International Journal For Multidisciplinary Research
E-ISSN: 2582-2160
•
Impact Factor: 9.24
A Widely Indexed Open Access Peer Reviewed Multidisciplinary Bi-monthly Scholarly International Journal
Home
Research Paper
Submit Research Paper
Publication Guidelines
Publication Charges
Upload Documents
Track Status / Pay Fees / Download Publication Certi.
Editors & Reviewers
View All
Join as a Reviewer
Get Membership Certificate
Current Issue
Publication Archive
Conference
Publishing Conf. with IJFMR
Upcoming Conference(s) ↓
SJGC-2026
Conferences Published ↓
IC-AIRCM-T3-2026
SPHERE-2025
AIMAR-2025
SVGASCA-2025
ICCE-2025
Chinai-2023
PIPRDA-2023
ICMRS'23
Contact Us
Plagiarism is checked by the leading plagiarism checker
Call for Paper
Volume 8 Issue 2
March-April 2026
Indexing Partners
The Evolution of India’s Defense and Foreign Policy Architecture in the Post-Kargil Period
| Author(s) | Mr. Supratik De |
|---|---|
| Country | India |
| Abstract | The 1999 Kargil war with Pakistan is one watershed event of the history of the independent India, a significant trigger of an intense and structural searching of the defense and foreign policy structure of India. The limited war, which was waged under a nuclear overhang, revealed the existence of critical, near-catastrophic failures in the Indian strategic posture: a joint deficiency in intelligence coordination, a maladaptive civil-military relationship and the failure of Indian strategic planning and operations to be joint, or even inter-service. The paper reviews the overall history of the development of defence and security apparatus in India in the last 25 years since the Kargil conflict. It is putting forward that the Kargil shock brought about a slow, tedious, and in many ways inadequate (Pant and Mukherjee, 2023) reform process. This change entailed, first, an organizational restructuring of higher defence management which eventually led to the introduction of Chief of Defence Staff (CDS). Second, it provoked a drastic change in the doctrine. A defensive and reactive stance was changed by a proactive and punitive one based on combating cross-border penetration and state-sponsored terrorism. Third, it required a fundamental shift in foreign policy, hastening the abandonment of the post-Cold War non-alignment to both a more pragmatic multi-alignment, typified by an almost-avoidant relationship with the United States, and a more aggressive posture in the wider Indo-Pacific. This paper will discuss all these intertwined reforms, the modernization issues that persist to date, and the bureaucratic obstacles that still characterize the strategic development of India in the 21st century. |
| Keywords | Kargil War 1999, Chief of Defence Staff, Civil–Military Relations, Defense Modernization, Proactive Deterrence Doctrine, Pragmatic Multi-Alignment (Foreign Policy) |
| Published In | Volume 8, Issue 2, March-April 2026 |
| Published On | 2026-03-03 |
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.36948/ijfmr.2026.v08i02.70503 |
Share this

E-ISSN 2582-2160
CrossRef DOI is assigned to each research paper published in our journal.
IJFMR DOI prefix is
10.36948/ijfmr
Downloads
All research papers published on this website are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, and all rights belong to their respective authors/researchers.
Powered by Sky Research Publication and Journals