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17 Jun 2026

Memory Chip Shortage Driving India's Inflation

Why in the News?

  • A global shortage of memory chips, driven by the AI investment boom, is pushing up prices of consumer electronics in India, with retail inflation data reflecting sustained price increases in items like smartphones, laptops, fridges, and pen drives.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Memory Chips (Basics, Importance, Global Supply Chain, Shortage, Supply-Demand Imbalance, Global Concerns, Implications, etc.)

Understanding Memory Chips and Their Importance

  • Memory chips are essential semiconductor components that enable modern electronic devices to store and process data. The two major categories are:
    • Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM): Used for temporary data storage and active processing.
    • NAND Flash Memory: Used for permanent storage in devices.
  • These chips are critical for the functioning of:
    • Smartphones and tablets.
    • Laptops and computers.
    • Refrigerators, televisions, and washing machines.
    • Pen drives, hard disks, and earphones.
    • Electric batteries and data centres.
  • Without memory chips, modern electronics cannot function.

Global Supply Chain for Memory Chips

  • The global semiconductor industry is highly concentrated, with production dominated by a few firms:
    • TSMC (Taiwan): World's largest contract chip manufacturer.
    • Samsung (South Korea): Major producer of memory and logic chips.
    • SK Hynix (South Korea): Leading producer of DRAM memory chips.
    • Micron (United States): Major supplier of DRAM and NAND memory.
  • This concentration makes the global supply chain vulnerable to disruptions.

How the AI Boom Is Causing a Memory Chip Shortage?

  • The recent boom in Artificial Intelligence has significantly altered semiconductor demand patterns.
  • Shift in Production Priorities
    • Chipmakers are increasingly diverting production capacity toward high-end chips needed for AI systems, including:
      • High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) used in AI computing
      • Server DRAM required for data centres
      • Advanced processors for AI training and inference
  • This has reduced the production of chips widely used in consumer electronics, such as:
      • LPDDR4 (Low Power Double Data Rate 4) memory chips used in smartphones
        • LPDDR is the most widely used "working memory" memory in mobile devices worldwide.
        • LDDDR4 provides 32Gbps bandwidth, which is 1.7 times faster than LPDDR 3 memory and 2 times faster than DDR3 RAM.
      • Standard DRAM chips for household appliances
      • Storage chips used in personal electronic devices

Supply-Demand Imbalance

  • According to Counterpoint Research, the global supply of LPDDR4 chips may decline by more than 40% in 2026 as manufacturing capacity shifts toward AI-oriented chips.
  • Similarly, Nomura analysts warn that chip demand could exceed supply for 3-5 years, making the shortage structural rather than temporary.
  • Buyers are increasingly entering multi-year contracts and pre-funding production, leaving fewer chips available in spot markets.
  • The shortage of memory chips has emerged as an unexpected driver of inflation in India’s electronics market.

Sequential Price Increases

  • Retail inflation data show persistent month-on-month price increases:
    • Laptops, computers, and tablets: Prices increased for seven consecutive months.
    • Mobile phones: Prices rose for six consecutive months.
    • Refrigerators, washing machines, and televisions: Prices increased for four months in a row.
    • Air conditioners, batteries, headphones, and earphones: Prices rose for three straight months.
    • Pen drives and hard disks: Prices increased in 15 of the last 16 months, recording the steepest monthly rise of nearly 3%.
  • Most electronics categories are witnessing monthly price increases approaching 1%, indicating sustained inflationary pressure.

Global Concerns About Chip-Driven Inflation

  • Policymakers globally are beginning to recognise semiconductor shortages as a new inflationary challenge.
  • Economists at the US Federal Reserve have identified unusually high price increases in the “Computer Software and Accessories” category as a major contributor to core inflation.
  • Since core inflation excludes food and fuel, rising electronics prices are increasingly influencing monetary policy discussions.

Implications for India

  • Impact on Consumers
    • Higher semiconductor costs are reducing the affordability of essential electronic products, potentially delaying purchases and affecting household consumption.
  • Impact on Industry
    • Make in India initiatives could face component shortages.
    • Beneficiaries under the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme may experience rising input costs.
    • Mobile phone manufacturing, a flagship export sector, could face production disruptions.
  • Micron executives have also warned that Indian firms are not making sufficient long-term purchase commitments, raising the risk of future shortages.
  • Inflation Outlook
    • The impact on headline inflation has so far remained moderate because electronics constitute only around 1% of India’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) basket. However, manufacturers are increasingly unable to absorb rising costs.
    • The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) currently projects CPI inflation at 5.9% in the final quarter of 2026, close to the upper limit of its inflation target range.
    • If chip shortages persist, electronics could contribute more significantly to inflation in the coming years.

Long-Term Concerns and Policy Response

  • Experts warn that the current shortage may persist for 3-5 years, implying prolonged price pressures.
  • To reduce vulnerability, India may need to accelerate efforts under the India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) and expand domestic semiconductor manufacturing capacity.
  • Policymakers may also need supply-side interventions beyond conventional demand management to address this emerging source of inflation.

 

Economics

Article
17 Jun 2026

The 'Dancing Girl' Controversy: History, Interpretation, and the NCERT Debate

Why in news?

NCERT's Class 9 Arts Education textbook carried a digitally modified image of the iconic Harappan bronze figurine — the 'Dancing Girl' — with its torso covered, giving the impression of clothing.

After widespread criticism, NCERT restored the original image. The episode has reignited a long-standing debate about historical authenticity versus contemporary moral sensibilities in educational content.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • About the Artefact: Key Facts
  • Why is it Called the 'Dancing Girl' — The Colonial Label
  • Colonial Morality and the 'Vulgarity' Controversy
  • Multiple Historical Interpretations
  • India-Pakistan Dispute Over the Artefact
  • The NCERT Controversy and the Textbook Question

About the Artefact: Key Facts

  • Civilisation - Harappan (Indus Valley), circa 2600–1900 BCE
  • Discovered in - 1926, Mohenjo-daro (present-day Pakistan)
  • Discovered by - John Marshall, then Director-General, ASI
  • Material – Bronze
  • Height - 10.8 cm
  • Technique - Lost-wax casting (cire perdue)
  • Currently housed - National Museum, New Delhi
  • Description - Bare-torso female figure; 24–25 bangles on left arm, 4 on right; necklace; head tilted back, knees slightly bent
  • The use of the lost-wax casting technique nearly 4,500 years ago is significant — it demonstrates the advanced state of ancient Indian metallurgy. The technique is still used in many parts of India today.

Why is it Called the 'Dancing Girl' — The Colonial Label

  • The name was given by John Marshall during the 1926 excavation.
  • Marshall described the figurine as a "young aboriginal nautch girl (professional female dancers and courtesans), her hand on hip in half-impudent posture… as she beats time to the music with her feet."
  • This label is now widely contested. Key points:
    • No textual or archaeological evidence confirms she was a dancer.
    • Historian Upinder Singh writes that the figurine "may not have been dancing at all, and even if she was, she may not represent a professional dancer."
    • Scholar Gregory Possehl also expressed doubt about the dancer identification.
    • Historian Ashish Kumar (Panjab University) argues that colonial officials' personal familiarity with nautch girls may have driven the instant association.
  • Marshall also linked the figurine to the devadasi tradition — an attempt to project continuity from Harappan times to his own era, which scholars consider speculative.
  • The label reflects colonial interpretive bias, not archaeological evidence. As historians note, labels attached to artefacts must be read in the context of the historical circumstances in which they were created.

Colonial Morality and the 'Vulgarity' Controversy

  • The association of the figurine with vulgarity and nudity is not a recent development. It is rooted in the colonial value system itself.
  • Colonial officials considered nudity in art as "immoral" and "vulgar." They held Greek and Roman art as superior because it captured anatomy "accurately."
  • Indian representations — multiple limbs, heads, or nude forms — were dismissed as "irrational" and evidence of cultural inferiority.
  • By contrast, the many nude terracotta female figurines found at Harappan sites were labelled as representations of the Mother Goddess — a more "respectable" category.
  • The bronze figurine alone was singled out as a nautch girl. This double standard reveals how colonial frameworks shaped the interpretation of India's own archaeological heritage.

Multiple Historical Interpretations

  • Scholars have offered several alternative readings of who the figurine represents:
    • Mother Goddess / Ritualistic Figure — Some scholars link it to the Mother Goddess cult prevalent across Harappan sites.
    • Parvati / Shakti connection — A more recent theory draws on the existing association of Harappan religion with proto-Shiva imagery (the Pashupati seal). Where there is Shiva, there should be Shakti. This interpretation is not unanimously accepted.
    • Warrior figure — The left arm shows an empty socket suggesting she may have held an object like a spear. The left arm is more ornamented than the right, which some interpret as the right arm being kept free for combat.
  • The absence of written records from the Harappan civilisation means all interpretations remain speculative.

India-Pakistan Dispute Over the Artefact

  • The figurine has also been at the centre of a bilateral heritage dispute — historically significant for understanding post-Partition cultural politics.
  • At the time of Partition, around 12,000 Harappan objects from Mohenjo-daro were in Delhi, having been brought by Mortimer Wheeler (DG, ASI, 1944–48) for an exhibition. Pakistan demanded them back, claiming the sites lay in Pakistani territory.
  • India argued that the Harappan civilisation was a common South Asian heritage, not exclusively Pakistani. Eventually, both countries agreed to a 50:50 division of artefacts from Mohenjo-daro and Chanhu-daro.
  • Pakistan wanted both the 'Dancing Girl' and the 'Priest King'. India was willing to part with only one.
  • Pakistan chose the Priest King — precisely to avoid domestic backlash over a nude female figure, which officials feared would provoke religious opposition.

The NCERT Controversy and the Textbook Question

  • The NCERT episode is not an isolated incident. A pattern of attempts to "clothe" or sanitise the figurine is visible:
    • 2023: A fully clothed, colourful "contemporised version" of the Dancing Girl was unveiled as the mascot of the International Museum Expo by PM Modi.
    • 2026: NCERT's Class 9 textbook carried the digitally altered image with the torso covered.
  • The core question raised is: should historical artefacts be presented as they are — reflecting the civilisational context in which they were created — or adapted to contemporary moral standards?
  • Altering the artefact misrepresents the actual material culture of the Harappan civilisation and imposes present-day value judgements on the past.

Conclusion

  • The 'Dancing Girl' is more than a 4,500-year-old bronze figurine — she is a mirror reflecting colonial biases, post-Partition politics, and contemporary anxieties about nudity and modernity.
  • Altering her image in a textbook does not protect children; it distorts history. Honest engagement with the past, including its complexity, is the foundation of genuine historical education.
History & Culture

Article
17 Jun 2026

Telegram Temporarily Blocked in India

Why in news?

The Ministry of Electronics and IT (MeitY) has blocked Telegram in India until June 22, at the request of the National Testing Agency (NTA).

The ban is linked to the NEET UG 2026 paper leak controversy. The original NEET exam held on May 3, 2026 was cancelled due to widespread paper leak allegations. The re-examination is scheduled for June 21, 2026.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • About Telegram
  • Background: The NEET Paper Leak Crisis
  • The Government's Response
  • Enforcement Action
  • Broader Issues Raised

About Telegram

  • Telegram is a cloud-based instant messaging platform founded by Pavel Durov in 2013.
  • Unlike WhatsApp, it supports channels with unlimited subscribers, large group chats, anonymous broadcasting, and easy file sharing including large PDFs.
  • Its end-to-end encryption, minimal data retention, and server infrastructure spread across multiple jurisdictions make it difficult for any single government to regulate or monitor.
  • Channels can be created anonymously, messages can be edited post-posting with timestamps retained, and bots can be deployed at scale.
  • This makes it a preferred tool for misinformation networks, exam fraud rackets, and organised cybercrime, posing serious challenges to law enforcement agencies worldwide.

Background: The NEET Paper Leak Crisis

  • NEET UG is India's national undergraduate medical entrance exam, conducted by the NTA.
  • The May 3 exam was cancelled after evidence emerged of systematic paper leaks and irregularities. A re-examination was then scheduled for June 21.
  • Following the cancellation, Telegram channels openly began offering candidates purported access to the re-examination paper, demanding fees ranging from a few thousand to several lakh rupees.
  • Some channels were brazenly named — "PAPER LEAKED NEET", "Re-NEET 2026", "Private Mafia", and "REE NEET MAFIAA."
  • The NTA clarified that no actual papers were available outside the secured examination chain. The channels were running fraud operations, exploiting anxious students and parents.

The Government's Response

  • MeitY issued the blocking order under Section 69(A) of the Information Technology Act, 2000.
  • This provision allows the Central Government to block public access to any online platform or content in the interest of:
    • Sovereignty and integrity of India
    • Defence and security of the state
    • Public order
    • Prevention of cognisable offences
  • The ban applies until June 22 — one day after the re-examination — to prevent any last-minute circulation of leaked content or fabricated paper leak material.
  • Message-Editing Feature Disabled Until June 30
    • Separately, MeitY directed Telegram to disable its message-editing feature in India until June 30.
    • This addresses a specific technical misuse. Telegram allows channel administrators to edit previously posted messages — including swapping attached PDF files — while the original timestamp is retained.
    • This feature has been exploited to fabricate paper leak "evidence": an administrator edits an old, innocuous post to insert the actual question paper after the exam is over, making it appear as though the paper was circulating before the exam.
    • The altered chat is then shared as fake proof of a leak. Disabling this feature closes this avenue of post-exam fabrication.

Enforcement Action

  • The Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) — acting on inputs from the NTA and police forces of Bihar, Gujarat and Rajasthan — secured the takedown of a substantial number of Telegram channels, groups and bots that openly advertised fraudulent services.
  • Recently, the cybercrime branch of Ahmedabad police arrested two men from Rajasthan for running a racket that defrauded medical aspirants and families via Telegram by falsely claiming to possess the NEET re-exam question paper.
  • The NTA described the Telegram block as "a measure of last resort."

Broader Issues Raised

  • Systemic vulnerability of examination infrastructure - NEET has now faced paper leak controversies in consecutive years, raising serious questions about how question papers are stored, printed, and distributed.
  • Digital platforms and exam integrity - Telegram's architecture — large anonymous channels, file-sharing capability, message editing — makes it structurally conducive to misuse in high-stakes exam contexts.
  • Platform accountability - The episode raises the question of how much responsibility social media and messaging platforms bear for misuse of their features. The message-editing direction sets a notable precedent for feature-level regulation.
  • Tension between free speech and state regulation - Section 69A allows blocking without any prior judicial scrutiny. The lack of transparency in blocking orders has been a concern raised by digital rights organisations.

Conclusion

The Telegram ban is a short-term emergency measure, not a structural solution. It highlights two deeper problems — the fragility of India's examination security chain, and the regulatory gap in holding digital platforms accountable for features that enable large-scale fraud against vulnerable citizens.

Polity & Governance

Article
17 Jun 2026

India at the G7 - Managing a Changing West While Accelerating Domestic Transformation

Context:

  • The Indian PM’s participation in the 52nd G7 Summit at Évian (France) marks India’s 13th appearance at the forum and his seventh consecutive attendance since 2019.
  • India’s repeated invitations reflect its growing economic weight, strategic relevance, and deepening engagement with the developed West.
  • In this context, there is the need to examine the significance of India-G7 relations, the changing nature of Western power, and the lessons India can draw from China’s rise.

India’s Expanding Engagement with the G7:

  • India’s association with the G7 began at Évian in 2003 when Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee was invited.
  • Since then, India has emerged as a regular participant due to:
    • Economic liberalisation and integration with global markets after 1991.
    • Growing geopolitical significance in an increasingly multipolar world.
    • Strong trade, investment, technology, education, and migration linkages with developed economies.
  • Today,
    • Nearly one-third of India’s merchandise exports go to G7 countries.
    • A major share of India’s services exports is directed towards G7 markets.
    • The G7 remains the principal destination for Indian students, professionals, and skilled migrants.
  • This underlines that India’s economic future remains deeply linked with the developed West despite growing engagement with forums such as BRICS.

India’s New Economic Diplomacy:

  • Contrary to perceptions that India is prioritising BRICS-led alternatives, recent economic diplomacy indicates a stronger emphasis on:
    • Trade liberalisation with developed economies.
    • Strengthening ties with Europe, the United Kingdom, and Canada.
    • Diversifying partnerships within the Western bloc rather than away from it.
  • India’s strategic objective is no longer balancing the West against BRICS but broadening opportunities across different Western economies.

Major Transformations within the West:

  • Rise of American unilateralism:
    • The return of Donald Trump has reinforced the “America First” approach, with:
      • Greater emphasis on narrow US national interests.
      • Increased pressure on allies to align with Washington.
      • Growing transatlantic differences between the US and Europe.
    • This trend creates uncertainty for countries like India that rely on stable Western partnerships.
  • Growing American economic dominance:
    • Contrary to narratives of American decline:
      • The US economy has significantly outpaced its traditional allies.
      • The Eurozone’s economy is now little more than half the size of the US economy (~ $31 trillion GDP, which is still growing at 2.5%).
      • Japan’s relative economic weight has also diminished.
    • Key strengths of the United States include:
      • Deep capital markets.
      • Technological leadership.
      • Robust innovation ecosystems.
      • Dominance in frontier sectors such as AI, space technology, and advanced research.
    • This widening asymmetry is reshaping the balance of power within the Western alliance.
  • Rise of tech capitalism:
    • The emergence of powerful technology firms is transforming global politics and economics.
    • Indicators include:
      • Massive valuations of technology companies (SpaceX - $2 trillion).
      • Expansion of the digital and space economy.
      • Increasing influence of private technology leaders in policymaking forums.
    • Technology and innovation are becoming central determinants of geopolitical power, economic competitiveness, and national security.

Trump’s Reordering of Global Geopolitics:

  • Trump’s foreign policy departs from established Western positions. This is visible in:
    • Pursuit of new arrangements with Iran.
    • Frictions with traditional allies such as Israel.
    • Renewed engagement with Pakistan.
    • Reassessment of relations with Russia and China.
  • Such shifts could reshape geopolitical dynamics across Europe, Middle East, Indo-Pacific, and South Asia.
  • India must therefore prepare for a more fluid and less predictable international environment.

The Real Challenge for India - Domestic Transformation:

  • India’s response cannot rely solely on diplomacy.
  • Key priorities include:
    • Economic restructuring: Accelerating industrial growth, enhancing productivity, and improving competitiveness in global markets.
    • Defence modernisation: Strengthening the defence-industrial base, reducing technological dependence, and promoting indigenous capabilities.
    • Technological advancement: Building innovation ecosystems, investing in research and development, and developing cutting-edge technologies.
  • Partnerships with the West remain crucial for achieving these objectives through capital, technology, education, and market access.

China’s Experience - A Lesson in Strategic Realism:

  • A comparison with China highlights India’s developmental challenge.
  • For example, China’s GDP increased from ~$1.6 trillion (2003) to ~$20 trillion (2025). India’s GDP reached from ~$0.6 trillion to less than $4 trillion in the same period.
  • China’s success stems from rapid economic transformation, technological upgrading, scientific advancement, strong state capacity, and long-term strategic planning.
  • Importantly, China combined deep engagement with Western markets and technology, simultaneous strengthening of national capabilities.
  • This dual strategy enabled China to become both a major economic partner and a strategic competitor of the West.

Strategic Autonomy vs Partnership - The Chinese Lesson:

  • A recurring debate in India is whether strategic autonomy is compatible with close Western partnerships.
  • China demonstrated that:
    • Engagement with the West need not undermine national autonomy.
    • Economic integration can strengthen domestic capabilities.
    • Pragmatism often delivers better outcomes than ideological rigidity.
  • Even after the Korean War, China eventually normalised relations with the United States and leveraged those ties for national development.
  • Such cold realism and strategic flexibility offer valuable lessons for India.

Conclusion:

  • India’s growing prominence at the G7 reflects its increasing integration with the developed world.
  • For India, sustained domestic reform and pragmatic external partnerships will be the key to achieving great-power status in an era of profound global change.
Editorial Analysis

Article
17 Jun 2026

The Long-Term Implications of the U.S.-Iran Deal

Context

  • The proposed Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between Iran and the United States marks a significant step towards de-escalation after years of hostility.
  • The agreement seeks to establish a ceasefire and create space for negotiations on contentious issues.
  • However, deep-rooted mutual distrust, unresolved strategic disputes, and competing regional interests make a durable settlement uncertain.
  • Beyond immediate diplomacy, the conflict has already triggered profound geopolitical, economic, and security transformations across West Asia, with implications for the global order.

Challenges to a Durable Peace

  • Unresolved Strategic Disputes
    • Several contentious issues continue to impede progress in negotiations.
    • These include U.S. sanctions, the release of frozen Iranian assets, demands for reparations, and broader regional security concerns.
    • The most difficult issues remain nuclear enrichment and Iran’s role in the Strait of Hormuz.
    • For Washington, limiting Iran’s nuclear capabilities remains a strategic priority. For Tehran, such demands are viewed as infringements on national sovereignty.
    • Reconciling these positions will require complex negotiations and mutually acceptable compromises.
  • The Strait of Hormuz as a Flashpoint
    • The Strait of Hormuz remains central to the dispute because of its importance to global energy flows.
    • Any disruption in this maritime chokepoint threatens international trade and energy security.
    • Consequently, the management of Hormuz has emerged as both a strategic challenge and a potential bargaining tool in future negotiations.

Geopolitical Lessons from the Conflict

  • Limits of Military Power
    • The conflict exposed the limits of American military power despite technological superiority and extensive military capabilities.
    • Iran demonstrated the effectiveness of asymmetric warfare through resilient command structures, strategic planning, and the use of geographic advantages.
    • The experience challenged traditional assumptions regarding military dominance and highlighted the difficulties of securing decisive victories against determined regional actors.
  • Return of Multilateralism
    • The shortcomings of unilateral military action and coercive diplomacy have strengthened the case for multilateralism.
    • Countries are increasingly recognising the importance of preventive diplomacy, international cooperation, and collective approaches to conflict resolution.
    • Furthermore, governments are likely to prioritise supply-chain resilience, strategic reserves, and the protection of critical infrastructure in response to vulnerabilities exposed during the conflict. 

Impact on Energy Security and the Global Economy

  • Vulnerability of Hydrocarbon Supplies
    • The disruption of maritime trade routes revealed the fragility of global hydrocarbon supplies.
    • Energy-importing nations experienced heightened concerns regarding access to essential resources and market stability.
  • Acceleration of the Energy Transition
    • Persistently high oil prices and supply uncertainty may accelerate investment in clean energy
    • The crisis has reinforced the importance of diversified energy sources and increased strategic reserves, potentially hastening movement towards a peak oil

Regional Realignments in West Asia

  • Reassessment by Gulf States
    • The conflict has altered strategic calculations within the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).
    • Many Gulf states were dissatisfied with the consequences of military escalation and questioned the reliability of external security guarantees.
    • As a result, regional actors may increasingly seek independent defence capabilities and adopt more flexible foreign policy approaches.
  • Emerging Strategic Autonomy
    • Internal divisions, including the Saudi–Emirati rivalry, may hinder collective security initiatives.
    • Consequently, some Gulf states may pursue bilateral arrangements with Iran while simultaneously strengthening their own defence capacities.

Iran’s Evolving Security Doctrine

  • From Nuclear Deterrence to Maritime Leverage
    • An important shift appears to be emerging within Iranian strategic thinking.
    • Rather than relying solely on nuclear deterrence, some policymakers increasingly view influence over the Strait of Hormuz as a more effective means of deterrence.
    • The ability to disrupt global energy markets has demonstrated the strategic value of maritime leverage, potentially reducing the centrality of nuclear ambiguity in Iran’s security calculations.
  • Prospects for a New Regional Framework
    • A cooperative mechanism involving the littoral states of Hormuz could provide a more sustainable security arrangement.
    • Although legal and political obstacles remain significant, such a framework may offer a pathway towards reducing tensions while preserving regional stability. 

The Implications of US-Iran Conflict

  • Rise of Non-State Actors
    • Even if diplomatic efforts succeed, instability may persist.
    • The weakening of Iran and its allied networks could create opportunities for non-state actors and militant organisations.
    • Groups such as Islamic State, al-Qaeda, and other extremist movements may exploit political vacuums and social grievances to expand their influence.
  • Risk of Prolonged Instability
    • Military confrontations often leave behind conditions conducive to insurgency, radicalisation, and proxy conflicts.
    • Without inclusive political settlements, the region may continue to experience cycles of violence despite formal agreements.

Conclusion

  • The conflict has reshaped regional geopolitics, underscored the importance of energy security, revealed the limitations of military solutions, and accelerated strategic realignments across West Asia.
  • Achieving lasting peace will depend on sustained diplomacy, mutual compromise, and the development of cooperative regional security frameworks.
  • While immediate tensions may subside, the long-term consequences of the crisis will continue to influence both regional and global affairs.
Editorial Analysis

Article
17 Jun 2026

A Nation Determined to Endure and Overcome

Context

  • Iran's modern history is characterised by the interplay of nationalism, modernisation, foreign intervention, and religious revivalism.
  • Located at the crossroads of Asia and the Middle East, Iran has experienced repeated attempts to reconcile traditional values with modern political and economic structures.
  • The country's transition from the rule of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi to the establishment of the Islamic Republic in 1979 fundamentally reshaped its domestic politics, regional role, and relations with global powers.

Historical Background: Oil, Foreign Influence, and Modernisation

  • The discovery of oil in 1901 transformed Iran into a strategically important state.
  • The establishment of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC) gave Britain significant influence over Iranian resources.
  • Later, the nationalization of the oil industry under Mohammad Mosaddeq and his subsequent overthrow with support from the CIA reinforced widespread perceptions of foreign interference.
  • During the 1960s and 1970s, the Shah launched ambitious modernization programs such as the White Revolution and the vision of a Great Civilisation.
  • Rising oil revenues financed industrialisation, military expansion, and social reforms.
  • However, these policies generated economic inequalities, weakened traditional institutions, and alienated large sections of society.
  • Opposition emerged among the ulema, bazaaris, intellectuals, workers, and the growing middle class.

Rise of Revolutionary Ideologies

  • The weakening legitimacy of the monarchy encouraged the emergence of alternative political visions.
  • Ali Shariati popularized Red Shiism, combining Islamic principles with social justice and anti-imperialism.
  • The Tudeh Party promoted Marxist ideas among workers and intellectuals.
  • The most influential challenge came from Ayatollah Khomeini, who advocated Vilayat-e-Faqih, or governance by Islamic jurists.
  • His message resonated with groups dissatisfied by corruption, authoritarianism, and dependence on Western powers.
  • By the late 1970s, revolutionary sentiments had united diverse social groups against the Shah.

The Islamic Revolution of 1979

  • The Islamic Revolution of 1979 marked a turning point in Iranian history.
  • While rooted in Shi'a religious traditions, the revolution was also driven by demands for political freedom, economic justice, and national sovereignty.
  • The monarchy collapsed, and a referendum established the Islamic Republic.
  • Subsequently, a process of Islamisation transformed state institutions, laws, and public life.
  • The new regime sought to combine religious authority with political governance, creating a unique model of revolutionary statehood.

Deterioration of U.S.-Iran Relations

  • Relations between Iran and the United States worsened rapidly after the revolution.
  • In November 1979, Iranian students seized the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and held American diplomats hostage for 444 days.
  • The crisis symbolized Iranian resistance to decades of perceived foreign domination and marked the beginning of a prolonged period of hostility between the two countries.
  • The hostage crisis reshaped regional geopolitics and reinforced mutual distrust, influencing U.S.-Iran relations for decades.

The Iran-Iraq War and Regional Dynamics

  • In 1980, Saddam Hussein's Iraq invaded Iran after repudiating the Algiers Treaty.
  • The resulting Iran-Iraq War lasted eight years and became one of the most destructive conflicts in modern Middle Eastern history.
  • Supported by several Arab states and the United States, Iraq sought to exploit Iran's post-revolutionary instability.
  • For Iran, however, the conflict evolved into a struggle for national survival and territorial integrity.
  • The war strengthened national unity and reinforced the legitimacy of the revolutionary regime.
  • Khomeini's calls to export the revolution also generated concern among neighbouring states, contributing to broader regional opposition to Iran.

Israel's Strategic Calculations

  • Despite ideological hostility toward the Islamic Republic, Israel considered Iraq a greater strategic threat.
  • Consequently, Israel covertly supplied Iran with military equipment, spare parts, and ammunition while receiving crude oil in return.
  • This cooperation reflected the importance of strategic interests over ideological differences in international relations.
  • By preventing either Iran or Iraq from achieving decisive dominance, Israel maintained a favourable regional balance of power. 

Iran's Resilience and Consolidation of Power

  • The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) expanded rapidly and emerged as a central pillar of the state's security structure.
  • Iran demonstrated remarkable resilience by maintaining oil exports, diversifying sources of military supplies, reducing non-essential imports, and mobilising public support for the war effort.
  • Despite criticism from groups such as the Islamic Liberation Movement, the regime successfully consolidated its authority.
  • Experiences of revolution, war, and external pressure fostered a strong sense of national determination and self-reliance.

Conclusion

  • Iran's transformation from monarchy to revolutionary state was shaped by the combined forces of oil politics, foreign intervention, modernization, revolutionary ideology, and warfare.
  • The shortcomings of the Shah's modernization project, coupled with political repression and foreign influence, created the conditions for revolutionary change.
  • The Islamic Revolution and the Iran-Iraq War subsequently forged a resilient political system that continues to play a significant role in regional and global affairs.
  • Today, Iran remains a major Middle Eastern power whose identity is deeply rooted in its experiences of resistance, sovereignty, and national endurance.
Editorial Analysis

Daily MCQ
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Current Affairs
June 16, 2026

What is Hamataliwa mawlyngot?
Researchers recently identified a new species of spider named Hamataliwa mawlyngot from Meghalaya’s East Khasi Hills.
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About Hamataliwa mawlyngot:

  • It is a new species of lynx spider.
  • It was discovered from a hillside shrub in Meghalaya’s East Khasi Hills.
  • Researchers found male and female specimens living on Molucca brambles growing along the slopes of the hills.
  • It was named after Mawlyngot Village, where it was discovered.
  • It marks the first recorded presence of the lynx spider genus Hamataliwa in Meghalaya.
    • Lynx spiders are agile hunters that do not build webs to trap prey.
    • Instead, they actively stalk insects among leaves and shrubs, relying on sharp vision and quick movements.
    • Because they prey on a wide range of insects, they are considered important natural predators in ecosystems and may also contribute to biological pest control in agricultural landscapes.
  • While several species of Hamataliwa have been recorded from parts of China, Southeast Asia, and southern India, northeastern India remains poorly studied.
  • The finding also helps bridge a gap in the known distribution of the genus between the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia.
Environment

Current Affairs
June 16, 2026

Exercise Pitch Black 2026
India will participate in Australia's Exercise Pitch Black 2026 from July 20 to August 7 alongside 18 other nations.
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About Exercise Pitch Black:

  • It is a biennial and multinational exercise hosted by the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF).
  • It is the RAAF’s flagship international flying exercise.
  • The name ‘Pitch Black’ was derived from the emphasis on nighttime flying over large unpopulated areas.
  • 2026 Edition:
    • It will run with operations based out of RAAF Bases Darwin and Tindal in the Northern Territory, as well as RAAF Base Amberley in Queensland.
    • It features a massive assembly of global air forces, providing an unparalleled platform for interoperability.
    • The exercise focuses on highly complex aerial manoeuvres, including offensive counter-air operations, air defence tracking, and tactical coordination between completely different styles of aircraft and communication systems.
    • The IAF has dispatched a highly capable multi-role task force to the exercise, ensuring robust participation across multiple operational spectrum.
    • For the IAF, training alongside advanced air assets from nations like the US, UK, Australia, France, and regional partners offers crucial exposure to contemporary air warfare tactics, electronic warfare defence, and modern network-centric operations.
    • Previous participation of India: The IAF has previously participated in the 2018, 2022, and 2024 editions of this exercise.
Science & Tech

Current Affairs
June 16, 2026

What is Drop Shipping?
The success of Amazon, the largest e-commerce retailer in the world, can be credited at least in part to drop shipping practices.
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About Drop Shipping:

  • Dropshipping is a retail business model in which a seller accepts customer orders without keeping the products in stock.
  • Instead, when a customer places an order, the seller purchases the product from a third-party supplier, who then ships it directly to the customer.
  • A dropshipper is an intermediary between consumers and suppliers, curating and promoting the goods that suppliers ship to customers.
  • Many businesses prefer dropshipping because it removes costs like warehouse storage and unsold inventory.
  • The dropshipping model is attractive to smaller retailers and entrepreneurs because it requires relatively little capital investment and overhead.
  • Drop-shipping is not illegal, but there can be problems for buyers and sellers.

●   How Does Drop-Shipping Work?

  • The company signs an agreement with a wholesaler, manufacturer, or other retailer to provide the goods it advertises.
  • Customers place orders
  • The company receives the order.
  • The customer receives an order confirmation.
  • The company forwards the order to the wholesaler, manufacturer, or other retailer.
  • The wholesaler, manufacturer, or other retailer ships the order.
  • Customers receive their product.

● Example:

  • You list a phone case on your website for ₹500.
  • A customer buys it for ₹500.
  • You order it from a supplier for ₹300.
  • The supplier ships it directly to the customer.
  • Your gross profit is ₹200 (before marketing and other costs).
Economy
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