability among major airlines.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Aviation Sector (Overview, Disruptions & Safety Concerns, Pilot Shortage, Regulatory Capacity & Gaps, Challenges, etc.)
Overview of India’s Aviation Sector
- India has emerged as the world’s third-largest domestic aviation market, operating over 840 aircraft and carrying more than 350 million passengers annually.
- Rapid growth in air travel demand has been driven by rising incomes, regional connectivity initiatives, and fleet expansion by private carriers.
- However, this expansion has increasingly exposed structural weaknesses related to manpower, regulation, and market concentration.
- While the sector contributes significantly to economic integration and mobility, its current growth trajectory appears overstretched, raising concerns about sustainability, safety, and passenger welfare.
Operational Disruptions and Safety Concerns
- The past year witnessed multiple operational failures, including mass flight cancellations, prolonged delays, and safety-related incidents.
- A major disruption in December involving IndiGo acted as a failed “stress test” for the system, revealing vulnerabilities that go beyond a single airline.
- These incidents were not isolated but indicative of system-wide constraints, with airlines operating close to their maximum capacity.
- The rising frequency of safety notices issued by the aviation regulator points to deeper compliance and oversight challenges.
Pilot Shortage and Flight Duty Time Constraints
- One of the most critical structural challenges is the acute shortage of trained pilots. India’s aviation expansion has outpaced its training capacity.
- New Flight Duty Time Limitation (FDTL) norms, which mandate longer rest periods and reduced night operations, have made existing airline schedules difficult to sustain.
- Major airlines operate with a pilot-to-aircraft ratio significantly below global benchmarks, increasing fatigue risks and operational fragility.
- While India may require 25,000-30,000 pilots over the next decade, licensing and training bottlenecks have constrained supply, forcing airlines to rely on costly and limited foreign pilots as stopgap measures.
Regulatory Capacity and Oversight Gaps
- Regulatory stress has compounded operational issues.
- The aviation regulator faces significant staff shortages, with a large proportion of technical positions vacant despite rapid sectoral growth.
- In practice, disruptions have often been managed through ad hoc exemptions rather than strict enforcement of safety norms.
- This approach reflects a shift toward crisis management instead of preventive regulation, weakening long-term institutional capacity and undermining confidence in oversight mechanisms.
Market Concentration and the Aviation Duopoly
- India’s domestic aviation market is highly concentrated, with two airline groups controlling nearly 90% of passenger traffic.
- This level of concentration transforms dominant carriers into systemically important entities whose failures directly impact national connectivity.
- On a majority of domestic routes, only one airline operates. Consequently, disruptions do not result in passenger redistribution but in the complete loss of connectivity, particularly affecting smaller cities and time-sensitive travel.
Entry of New Regional Airlines
- To address concentration and improve connectivity, the government has approved new regional airlines aimed at serving underserved routes.
- These entrants align with the objectives of the UDAN scheme, which has expanded regional air access across multiple States.
- However, past failures of regional airlines highlight persistent challenges such as high fuel costs, weak demand, infrastructure gaps, and intense price competition.
- Without sustained policy support, such as assured subsidies, better airport infrastructure, and relief from fuel price volatility, new entrants risk inheriting the same fragilities.
Structural Challenges and Fuel Price Volatility
- Aviation Turbine Fuel (ATF) remains one of the biggest cost drivers for Indian airlines.
- Prices are linked to global oil markets and currency fluctuations, exposing carriers to external shocks.
- Combined with thin profit margins, this volatility has historically contributed to airline failures.
- Globally, airlines maintain spare crew and capacity buffers to absorb shocks. Indian carriers, by contrast, operate at near-total utilisation, allowing minor disruptions to cascade across networks.
Article
11 Feb 2026
Context
- The contemporary world is experiencing a profound shift driven by Artificial Intelligence, a development comparable to the Industrial Revolution in its potential to reshape society.
- Rather than a gradual change, the moment resembles a structural rupture in which technological progress is transforming governance, economies, and security simultaneously.
- Advanced Large Language Models now perform reasoning, writing, and analysis, signalling a movement toward machine participation in intellectual activity.
- The central challenge is not merely adaptation to innovation but preserving human authority over increasingly capable systems.
AI as a General-Purpose Technological Revolution
- AI operates as a general-purpose technology, influencing nearly every sector of human activity.
- It reshapes communication, decision-making, and institutional functioning by processing vast amounts of data and generating predictive insights.
- Governments and courts, designed for gradual evolution, struggle to keep pace with exponential technological advancement.
- The replication of speech, vision, and reasoning blurs the boundary between human cognition and machine capability.
- AI systems increasingly influence administration, economic transactions, and knowledge production.
- As institutions attempt adjustment, a widening gap emerges between technological capability and regulatory readiness, raising concerns about accountability and reliability.
AI and the Transformation of Global Politics
- In the twenty-first century, geopolitics is being redefined by technological capacity rather than territorial control.
- Global competition, particularly between the United States and China, now centres on AI leadership, advanced algorithms, and control over information networks.
- Nations seek technological sovereignty by building domestic infrastructures, often described as sovereign stacks, to avoid dependence.
- AI has become a tool of diplomacy, intelligence, and economic influence. Access to information, computing power, and networked systems determines strategic influence.
- States capable of mastering AI may shape international standards and economic flows, while others risk strategic vulnerability and technological dependence.
AI and the Revolution in Warfare
- Transformation in Military Affairs
- AI is shifting conflict from human-operated systems toward automated and autonomous
- Unmanned vehicles, intelligent surveillance, and cyber weapons are redefining battlefield operations.
- Military strategies now incorporate automated targeting, predictive analysis, and machine-assisted command structures.
- Rise of Asymmetric Warfare
- AI dramatically alters power relationships by enabling asymmetric warfare. Smaller forces equipped with intelligent systems can challenge conventional armies.
- Recent conflicts illustrate how drones and automated targeting can undermine traditional military superiority.
- Power is no longer determined solely by heavy weaponry but by access to software, sensors, and real-time analytics.
- Autonomous Weapons and Ethical Concerns
- The emergence of autonomous weapons introduces serious ethical dilemmas. When machines independently select targets, questions of accountability
- Without human judgement, established legal and moral frameworks governing conflict may weaken.
- The possibility of algorithm-driven combat challenges traditional concepts of responsibility and control.
AI Beyond the Battlefield and the Existential Risk
- AI Beyond the Battlefield: Social and Institutional Impact
- Beyond military use, AI influences surveillance, finance, health care, and governance. Rapid automation enhances efficiency but also introduces systemic risks.
- Courts and administrative bodies face challenges when machine-generated outputs contain inaccuracies or fabricated information.
- Institutions evolve gradually, whereas technological capability expands rapidly. This mismatch threatens the stability of legal and administrative systems.
- Societies must adapt governance structures to maintain trust and prevent misuse of automated decision-making.
- The Existential Risk: Loss of Human Control
- A deeper concern emerges with the possibility of autonomy exceeding human oversight.
- Advanced systems capable of self-learning may act unpredictably, especially in areas such as cybersecurity and information management.
- The concentration of power within complex machine networks creates the risk of unintended consequences.
- Potential scenarios include coordinated drone swarms, automated attacks, or manipulation of public perception through large-scale predictive analysis.
- Such developments would shift technology from a tool of assistance to an independent operational force, challenging human agency and ethical responsibility.
The Path Forward: Need for Global Governance and Oversight
- Despite the risks, AI also offers benefits in crisis management, medical research, and conflict prevention.
- Effective regulation therefore becomes essential. International cooperation, ethical frameworks, and coordinated governance structures must guide development.
- Scientists, policymakers, and institutions must establish safeguards and shared standards.
- Balanced oversight can ensure that technological progress enhances welfare while preventing destabilising outcomes.
Conclusion
- Artificial intelligence is becoming the defining force of the modern era. It is reshaping political power, military capability, and social organisation.
- The future will depend on the ability of societies to integrate innovation responsibly.
- Proper oversight and cooperative frameworks can transform AI into a stabilising influence, while neglect could undermine global stability.
- The essential task is to ensure that technological progress remains aligned with human values and collective security.
Study Material
4 hours ago
Online Test
11 Feb 2026
CA Test - 5 (CA1105)
Questions : 100 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
Online Test
11 Feb 2026
CA Test - 5 (CA1105)
Questions : 100 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, midnight
Announcement
19 hours ago
Dear Students,
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The Test Centre will also be closed during this period.