Archives (PRELIMS Focus) Bab el-Mandab: The ‘Gate of Tears’ as a Second Strategic Chokepoint Subject: Geography (Paper I) & Current Affairs News Context: Iran-backed Yemeni Houthis have entered the Israel-Iran war, launching ballistic missiles at Israel. They control Yemen’s capital Sana’a, located close to Bab el-Mandab, raising fears of renewed attacks on Red Sea shipping. Key Details & Facts: Location: Southern tip of Red Sea, between Yemen (Asia) and Horn of Africa (Eritrea/Djibouti). Connects: Red Sea → Gulf of Aden → Indian Ocean. Significance: Links to Suez Canal and SUMED pipeline. Traffic: ~10-12% of global oil & gas shipments; 30+ million tonnes of natural gas (Nov 2023); 12% of seaborne-traded oil. Alternate Route: Cape of Good Hope – adds 4,000–6,000 nautical miles & 14–20 days. Relevant Keywords for Prelims: Chokepoints: Strait of Hormuz, Bab el-Mandab, Suez Canal, Cape of Good Hope. Groups: Houthis (Axis of Resistance), Iran’s proxy network (Hamas, Hezbollah). Concepts: Seaborne trade, SUMED pipeline, Global liquid petroleum consumption. Core Theme: Second Chokepoint under Threat: After Strait of Hormuz (20% global oil/LNG), Bab el-Mandab is now at risk due to Houthi involvement. Impact of Blockade: Closure forces detour around Africa → higher freight costs & delivery delays (14-20 days). India’s Stakes: ~80% of India’s merchandise trade with Europe (EU = 15%+ of India’s $450 bn exports) passes through this route. UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage): Static: Oceanic chokepoints (Geography GS I) – location, connecting water bodies. Dynamic: Geopolitics of energy security (IR) – Iran’s Axis of Resistance, Houthi capabilities. Source/Reference: https://indianexpress.com/article/world/houthis-attack-israel-bab-el-mandab-10607537/ Single-Use Plastic Ban in India: 84% Non-Compliance Exposes Enforcement Gaps Subject: Environment & Ecology (Paper I) & Current Affairs News Context: Three years after India’s ban on selected single-use plastic (SUP) items, a Toxics Link study (April–August 2025; released March 25, 2026) surveyed 560 locations across Bhubaneswar, Delhi, Guwahati, and Mumbai. It found 84% of sites still using banned SUP items, highlighting poor enforcement. Key Details & Facts: Organization: Toxics Link (New Delhi-based environmental research & advocacy group). Cities surveyed: Bhubaneswar (89% violation – highest), Delhi (86%), Mumbai (85%), Guwahati (76%). Common banned items found: Thin plastic carry bags, disposable cutlery, cups, plates, straws. Compliance pattern: Organized retail (malls) → better adherence; informal markets & small vendors → high violations. Customer behavior: 91% vendors reported customer demand for carry bags; 55% customers bring own bags, but many still expect free bags. Vendor perception: Disposable plastics seen as cheaper & more hygienic than reusable alternatives (paper, wood, steel, bagasse, cloth, or reusable plastic >120 microns). Relevant Keywords for Prelims: Acts/Rules: Plastic Waste Management Rules, 2016 (amended 2021); SUP ban effective July 1, 2022. International forum: Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC) on Plastic Pollution – Geneva, 2025. Alternatives mentioned: Bagasse plates, cloth bags, wooden cutlery, steel utensils, aluminium foil containers, reusable plastic (>120 microns). Concepts: Circular economy, extended producer responsibility (EPR), plastic littering. Core Theme (Headings): Ban vs. Reality: Despite national ban, 84% surveyed locations still use prohibited SUP items due to weak enforcement. Drivers of Continued Use: High customer demand (91% vendors report this), cost advantage, and perception that disposables are more hygienic. Recommendations: Robust monitoring, consistent penalties, affordable alternatives, public awareness campaigns, and support for small vendors. UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage): Static: Types of plastic (thermoplastic vs. thermoset); biodegradability; thickness standards (120 microns for reusable carry bags). Dynamic: India’s commitment to UNEA Resolution 5/14 (global plastic treaty); status of EPR framework. Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/assam/toothless-ban-single-use-plastic-rules-84-of-surveyed-sites-in-four-cities/article70788244.ece Section 79(3)(b) IT Act: MHA’s I4C Issued 1.11 Lakh Takedown Notices in One Year Subject: Polity & Governance / Science & Technology (Paper I & III) & Current Affairs News Context: On March 13, 2024, the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) was designated as the MHA’s agency under Section 79(3)(b) of the IT Act, 2000. Within one year (till March 31, 2025), it blocked 1,11,185 suspicious online content -averaging ~290 takedown notices per day. The data is from the MHA’s annual report 2024-25 (released March 25, 2026). Key Details & Facts: Legal Framework: Section 79(1): Safe harbour protection for intermediaries (no liability for user-generated content). Section 79(3)(b): Protection lost if intermediary fails to remove content after government intimation. Nodal Agency: I4C (Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre) – under MHA. Timeline: Designated March 13, 2024 → data till March 31, 2025. Takedown timeline: Intermediaries must remove content within 3 hours of government/court order (as informed to Parliament by MeitY). X (Twitter) case: Challenged Section 79(3)(b) and Sahyog portal in Karnataka HC; petition dismissed in 2025. Nearly 1/3rd of notices to X sought removal of content about Union Ministers & Central agencies. Separate Data – Cyber Security Incidents (CERT-In): CERT-In functions under Section 70B of IT Act, 2000. Cyber incidents: 20.41 lakh (2024) → 29.44 lakh (2025) – highest in 5 years. Highest incidents: National Capital Territory of Delhi. Relevant Keywords for Prelims: Acts/Sections: IT Act 2000 – Sections 79(1), 79(3)(b), 70B. Agencies: I4C (MHA), CERT-In (MeitY), Sahyog portal. Concepts: Intermediary safe harbour, reasoned intimation, cyber security incident. Judicial precedent: Karnataka HC upheld Section 79(3)(b) (2025). Core Theme (Headings): MHA’s Enhanced Power: I4C can issue direct takedown notices – intermediaries lose safe harbour if non-compliant. Scale of Action: 1.11 lakh content blocks in one year (~290/day). Parallel Trend: Cyber security incidents rising sharply – 29.44 lakh in 2025 (CERT-In data). Judicial Scrutiny: Karnataka HC dismissed X’s challenge; notices on political content flagged. UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage): Static: Difference between Section 79(3)(b) (content removal) and Section 69A (blocking for national security). CERT-In vs. I4C mandates. Dynamic: Intermediary liability vs. free speech debate; Shreya Singhal case (2015) – Section 66A struck down but Section 79 upheld; global comparison – EU DSA, US Section 230. Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/within-a-year-of-getting-powers-mha-agency-issued-290-takedown-notices-a-day-on-average-for-online-content/article70788677.ece S-400 ‘Sudarshan Chakra’: India to Receive Final Two Squadrons by November 2026 Subject: Defence & Security (Current Affairs) & Science & Technology News Context: India signed a $5.43 billion deal with Russia in 2018 for five squadrons of the S-400 Triumf air defence system. Amid West Asia tensions, the remaining two units will be delivered by November 2026 (one in April 2026, last by November), accelerated from the earlier estimate of 2027. Key Details & Facts: System Name in India: ‘Sudarshan Chakra’ (after Lord Krishna’s mythological weapon). Capability: Engages aerial threats up to 400 km – fighter jets, ballistic missiles, drones. Operational Proof: Played critical role in Operation Sindoor – intercepted incoming missiles and drones. Recent Procurement: Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) granted Acceptance of Necessity (AoN) for 288 additional S-400 missiles from Russia at ₹10,000 crore (last month). Challenge: Earlier delays due to Russia–Ukraine war & supply chain disruptions; now expedited. Relevant Keywords for Prelims: System: S-400 Triumf (NATO reporting name: SA-21 Growler). Manufacturer: Almaz-Antey (Russia). Indian Nomenclature: Sudarshan Chakra. Other operators: China, Turkey, Belarus (sanctions risk under CAATSA – US law). Indian procurement bodies: DAC (Defence Acquisition Council), AoN (Acceptance of Necessity). Core Theme (Headings): Strategic Acquisition: Five squadrons under 2018 India-Russia deal; three already operational. Accelerated Delivery: Remaining two units – April 2026 & November 2026 (vs. earlier 2027 estimate). Operational Validation: S-400 proved effective during Operation Sindoor. Missile Replenishment: AoN for 288 more missiles (₹10,000 crore) to sustain combat readiness. UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage): Static: Layered air defence – Long-range (S-400), medium (Akash), short-range (SPYDER, VSHORAD). Difference between ballistic missile defence (BMD) and area defence. Dynamic: India’s balancing act – S-400 from Russia vs. CAATSA sanctions threat (US waiver provision). India’s push for indigenous systems (Project Kusha – DRDO’s long-range air defence). India-Russia defence ties despite Ukraine war. Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/s-400-deliveries-accelerated-as-india-enhances-air-defence-capability/article70788576.ece Forex Reserves Adequacy: Is India’s $710 Billion Cushion Enough for External Shocks? UPSC Syllabus Coverage: Economy (Paper I & III) & Current Affairs R News Context: RBI stated India’s forex reserves ($710 billion as of March 13, 2026) “remain adequate to provide cushion against external shocks.” This comes amid record monthly FPI outflows ($12.1 billion in March 2026 – highest ever), rupee hitting record lows, and rising West Asia tensions. Former RBI Governor Das called reserves “umbrella for a rainy day.” Key Details & Facts: Reserves Components (as of March 13, 2026): Foreign Currency (FX) Assets: $556 billion Gold: $131 billion SDRs: $18.7 billion IMF Reserve Tranche: $4.8 billion Total: ~$710 billion (near record $728 billion from Feb-end) Reality Check: Only FX assets ($556B) are readily usable for daily rupee defence. Gold is a last resort (as in 1991 BoP crisis). SDRs and IMF tranche are limited buffers. Forward Sales Adjustment: RBI sold net $68 billion in forwards (Jan 2026 data; likely higher in March). Adjusted FX assets fall below $500 billion. HSBC noted import cover months approaching 2013 BoP stress levels. Rupee Defence Mechanisms: Spot market sale: Reduces reserves immediately; tightens rupee liquidity → higher interest rates. Forward market sale: Delayed FX delivery; no immediate liquidity impact. Relevant Keywords for Prelims: Components: SDR (basket of USD, EUR, CNY, JPY, GBP), Reserve Tranche Position (IMF). Indicators: Import cover (months of imports), forward sales, net FX adequacy. Historical context: 1991 BoP crisis (gold pledge), 2013 taper tantrum. Agencies: RBI, HSBC, Bernstein, IDFC First Bank. Core Theme (Headings): Nominal vs. Effective Reserves: $710 billion looks strong, but after adjusting for forward sales (~$68B), usable FX assets ~$500B. Dual Defence & Trade-off: Spot sales defend rupee but tighten liquidity; forward sales avoid liquidity hit but create future liability. Diminishing Returns: Since Oct 2024, RBI sold $94B in spot yet rupee fell from 84/$ to 94/$ – showing limited effectiveness amid global headwinds. Policy Dilemma: Preserve reserves for longer crisis vs. defend rupee now. Economists suggest controlled depreciation if West Asia war persists. UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage): Static: Components of forex reserves (FEMA, 1999); BoP accounting – current account vs. capital account; SDR valuation basket. Dynamic: Global spillovers – US Fed policy, Trump 2.0 expectations, West Asia conflict → oil prices → import bill → rupee pressure. FPI outflows and RBI’s intervention toolkit. Source/Reference: https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/explained-economics/are-indias-forex-reserves-really-adequate-to-provide-cushion-against-external-shocks-10601845/ (MAINS Focus) Multi-Domain Deterrence: Strengthening India’s Defence-Industrial Base UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper III – Security (Defence) | GS Paper III – Economy (Industrial Policy) Introduction China’s rapid military modernization is widening the capability gap with India. Building a robust defence-industrial base, alongside urgent procurement and doctrinal reforms, is key to ensuring credible multi-domain deterrence against the PLA. Strategic Choices: Three Approaches to Deterrence Approach Strategy Risk/Benefit Bold Bet on emerging war-fighting technologies; invest in new bundles of capabilities High risk if implementation fails; India lacks industrial scale; but could reduce capability gap if successful Conservative Integrate emerging tech with existing platforms; enhance cyber, space, EW capabilities Doable but won’t alter balance of power; suited for short war with Pakistan, not protracted China conflict Middle Path Rely on legacy platforms while investing in enabling layers (C2, ISR, deep-strike, logistics) Most pragmatic; builds syncretic multi-domain force over time Conclusion: The middle path—strengthening enabling layers—offers the most viable route to credible deterrence against China. Systemic Vulnerabilities: Industrial & Procurement Challenges Challenge Analysis Defence-Industrial Base Not structured to deliver at speed and scale; missiles, munitions, drones, ISR networks urgently needed Private Sector Underutilization Mindset gap: private players can build military systems more efficiently than public sector Procurement System Adapts too slowly; constrains rather than enables fighting force Budgetary Instability Short-term allocations hinder long-term industrial planning Red Tape Bureaucratic delays impede capability induction Key Insight: India’s technological competence is not the issue—its industrial base is. Without expanding capacity in conjunction with private industry, constraints will persist. Enabling Layers for Multi-Domain Deterrence India must create and operationalize five critical layers: Layer Function C4ISR Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance—the side that sees, fights Deep-Strike Integration of missiles, aircraft, drones to dislocate enemy in depth Close-Battle Coordinated employment of tanks, guns, infantry vehicles for front-line combat Logistics Supply chains, installations, rear-zone integration for protracted war Nuclear Deterrent Compensates for conventional gaps against nuclear adversary C4ISR Priority: India needs cheap ISR platforms in numbers it can afford to lose, while maintaining surveillance capacity. Superior cyber, space, and electronic warfare capabilities are vital to degrade adversary ISR. Fixing the Inventory Gap Issue China’s Advantage India’s Response Missile Inventory Sizeable inventory; industrial capacity to produce thousands during conflict Incentivize domestic production; one-off budgetary allocations for surge capacity Protracted War Risk China could drag India into attritional conflict Build logistics and industrial surge capacity to withstand initial strikes Without addressing this inventory gap, China may be tempted to escalate, betting on its industrial superiority. Way Forward: Reforms & Prioritization Industrial Base Expansion: Partner with private industry for missiles, munitions, drones, ISR platforms Provide long-term contracts and budgetary stability Shift mindset: private sector as partner, not peripheral player Procurement Reform: Adapt faster to evolving force requirements Root procurement in efficient defence-industrial base Reduce red tape; streamline decision-making Doctrinal Convergence: Theatre-isation alone insufficient without deep doctrinal alignment Develop common picture of deterrence across military services Military must articulate roles, costs of inaction, and trade-offs to political leadership Prioritize Key Capabilities: Identify military vulnerabilities that advantage China Focus on layered C4ISR as top priority Make hard choices: spend more, but spend smarter Critical Analysis: Strengths & Gaps Strengths Gaps Growing political will for indigenization (Atmanirbhar Bharat) Industrial base lacks scale and speed Private sector potential increasingly recognized Procurement system still slow and risk-averse Doctrinal evolution underway (theatre commands) C4ISR and enabling layers underdeveloped Nuclear deterrent provides strategic stability Conventional inventory gap persists Conclusion India’s China deterrence depends on a strong, layered defence-industrial base, not isolated capabilities. Urgent reforms in procurement, private participation, and joint doctrine are vital to prevent a widening capability gap. UPSC Mains Practice Question “India’s defence-industrial base is not structured to deliver at speed and scale, threatening its ability to deter China.” Critically examine the systemic challenges in India’s defence-industrial ecosystem. Suggest a roadmap to build a robust, multi-domain deterrence posture. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/the-key-to-indias-multi-domain-deterrence-capabilities/article70789040.ece WTO at Crossroads: India’s Stand at MC14 UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – International Relations (International Institutions) | GS Paper III – Economy (Trade) Introduction The 14th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14) comes amid a deep crisis in the global trading system, marked by U.S. actions that have weakened dispute settlement, challenged the MFN principle, and promoted unilateral tariffs. For India, the priority is to safeguard policy space for development, food security, and digital growth. Key issues include the e-commerce moratorium, investment facilitation, public stockholding, and broader WTO reforms, all of which will shape India’s future economic strategy. Key Issues at Stake Issue Contention India’s Position E-Commerce Moratorium Ban on customs duties on electronic transmissions renewed since 1998 Opposes – undermines revenue and policy space for digital industrialization Investment Facilitation for Development (IFD) China-backed plurilateral agreement on investment flows Opposes – challenges consensus-based multilateralism; strategic overlap with BRI Public Stockholding Permanent solution for food security subsidies Demands – protects MSP, PMGKAY, and livelihood of small farmers WTO Reforms US questions MFN principle; pushes radical restructuring Supports reforms that strengthen multilateralism with development at core E-Commerce Moratorium: Revenue & Policy Space Dimension Analysis Growth Digital trade grew from <$1 trillion (1998) to >$16 trillion (2025); digitally delivered services = 56% of global services exports India’s Concern Moratorium locks in zero tariffs permanently; developing nations lack digital infrastructure to compete RIS Report Developed nations invest heavily in AI, robotics, big data; developing nations still building basic ICT infrastructure Core Principle “Not just revenue issue but policy space issue” – India and South Africa joint submission Historical Precedent: IT Agreement-1 (1996) – India eliminated tariffs on IT products, benefited from IT boom but missed manufacturing opportunity. This experience shapes current caution. Investment Facilitation for Development: Strategic Considerations Proponents 128 countries, including China India’s Objection Plurilateral route undermines consensus-based multilateralism Strategic Overlap 98 of 128 IFD participants are also BRI members – raises geo-economic concerns Institutional Concern Precedent could fragment WTO into issue-based coalitions, sidelining developing country voices Public Stockholding: India’s Core Demand Framework WTO agriculture subsidy cap: 10% of production value for developing countries India’s Stance Seeks permanent solution to protect MSP, food security programs (PMGKAY covers 80 crore beneficiaries) Rationale Large section of farmers low-income, resource-constrained; food security essential for vulnerable populations WTO Reforms: US Challenge & India’s Response US Position: Questions MFN as bedrock principle Seeks plurilateral agreements outside consensus framework Has blocked appointment of Appellate Body judges, rendering dispute settlement dysfunctional India’s Position: Supports meaningful reforms that strengthen multilateral trading system Insists reforms must be development-oriented Emphasizes respecting WTO’s multilateral mandate India’s Core Principles at MC14 Principle Application Policy Space Preserve ability to nurture nascent digital and manufacturing sectors Food Security Protect small farmers and vulnerable populations through MSP and public stockholding Fisheries Livelihoods Balanced approach: sustainability with protection of artisanal fishers; distant-water fishing nations bear proportionate responsibility Development at Core Any WTO reform must prioritize developing country concerns Critical Analysis: Strengths & Constraints Strengths Constraints Coherent position rooted in developmental priorities Relatively low share in global trade limits bargaining power Historical learning from ITA-1 experience US unilateralism undermines rules-based order India relies upon Coalition-building with South Africa, Indonesia, etc. Plurilateral momentum may marginalize consensus-based approach Conclusion MC14 is a decisive test for the relevance of the World Trade Organization. For India, the issue goes beyond negotiations to preserving a multilateral, consensus-based, development-oriented system. Its positions on e-commerce, investment facilitation, and public stockholding reflect the need to retain policy space. As the U.S. challenges core principles, India must balance defending the rules-based order with protecting its farmers, fishers, and digital future. UPSC Mains Practice Question “The 14th WTO Ministerial Conference comes at a time when the multilateral trading system faces an existential crisis.” Critically examine the key issues at stake for India at MC14 and analyze how India can balance its developmental priorities with the need for WTO reforms. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: http://indianexpress.com/article/explained/explained-economics/wto-conference-whats-at-stake-10603160/