A newly released study by the British Library has catalogued 17th century news reports from Mughal India, revealing a brutal and unstable theatre of operations. For those of us who track threat vectors across history, these documents are not mere academic curiosities. They are a stark warning about intelligence failures and the cost of strategic complacency.
The reports, known as 'akhbarat' or newsletters, provide a granular account of governance under Emperor Aurangzeb. They detail assassinations, famines, and military campaigns with a cold, bureaucratic precision. This is raw intelligence data. Yet the British East India Company, operating in the subcontinent at the time, largely failed to exploit this information. They were focused on commercial advantage, not strategic dominance. That was a critical error.
Consider the logistics. The Mughal Empire maintained a vast network of runners and spies to transmit these newsletters across thousands of miles. The time lag between a military engagement in the Deccan and a report reaching Delhi was a known vulnerability. Hostile actors, including the Marathas and the Sikhs, exploited these gaps. The Mughals, in turn, struggled with internal security. The newsletters record multiple attempts on Aurangzeb's life. The empire's central command was compromised by its own elite.
Now, pivot to the present. The British Library's analysis highlights a fundamental principle: information dominance is never permanent. The Mughals had it for a century. They lost it. The British had it for two centuries. They lost it. Today, Western intelligence agencies face similar threats from state actors who understand the value of asymmetric information warfare. The parallels are direct.
The study also underscores the danger of romanticising historical data. These are not tidy narratives of glory or decay. They are operational reports. They show a system under constant strain, rife with corruption and betrayal. The Mughal intelligence apparatus was sophisticated but brittle. It collapsed when faced with coordinated deception and subversion.
For the modern defence analyst, the lesson is clear. Every piece of open-source intelligence, every classified signal intercept, is a potential fail point. The Mughals learned this too late. Their newsletters became the record of their decline. Today, we must treat every news event as a potential chess move by a hostile actor. The British Library's work is a valuable contribution to the strategic literature. But it is also a reminder: history is a weapon. Those who fail to weaponise it will be outmanoeuvred.









