Disruptive Technologies and Deterrence Stability in South Asia: The Pakistan-India Equation 2025
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.61732/bj.v4i2.242Keywords:
South Asia, Deterrence Stability, Disruptive Technology, Artificial Intelligence, Hypersonic Weapons, Full-Spectrum Deterrence, Crisis EscalationAbstract
The advent of disruptive military technologies, such as AI-supported surveillance, autonomous weapons systems, and hypersonic delivery platforms, in India as part of the new force posture poses a highly tangible threat to deterrence stability in South Asia. The instability of crises has been exacerbated by the creation of non-attributable technologies in India, which has reduced its chances of controlled escalation rather than intensifying it. In this paper, the dynamic equilibrium between technology and the doctrinal stance of India and Pakistan is discussed, taking particular interest in how the induction of futuristic systems in India is threatening the current deterrence equation. According to the May 2025 military conflict scenario, in which the Indian operation Sindoor has so far failed to achieve its objectives and the Pakistani air defences have so far been found satisfactory, the analysis suggests that Pakistan maintains credibility in its nuclear deterrence, operational preparedness, and political consummation in a crisis. The evolution of Pakistan's doctrine of full-spectrum deterrence, notwithstanding external pressures, has helped keep pace with emerging pressures and served as a stabilizing factor. Conversely, the world's pressure on India, driven by technology-based risks, breeds a false sense of confidence, a misperception, and an unwillingness to create a spiral of escalation. At the end of the paper, it is proposed that Pakistan take the lead in regional armaments control, AI openness, and mutual non-interference commitments in the cyber and space realms. South Asia is at greater risk of miscalculation without these confidence-building measures amid an intensifying technological arms race.
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