Indian Foreign Policy

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Rye
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Post by Rye »

ArjunKarn wrote:
Obviously the planners never read even the basic panchatantra stories!! You never bring outsiders to solve your own issues particularly when you don't know what the outsiders would do once they have done your job.
:) Thanks, ArjunKarn, for the link to the incredibly wise panchatantras. (It has been a while since I read that particular story).

I think there is a "realist" explanation for not supporting ideologies incompatible with democracy in a multipolar world. There is an extensive case analysis that was partially outlined in the "FU of nukes" thread that one can do to come to this conclusion, assuming an eventual goal of a "nukes only in the hands of coutries that have the natural ability to create and support their own nuclear program" (this is the same as a "nuke free" world if we assume that democracies will always be responsible with nukes) -- where the tendency of states that create conflagrations to push their state's interests is self-defeating in the long run.

Anyway, the jist of that argument is that if we model the nation states in the world into different categories (they were briefly outlined in the FU of nukes thread), then the creation of a jihadi force in Afghanistan AND Pakistan basically increases the "entropy" of that state to a very high value (think of a "peaceful state" as one with low entropy -- where low entropy implies increased stability).

Now think of the relationships between countries in the world, as either "blue" arcs (a relationship directed towards lowering entropy) or "red" arc s (a relationship directed towards increasing entropy), where a "red" arc has negative weight and a "blue" arc has positive weight. The stronger a hostile relationship is, the more negative the value is for the "red" arc. The stronger a "blue" relationship is, the more positive value there is for the "blue" arc. Clearly, a world where all arcs between all countries is blue is the ideal world peace situation.



Of course, countries like USA, China and India have both "blue" and "red" arcs connecting them (in both directions) since they both compete and cooperate simultaneously.

"Peace" is a stable equilibrium because all the arcs are positive and unless "red" arcs are created deliberately (policies of the P-5 to create wars that increase the entropy in different countries), blue arcs will tend to bring increasing stability over time....and, unfortunately, also end up with each state having citizens that do not understand war and its necessity. So the bluer a world gets, the higher its tendency to be vulnerable to very destabilizing set of "red" relationships. This is one main reason why states with Nuclear weapons must not ever give them up. They are the "stabilizing" forces (especially if they are democracies) that can handle both "red" and "blue" relations effectively. Countries like China, where the average citizen has no voice in controlling the blueness or redness of china's relationships with other countries, are inherently unstable because they do not have deep relations at a grassroot level with other "power poles" with which China has both blue and red arcs.

Of course, the trick for countries like USA and India is to have a healthy balance of "blue" and "red" between each other, and the really cool thing here is that the nature of "red" can be changed, if the countries wage economic war on each other instead of real war.....but the problem here is other secondary effects where the "red" arc eventually becomes stronger and stronger, if the countries do not play by the rules and start hurting the civilians in the democracy they are competing with.

At this point, I am not sure I am making much sense (to anyone other than myself :) ), so I will finish writing this up better and post the whole analysis.

Of course, goes without saying that the "cold war" was a HUGE red arrow going both ways between USSR and USA, and the controlled demolition of USSR was a masterpiece solution in the end. Ended up reducing the intensity of the red arcs and strengthening of the blue arcs. (The wisdom of the question of strengthening the red arcs to insane levels during the cold war is debatable and may or may not have been "inevitable"...one would have to do a bunch of number crunching to game out various scenarios)

(C) Copyright Bharat-Rakshak 2006.
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Post by ramana »

Pranab Mukherjee's address at NDC Delhi.

[quote]
“Indian Foreign Policy: A Road Map for the Decade Aheadâ€
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Post by Manu »

The Speech is certainly impressive, but I am quite sure he did not write it.

I don't remember him doing anything of note as defence minister, maybe in his second innings, we may be in for a (pleasant) surprise.

He sure is popular with the Congress party president, that's all that matters, perhaps.

From a Prime Minister who has never won an election in his life to a foreign minister who has won only once, you will forgive me if I don't hold my breath.

Meanwhile, from Somini Sengupta / The New York Times

Link
Competition between China and India goes beyond borders
A 40-year border dispute remains unresolved. Tibetan refugees continue to pour across the Himalayas. The memory of India's bruising defeat by China in 1962 remains fresh in the minds of a certain generation.

But as President Hu Jintao of China arrived here Monday for a four-day visit to shore up relations between Asia's two giants, what matters is no longer just the territorial arguments between them. As India and China tend their flourishing economies and strive to expand their global reach, they also increasingly find themselves scrambling for natural resources and political influence around the world. At times, they appear to be linking arms; at times, they are in active competition.

It is not exactly a relationship of equals. So measurably does India lag behind on virtually every indicator - except, notably, in the size of the software industry and the number of billionaires (India wins on both counts) - that the Indian minister for commerce, Jairam Ramesh, told an audience here Monday that Indians would do well to stop racing with the Chinese and start admiring.

"We are not in a race," he said at a seminar sponsored by the Confederation of Indian Industry. "They have already won the race."

Some of the competition is in each other's neighborhoods. China is a longtime ally of Pakistan, India's chief antagonist, and it is helping the Pakistanis to fulfill their nuclear energy ambitions and is building a deep- water port at Gwadar on the Arabian Sea.

On India's eastern flank, China has emerged as one of the largest trading partners of Bangladesh.

India, meanwhile, is ever more visible in China's backyard. It signed a free trade agreement with Singapore last year, and is increasingly cozying up to the junta in Myanmar. (Singapore is now China's Backyard? If I remember my history, it was a colony of Britain run out of Bengal - and China is certainly more active in Myanmar than India)

Some of the competition is taking place near and far, as China and India, both hungering for raw materials like fossil fuels and iron ore, aggressively court resource-rich countries like Nigeria and Kazakhstan.

"As two large countries with their own oversized egos, with their sense of manifest destinies, the rivalry is natural," said C. Raja Mohan, strategic affairs columnist for The Indian Express, an English-language newspaper. "The self-perception in both China and India is that they have a larger stake in the world. Therefore, there is a politics of balancing which has become more acute."

Never mind, many Indian analysts say, that the United States is seeking to shore up India as a bulwark against China. India has its own reasons to step up to China or, at times, to collaborate.

For instance, India, like China, has bucked U.S. efforts to isolate the Myanmar military regime. India is instead building roads, refurbishing a port and considering the construction of a natural gas pipeline.

India and China are partners in an oil venture in Sudan. Both countries remain staunch supporters of the Sudanese government despite international pressure over the fighting in Darfur.

Both China and India have stepped up their courtship of Africa. At a meeting this month in Beijing attended by representatives from 48 African countries, China signed trade agreements worth $1.9 billion, pledged $5 billion in loans and credit and offered to double its foreign aid to Africa.

Trade between China and African nations, with their ample deposits of iron ore, copper and oil, has grown tenfold in the past 10 years, to nearly $40 billion last year.

India, though far behind, is making a beeline for some of those very same resource-rich African nations. Indian companies are making sport utility vehicles for the African market, selling hair care products and bidding for hotels. India's bilateral trade with African countries has inched up, to about $12 billion last year.

Their economic rises have prompted India and China to gradually put away distrust and start doing business together. Trade has more than doubled in the last two years, reaching nearly $18 billion in 2005. A report by the Confederation of Indian Industry forecast that it would reach $30 billion by 2010. A historic trading route at Nathula Pass reopened earlier this year.

But distrust remains a stumbling block to expanded economic ties. The Indian government, on security grounds, has blocked Chinese investment in ports and telecommunications in India.

The most entrenched bilateral dispute has to do with their competing border claims. India claims as its own a vast swath of Chinese-controlled territory in Kashmir. China says that the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh is part of China (Now, we know where NYT is coming from). Talks between the two countries have yet to yield a resolution on the border.

Pakistan is the other sore point. Hu, the first Chinese president to visit India in 10 years, is scheduled to visit Pakistan later in the week. Among the potential deals to be announced there is the expansion of trade and further nuclear cooperation.

For India, such overtures are more than a minor irritant, making it ever harder for New Delhi to overcome a legacy of distrust about China.

"These are issues that concern us," said Ramesh*, the Indian commerce minister.

"Some of them are hangovers from the past. Some of them are also contemporary in nature."
* That would be Jairam Ramesh, author of 'Making Sense of Chindia'.
JE Menon
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Post by JE Menon »

>>"We are not in a race," he said at a seminar sponsored by the Confederation of Indian Industry. "They have already won the race."

Typical rhetorical bullshit, which also happens to be defeatist and an excuse for inaction... Meanwhile, can somebody point me to where the finish line of this race was?
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Post by shyamd »

UK protests against Kazakh Hindus harassment
British Prime Minister Tony Blair has raised the issue of alleged harassment of Kazakh Hindus with the Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev at a meeting in London.

The Hindu Forum of Britain alleged on Wednesday that 60 riot police and bulldozers assembled inside a Hindu temple in Kazakhstan and demolished five Hindu houses. According to the forum, the Kazakh government is allegedly planning to bulldoze a Hindu temple in the Karasai District in Kazakhstan.

In an effort to highlight the plight of Hindus in Kazakhstan, Ashok Kumar, Member of Parliament, has tabled an Early Day Motion in the House of Commons.

The motion said: "This House, prior to the visit of the President of Kazakhstan, condemns the harassment of and discrimination against Hindu minorities in Kazakhstan; notes that Hindus in the Karasai district have had land, barns and cows confiscated, have been threatened with demolition of their houses, and denied the right to own land.

It further notes that Kazakh Hindus who applied for ownership of their houses were asked to declare that they were not Hindus, while non-Hindus who made similar applications were immediately granted ownership rights. The motion also acknowledges that the Supreme Court reviewed two cases regarding Hindu cottages and ruled against Hindus, without inviting the plaintiffs to the hearings.

Forum 18, a human rights website has linked the Kazakh President's brother to the demolition and land-grab attempt suggesting that the value of the land could be the reason why Hindus are being harassed and subjected to human rights violations.

"The human rights violation against Kazakh Hindus has caused worldwide condemnation," Sudarshan Bhatia, President of the National Council of Hindu Temples, UK, who is leading the Defend Kazakh Hindus Campaign, said.

"We ask for a complete review of decisions made against Hindus in the court, call upon the President to order the Karasai District Hakimat to have all cases against the Kazakh Hindus withdrawn and basic human rights values restored," Ishwer Tailor, President of the Hindu Forum of Britain, said.
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Post by Singha »

I thought J.Ramesh was a paid for American dalal in Delhi. when did he become such a china bhakt ? beijing maybe has a bigger salary & perks.
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Post by kshirin »

Manu wrote:The Speech is certainly impressive, but I am quite sure he did not write it.

I don't remember him doing anything of note as defence minister, maybe in his second innings, we may be in for a (pleasant) surprise.

He sure is popular with the Congress party president, that's all that matters, perhaps.

From a Prime Minister who has never won an election in his life to a foreign minister who has won only once, you will forgive me if I don't hold my breath.

Meanwhile, from Somini Sengupta / The New York Times

[url....* That would be Jairam Ramesh, author of 'Making Sense of Chindia'.
I cant figure out Pranabda either. he has made two good speeches -on terrorism and the one above, but why did he avoid naming Pakistan as the country sponsoring terrorism against India at the press Q & A with the UK Foreign Secretary? Lost a good opp to set the record straight. But to another paper he clearly stated Pak was still sending them in droves... So I dunno what he is upto.
Raju

Post by Raju »

India eyes an island in the sun

Mauritius Offers Agalega On Long-Term Lease For Use As A Tourist Destination
Sidhartha
[ 25 Nov, 2006 0045hrs ISTTIMES NEWS NETWORK ]

NEW DELHI: In a move that could give the country a strategic presence in the Indian Ocean, Mauritius has offered to hand over the Agalega Islands — which is closer to India than the African country — ostensibly for development as a tourist destination.

The details of the offer, made during negotiations for a bilateral trade pact, are still being discussed. But its broad contours are something like this. Indian companies would develop hotels and resorts and also upgrade the existing airstrip in the island into an airport.

Sources close to the negotiations said that Indian companies or the government also had the option to develop a port, which could be used for purposes of both trade and tourism.

While Mauritius has given projects to private developers on long-term lease, a source said that in this case it could be different since it was a government-to-government deal. "But these are early days. The details have to be thrashed out," he added.

The two islands on offer — North and South Agalega — are over 1,000 km from Mauritius but whether India gets to develop just one of them or both depends on the development plan, a source said. "It can be used for agriculture, tourism or for other strategic purposes," said a source.

Sources said that initial estimates suggested that the cost of building resorts and hotels could be quite high since Mauritius wanted to develop the islands, which have a land area of 70 sq km, for premium tourists.

The North island has two villages — Vingt Cinq and la Fourche — with a bulk of the infrastructure in the former. At present, only the Outer Island Development Corporation of Mauritius can organise trips to Agalega and people can either travel by boat or fly for three hours from Mauritius on a non-pressurised, non-airconditioned Dornier.
Raju

Post by Raju »

India acquiring global footprint
Sidhartha
[ 25 Nov, 2006 0109hrs ISTTIMES NEWS NETWORK ]

NEW DELHI: Indian officials initially denied that Mauritius has offered to hand over the Agalega Islands to India, but later said that it was being dealt with at a senior level.

A Mauritius government official, however, confirmed that an offer had been made. At present, people travel to the islands at their own risk, for which an undertaking is insisted upon.

If India finally secures the rights it will be a move forward for having a global footprint. The US has a presence in Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, which is used as a large military base.
Raju

Post by Raju »

[off the record]
Hindustan Times

Image

Honeymoon Memories

Labour Party politician Jack Straw and his wife Alice Perkins share a special lover for India. The former British foreign secretary, who is currently the leader of the house of Commons, and his wife spent their honeymoon in India in 1978. That was shortly before Straw, then a member of the bar, became MP from Blackburn. Both fondly remember the time they spent here. "We toured the whole of South India and had a memorable holiday in Goa. We always look forward to returning here." Alice said. Incidentally, Straw met Alice when he was special advisor at the Department of Social Security. Alice, who was then a high-flying civil servent, also worked there.
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Post by Singha »

I am sure FinMin will find a way to nuke this golden Mauritius offer by citing cost concerns. the PRC would be happy to step in and spend a billion$.
Raju

Post by Raju »

that is very much possible considering how he has efficiently managed to delay the fab/semIndia ventures by citing some silly tax concerns. Even Intel is being put on the hold for some unforeseen reason.
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Post by Singha »

indeed the much tom-tommed new semiconductor & HW policy has been all smoke and no fire so far. they go around to forums & meetings promising its imminent arrival.

we should take both islands and build two airfields. one island can be a tourist island and the other one a modest LRMP base and naval jetty for now, plus a ELINT facility and mountain top radar to return the compliment of diego garcia to the americans. if you recall they wanted to build a VOA facility in Sri Lanka that was almost certainly a dual use ELINT job.

Territory is a zero sum game - if we dont move in, others will certainly take it away. the Maldivian "Gan" island should also be roped in for our own "string of pearls" strategy - the Maldivian president owes his life to our good offices and is facing a islamist upsurge at home.

A good base on east coast of Madagascar would be icing on cake allowing us to police the traffic flowing between red sea and IOR plus keeping one eye on cape of good hope and joint work with south africans. there was some buzz about it few months back...apparently there has been a coup bid there...panda pawprints would be visible if dig deeper.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/11/ ... ension.php

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/HC03Df02.html

South Asia
Mar 3, 2006


Delhi all ears in the Indian Ocean
By Sudha Ramachandran

BANGALORE - India is reportedly planning to set up a high-tech monitoring station in northern Madagascar to tackle piracy and terrorism, while keeping an eye on China and the sea lanes that are so critical to Delhi's economy and security.

The station in Madagascar, a large island in the southern Indian Ocean off the east coast of Africa, will enable India to keep an eye on growing terrorist activities in East Africa and piracy in the waters off the East African coast.

................

"India will pay US$2.5 million to lease the station, because it apprehends threats to its strategic naval assets and its political, economic and military interests in Africa," the online Public Affairs Magazine reported. "The monitoring station will have high-tech digital communication systems."

The monitoring station is in tune with Indian maritime doctrine that envisages an ambient forward naval presence from the Strait of Hormuz to the Strait of Malacca.

Madagascar is in a rough neighborhood. To the north is civil-war-racked Somalia, which hasn't had a functioning central government for more than a decade. The waters off Somalia's coast are piracy-infested.
......................

The proposed monitoring station on Madagascar is part of a larger Indian strategy to secure SLOCs in the Indian Ocean. It is another step that India is taking to assert its presence and secure SLOCs through policing waters from Madagascar, Mozambique and the Gulf of Oman in the west to the Malacca Strait and probably the South China Sea in the east.

In fact, several Indian analysts view India's security perimeter - its "rightful domain" - as extending from the Strait of Hormuz to the Strait of Malacca from Africa's east coast to the western shores of Australia.

To its east, India's naval presence has witnessed a significant and visible increase. The Indian navy has been exercising with the Singaporean navy for more than a decade, with the Indonesian navy since 2004 and with the Thai navy since August. In 2002, Indian and US ships engaged in joint escort duties in the Malacca Strait. Likewise to its west, the Indian navy has been holding joint exercises in the Gulf of Oman, the Gulf of Aden and the Arabian Sea with the likes of Oman, Iran and France.

In contrast to its exercises near the Malacca Strait or in the Gulf of Oman, the Indian navy's foray into the southern Indian Ocean is less talked about. However, the proposed monitoring station on Madagascar is not the first time that the Indian navy will play a role in waters off the East African coast. The Indian navy has patrolled the waters around Mauritius at least twice and during the African Union summit in Mozambique in 2002, the Indian navy provided seaward security.

The expansion of the Indian naval presence in the Indian Ocean is as much about keeping an eye on the mounting Chinese presence in these waters as securing the SLOCs. The Chinese presence in the Bay of Bengal has increased much to India's concern after its growing proximity with Bangladesh and Myanmar.


........................
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Post by shyamd »

Prem
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Post by Prem »

I was hoping line will start from Mozambique to Madras to Medan but Madgascar is good enough to start with. :wink:
We should check with Yeman if they can lease small place at the mouth of Gulf.
Last edited by Prem on 30 Nov 2006 06:24, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by Prem »

Duplicate
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Post by ArjunKarn »

Prem wrote:
I was hoping line will start from Mozambique to Madras to Medan but Madgascar is good enough to start with. :wink:
We should check with Yeman if they can lease small place at the mouth of Gulf.
A good thing would be to open Casions like Macau in the islands.
http://www.macaucasinoworld.com/

Also use the money from Casinos to give Indian Army/Paramilitary forces proper fighting gear.
http://www.aetv.com/dallas_swat/dswat_photo_gallery.jsp

The present "GEAR" with forces is wholly inadequate.
http://www.tribuneindia.com/2001/20011214/main9.htm
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Post by shyamd »

For more info on how to get invited and who are the best and worst hosts click the link.
Wine Or Vinegar!
Who hosts the best (and worst) parties in the hallowed diplomatic enclaves of Delhi

RAVINA RAWAL
Delhi is not as quiet as it seems. Behind those impressive frontages is another world, which can be elegant or trashy, glamorous or just showy, depending on who's inviting, and who's invited. But never peaceful. Welcome to the world of New Delhi's embassy parties.

For a long time, diplomatic dos used to be staid black-tie affairs, with top government officials and the more socially savvy politicians invited to sit-down dinners. National days were populated by more of the same, nibbling sad canapes and sipping drinks that ran out midway through the evening. The Soviets were notorious for having two rooms—unlimited champagne and caviar in the room for VVIP guests, pakoras and sickly-sweet white wine for the hoi polloi assembled in the larger room. Unless you made it to the VVIP Soviet room, your best bet was to wangle an invitation to the British, American or French embassies.

Today, it's a very different story. The guest-lists have grown and grown—to include heavyweight socialites, artists, journalists, businessmen, power brokers, sportspersons, media stars, and those famous for being famous.

And the parties have got a lot more lavish, offering drinks, dinner, entertainment and air kisses. For adman Suhel Seth it all adds up to "diplomatic punishment.... The parties are all full of arms dealers, fixers, foreign correspondents and editors from dubious magazines. They serve terrible wine and worse food that we are expected to praise for no apparent reason," he says.

There's more. "It's the same 45 people at every party," says Seth scathingly. "Typically, 8 per cent are bootleggers, 9 per cent are social wannabes, 15 per cent are the same people who go to every diplomat's house, irrespective of whether their countries are at war with each other, and there will always be at least two wine-traders, to ensure that their wine gets sold."

But some invitees can't stay away. "I love going to these parties," enthuses socialite Mani Mann, who runs a successful fashion export house and is a regular on the embassy party circuit. "The people are interesting, suave, and curious about India. You just have to follow your instinct, and you'll spot the right people." For bachelor-at-large Bhaichand Patel, a former United Nations official, it used to be duty. "Now, it is pure pleasure," he confesses. But even he has a bone to pick: "The pork upsets the Muslims, the beef offends the Hindus, so it's chicken. Always chicken."

But that doesn't stop the hordes, scrambling madly to get on to the guest list, whenever there's talk of an embassy celebrating a national day, hosting a sit-down dinner, or having a cultural event. "If we know the person who wants to come, we usually say okay—a friend's friend for example, or an extended family member or even an acquaintance. But when strangers call saying they're from organisations with strange, obviously concocted names, we have to say no," says Anjali Daphtary, social secretary at the Spanish embassy.

Sometimes, saying no makes no difference. Gatecrashers brazen their way in for imported wine, food, and their chance to hit Page 3. Patel's practised eye spots a group of 20 to 30 people who turn up without invites at every party. "They have visiting cards with fictitious designations in NGOs such as UN Friendship. Who're they fooling?" For the hosts, they are often an embarrassment, as they lunge for the food and booze before the legit guests can get to it.

But is every party worth scrambling for? With the current diplomatic festive season in full swing, we thought it might be helpful to sort out the good from the bad, the cheap from the sumptuous, the dull from the sparkling. Some regulars on the circuit are reluctant to express an opinion, like dancer Shovana Narayan, wife of the former Austrian ambassador to India."Every embassy makes a genuine effort within its resources to reach out to people, cementing the bridge between their countries and the local host country," says she virtuously.


The Austrians are known for good parties. This year’s Viennese Ball was a huge draw.

But not everybody's that high-minded. "Some embassies have very good parties because they are genuinely interested and try hard, unlike others," says Mann frankly. So who tries hardest, does best? The answer from the partygoing set is, in one word, Spain. Its flamenco dancers go down a treat, the imported musicians and cooks are a big draw. The spectacular decor and lighting, whether it's a pretty pattern with fairy lights and flowers, or laser shows, are always remembered. The Spanish national day in October was voted party of the season, scoring on every count, from food and drink to entertainment, and that important ingredient—warmth. Even the exacting Seth approves.

Behind it all is hard work. A two-to-four-hour event means six months of planning, a lot of helping hands and, yes, lots of cash. "If we are going to fly down cooks, dancers and musicians from Spain, we need to plan early," points out the elegant Maria de Conde, wife of ambassador Rafael Conde.

Once it's all over, there are flattering phone calls from social secretaries and ambassadors' wives to ask if they can borrow an idea or two. "What could be a better compliment than that," says ambassador Conde proudly, watching his wife blush.

Their big, fat, successful secret? "Good tentwallahs!" booms His Excellency. "And teamwork," adds Maria. "We both do everything together. All you need is a little time, a little care, a little taste, a little money, lots of tent-wallahs and lots of love."

Now for the runners-up. Italy scores high on many counts—painter Satish Gujral extols their energetic "cultural diplomacy"—a recent coup was getting the Parma Opera to perform at the Purana Qila, followed by a grand dinner at the embassy. Media personality Sunil Sethi says the Italians have the perfect party down pat: intelligent hosts, excellent food and great company. "Antonio Armellini and his wife Giovanella are bright, witty people who are well-connected. They always manage to get a great crowd, a good mix of politicians, journalists, artists and bureaucrats," he says. Austria is also quite a hit, not least because of ambassador Jutta Stefan Bastl herself, in the words of one admirer, "one of the most gracious hostesses in town". The annual Viennese Ball in November, with an orchestra flown in from Austria, was a big draw.

Argentina is highly rated for exceptional food and wine. "If your hosts are warm and witty, they'll get the party right," says an attendee, amusedly recalling the 'Sonia Gandhi soup' at an Argentinian do (he can't remember what exactly this soup was—perhaps a mix of Indian spices and Italian seasoning). Also high on the ratings meter for its superb food is Mexico. The Israelis impress with high-powered guests, including senior generals and industrialists. Outgoing Pakistani high commissioner Aziz Ahmed Khan and wife Ayesha have been popular hosts too, for the elegance and warmth of their hospitality. And don't forget Saudi Arabia—the table is so lavishly laden that the lack of alcohol goes unnoticed. The Germans get kudos for entertaining often, offering quantities of beer, sausages and earnest conversation. The cognoscenti, however, complain their parties are often overcrowded."Their bashes for the World Cup Football and the Oktoberfest were real Janata Jamborees," says one guest disdainfully.


US ambassador Mulford and his wife Jeannie. Americans serve popcorn and bad food at parties.

Now for the brickbats. Who's the worst host? Surprise, surprise, the US of A. Which other country would dare serve popcorn as snack? Recalls a well-known editor, "I once went to an American embassy dinner on an invitation from the ambassador. There was only one course—hamburger and fries. No sweet. The burger was awful and the fries soggy. The world's sole superpower thinks guests should just be grateful for the invite. They are terrible hosts." Fans of ex-US ambassador Richard Celeste and his wife Jacqueline Lundquist (Seth is among them) say it's all been downhill since they left. "Ambassadors are the face of the embassy," says Mani Mann. "They set the tone. The current US ambassador (David Mulford) has not made much of a mark. No one seems to know him." Everyone knew Robert Blackwill, the previous incumbent, but he wasn't exactly the world's best party thrower either, subjecting dinner guests to round-table discussions at which his own views reigned supreme.

Competition for the US comes from two other dull hosts: the British High Commission and France. They might score on their cultural offerings and their charity dos, but it's all sunk in mediocre food—sometimes mediocre Indian food—and cheap wine. Says an indignant guest who knows his wine: "The French serve terrible wine. I promise you my cooking wine tastes better." Another recalls with a shudder favourite British dinner-table touches like dals served in sauceboats, and "curry" seasoned with a strange mango chutney. Some say their food has got better recently, but a vegetarian has the final word: "My secretary calls the British High Commission to inform them that I will be attending a dinner, and that I am vegetarian. I reach my table, and I am served an omelette for dinner. Not once. Not twice. But three times. Why have I dressed up and stepped out of my house? For an omelette?"
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Post by Tilak »

Pranab admits change in McMahon possible

[quote]New Delhi, Dec. 13: External affairs minister Pranab Mukherjee, responding to criticism from Leader of the Opposition L.K. Advani in Parliament on Thursday over failure to take any action on Chinese envoy Sun Yuxi’s recent remarks that portions of Arunachal Pradesh were being negotiated, admitted that discussions are on and remarked that “boundaries are not drawn in the sky. They are made on land and have to be discussed....â€
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Post by Tilak »

"I have a vision" for Indo-Pak relations : Martin Luther Singh
Amritsar, Dec 20 (PTI) Reaching out to Pakistan with his "vision" of Indo-Pak ties, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today renewed his offer of a bilateral treaty of Peace, Security and Friendship which would be an instrument for enduring peace and prosperity.

Welcoming "new ideas" from Pakistan to resolve outstanding issues with India, he said the two countries need to work together with an "open mind" and build trust.

Underlining that the destiny of India and Pakistan is interlinked :roll:, he said they need to put the past behind and work for a "new future" and expressed confidence that this will be achieved overcoming all hurdles.

"Last week, I had read about some new ideas and thoughts expressed from Pakistan," he told a public meeting here in an apparent reference to President Pervez Musharraf's four-point formula to resolve the Kashmir issue which included demilitarisation and joint management of the undivided state.

"We welcome all ideas as they contribute to the ongoing thought process," Singh said, adding if both sides approach issues with "open and friendly mind, and work together on resolving each of these, then it will be possible for us to resolve all pending issues through a dialogue process." PTI
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Post by Vipul »

Secret talks to blur LoC make headway.

Come on, is the Indian Leadership so dense? Whats going to stop the Jehadi Pig-lets from spreading out to the other parts of India, once they cross the LOC?

Blaming MMS alone is pointless.Its evident as per the news-report, that Alzheimer's and Parkinson has struck in tandem the old hags across the political spectrum.

No country in the world holds negotiations for giving away/compromising its own territory, except ofcourse Mera Bharat Mahan.
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Post by jrjrao »

Straight from the top source:

Indian foreign policy : A road map ahead
By Pranab Mukherjee
(The author is the present Foreign Minister)
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Post by Apu »

India's growth figures make us jealous: Cavaco Silva
http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/181_ ... 050003.htm

It is not only India's growth figures, "which make us jealous," but the need to contribute to change and build on the "excellent" political relations Portugal has with India that is prompting President Anibal Cavaco Silva to visit India.

Set to arrive in India next week for the first visit by a Portuguese head of state in 15 years, President Silva told a select group of visiting Indian journalists he felt "a sense of proximity with India."
These people shouldnt even be handed an olive leaf by the Indian Admin....after keeping India in the dark internationally (e.g. Dragging feet over the nuclear deal esp when they have nothing to do with nuclear science and the Salem Case etc) after getting their asses kiked from Goa they suddenly feel 'a close proximity' with india seeing the chance to bump up their staggering economy...... :roll:
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Post by ramana »

Hindustan Times reports India in lesser UNSC race now :(

Someone should tell MEA to back of UN for a while. Shashi Tharoor episode is enough for one Cabinet tenure.
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Post by sanjchopra »

'India's military bogged down by internal security duties'
Instead of improving the capabilities of the police and paramilitary forces to tackle internal threats, "We have unwittingly degraded the quality of manpower that India requires to defend itself from looming external threats by saddling it with internal security responsibilities", he said in a strongly-worded editorial in the upcoming issue of the well-known defence journal.

India would have to hone its military machine and "come to grips with the nuances" of its foreign policy and securing its EEZ and energy security, Verma said.
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Post by ramana »

K.P. Nayar in Telegraph, 24 Jan., 2007
[quote]
TAKE ANOTHER LOOK
- Improving Indo-Pakistan relations is a top priority for the UPA
Diplomacy -K.P. Nayar


Starting afresh
During my last meeting with the former national security adviser, J.N. Dixit, shortly before his death, he predicted dramatic changes in Indo-Pakistan relations in six months. That would have meant the second quarter of 2005 as the time for moving forward with proposals to resolve outstanding disputes with Pakistan, one step at a time.

Dixit did not specifically say what these proposals were. A major difficulty confronting Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and the external affairs minister, Pranab Mukherjee, in their dealings with Islamabad today is that Dixit did not tell anyone in the government the full scope and range of the negotiations he had conducted with Tariq Aziz, his Pakistani counterpart, between June 2004, when he became Singh’s national security adviser and January 3, 2005, when he died unexpectedly. What he left behind on file in the prime minister’s office is only a fraction of what transpired at the meetings between him and Aziz during the six months when Dixit was Singh’s most trusted foreign policy aide. That has always been Dixit’s style of operation.

After Dixit died, Aziz visited New Delhi to condole the death of the man who could have been his partner in peace in south Asia. Aziz kept the visit low key and called on Dixit’s widow. He met few people in the government other than those he thought could give him an idea of where the Manmohan Singh government stood on the proposals Dixit had made for peace with Pakistan in the six months prior to his death. Pervez Musharraf’s national security adviser went back home and told his boss that the Dixit initiative was a non-starter and that the sense he got in New Delhi was that there would be no forward movement on the proposals, which the two national security advisers had discussed. Aziz probably did not realize that the reaction he got during that visit was because there were not many people in New Delhi who knew enough about Dixit’s peace plan to be able to give him the positive reaction he had hoped for.

The general in Islamabad wanted a second opinion and sent someone on the back channel to New Delhi. That visitor met a large number of people, both within and outside the government, and he pleaded on behalf of Musharraf that substantive steps should be taken towards enduring solutions to problems that had bedevilled relations between India and Pakistan. He also warned that if the opportunity offered by Musharraf’s willingness to change the traditional colours of the Pakistani leopard in its dealings with India was lost, there would not only be a backlash in both countries, but also that such an opportunity may not come for a very long time.

The United Progressive Alliance government attempted for a year or more after Dixit’s death to quietly reconstruct the main elements in the late national security adviser’s dealings with Pakistan and incorporate those into policy. Singh’s resolve to visit Pakistan later this year is the result of a conviction among his top aides that they have put together many missing pieces of the Dixit plan and then cobbled together a similar plan of their own, which could be the basis of a long-term settlement with Pakistan.

This effort need not have taken the two years that it did since the death of Singh’s first national security adviser. Nearly a year was lost because the then external affairs minister, K. Natwar Singh — who had not been told of anything that Dixit had initiated on Pakistan — tried to outdo the deceased national security adviser in dealing with Islamabad because he vaguely knew that Dixit had travelled considerably on the road towards a settlement with Pakistan. But the Pakistanis were sceptical of anything Natwar Singh told them because they knew first-hand that whatever he said was at variance with what Dixit had secretly discussed with Aziz. At the same time, most of the now discredited external affairs minister’s proposals were unacceptable within the UPA government because these typically lacked imagination and they were, because of Natwar Singh’s personality, clearly aimed at replacing Dixit’s imprint on Indo-Pakistan relations with his own.

With the gigantic effort to pass the nuclear legislation in the US Congress now out of the way, it is clear that the UPA government’s highest diplomatic priority this year will be to make significant progress towards resolving disputes with Pakistan. If anyone in the Union cabinet is capable of shouldering this tricky task, it is Pranab Mukherjee, an old hand in South Block, who has been recalled to the job he held more than a decade ago.

The last time Mukherjee was foreign minister, he faced an equally tricky task. Then, he had come to South Block curiously convinced that it was possible to placate, pacify and do normal business with Bangladesh. The then prime minister, P.V. Narasimha Rao, thought otherwise, from his many years of experience in Mukherjee’s shoes and later as prime minister. But as was Rao’s habit with cabinet colleagues, he did not stop Mukherjee from doing what he wanted to try with Dhaka.

Mukherjee was a different man when he came back after his first visit to Bangladesh as South Block’s political boss. He was canny enough to bury sentiment and completely change course on Bangladesh once he recognized the reality for what it was. In this age of 24-hour television, when news increasingly appeals to the lowest common denominator, two sentences in Mukherjee’s joint briefing with the Pakistan foreign minister, Khurshid Mahmood Kasuri, have been completely lost on most Indians: these sentences also offer a clue to what he will advise the present prime minister about dealing with Pakistan.

Mukherjee did not mince words when he was asked about the role of the Inter-Services Intelligence in the “insurgencyâ€
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Post by ramana »

Another article in Indiareacts site
The way ahead
India has to shed its foreign policy timidity and follow a new road map.

25 January 2007: This is the season of wooing and feting India. Goldman Sachs' BRIC report is out. It says India will be the second largest economy after the US by 2050. India's accelerated growth rate since 2003, it analyzes, is because of structural and not cyclical factors.

Meanwhile, the Russians have come determined to involve us in their strategic defence R and D and production. Highlights are cooperation on co-developing and producing fifth generation stealth fighters. Our indigenous nuclear submarine project may get critical assistance. And on the back of past assistance in our nuclear programme, it is keen to supply nuclear power reactors.

At the same time, Israel's most powerful lobby group in the United States is engaging with the Indian government to prevent Iran's weaponization. As we said, this is the season of wooing and feting India. But should we rest on our oars? Hope and pray that the currents carry us somewhere? Anywhere? Or should we set national goals, and single-mindedly pursue them?

The answer is obvious. But there's a strange Indian mindset. Call it cultural, spiritual, whatever. This mindset says India's idea has arrived. India's time has come. So we should just wait and take what happens. Funnily, this attitude is not reflected in most of our second or third generation industrialists or businessmen, or indeed new entrepreneurs. The risk averse middle class radiates this attitude. And it infects our political establishment.

To give our own example. Days ago, this writer, N.V.Subramanian, suggested that we engage at a third or fourth level on Iraq on Kissinger's draft plan contained in a signed piece in the International Herald Tribune. Obviously, Kissinger is not the last word on the subject. The US administration will have a view on it and probably has. India will presumably deal with it at an appropriate level taking all the risks into account. It may seek UN legitimacy for the Iraq peace plan. Since Kissinger calls for the involvement of the five veto powers of the UN Security Council, it follows that the UN will be central to the save Iraq scheme.

What happened after the piece? Our readers voted against our position. That is fine. We are perfectly democratic in our magazine. What was less appreciable were the angry reader responses. What's there to be angry about?The write-ups are meant to encourage debate. Bring all options to the table. To look at issues from all sides. But what was so typically reflective of the Indian mindset was the smugness about Iraq. The US had created the crisis. It was for it to resolve. We had to stay out of it at any cost.

Problem is, staying out is increasingly not an option for India. India is as connected to the rest of the world as any other state. Our economy is global. To protect and advance our global economy, we have to outreach and outthrust politically and militarily. This won't occur with our present ostrich behaviour.

Either we will have to adjust to the environment, which is becoming growingly hostile. Or we have to strive to make it less hostile. This is by trying to alter the environment to our advantage. It is not easy. But surviving and prospering never have been.

Our smugness, for instance, is evident in Pranab Mukherjee's observations on his recent Afghanistan visit. The visit was overdue. The foreign minister has gauged first hand the Taliban threat to Afghan democracy and Indian interests.

But he says it is Nato's responsibility to counter the Taliban threat. Nato is on the ground fighting, replacing US troops. Eventually, they too will return home. Who will protect Afghanistan?

One can argue the US must undertake this protection. But it is unreasonable to expect them to do so indefinitely. Neither will Nato remain there forever. We have to prepare for a situation where the region has to shoulder responsibility to secure Afghanistan.

Because once Afghanistan reverts to Taliban control, the impact will be felt in Kashmir.
Pakistan will simply relocate the Kashmiri terrorist groups there. While assisting them, it will deny all connections. Do we want to return to that scenario? Why should the US or Nato keep pulling our chestnuts out of the fire?

Go earlier in history, to our Sri Lanka engagement. Acting before its time, Rajiv Gandhi's India committed to Indian peacekeeping between the Sri Lankan forces and the LTTE. Since we had no experience outside UN peace missions, we bungled on our political and military objectives. We catalyzed the impossible, an LTTE-Sri Lanka government understanding against the IPKF.

But the IPKF disaster has completely shut our eyes to the civil war build up in the island state. The Sri Lankan forces are on a major arms acquisition drive. The LTTE sees this as a war to end all wars.

Instead of holding down both sides to talks, we are mouthing platitudes. Sri Lanka's territorial integrity cannot be undermined. Equally, the non-Eelam Tamil demands are justified. What are we doing to enforce this line?

We have valid reservations about dealing with the LTTE. It assassinated Rajiv Gandhi. But let's put this in perspective. India's interests cannot be held hostage to the assassination, tragic and condemnable as it is.

Nobody suggests a pardon to the LTTE chief, V.Prabhakaran, who ordered the assassination. But we simply won't be able to push the Sri Lankan government to negotiate with the Tamils unless we use the LTTE lever. And for that, we need to re-establish political links with the LTTE.

This is hugely politically sensitive. While Sonia Gandhi has shown pragmatism on the Sri Lanka issue, UPA Congress ministers would be wary to approach her on re-engaging the LTTE, because it concerns her late husband. But we will do the ministers' job for them.

Sonia Gandhi has to put aside personal losses and authorize talks with the LTTE. The conditions can be that Prabhakaran won't be involved. Cases against him won't be dropped in India. And no Eelam. Prabhakaran is a pragmatic militant leader. He will very likely agree to this, although no-Eelam may be a scare away. But it is a good starting point anyhow.

Even as Sri Lanka has turned a failure so far, we have succeeded with Nepal. By shutting down transit facilities, the Chandrasekhar government forced a democratic makeover in Nepal. When the Indian Army leaned on the Nepalese army, which in turn told Gyanendra to step down, parliamentary democracy got new life in the Himalayan state.

Without fully realizing, we used the Indian army as a lever. It worked. It worked on Bhutan which ran out ULFA. In Bangladesh, on the other hand, we have let down our friends. We have been unable to stop the country's slide to a terrorist state like Pakistan. Our means of influencing public opinion in the state is nil.

On the whole, the picture is depressing. It is clearly indicated that we have to overcome our diffidence and become pro-active. Our Sri Lanka failure has defeated our power projection instincts. We have said this before. Unless we expand to the natural space of our growing political, economic and military power, others will displace us.

In earlier times and especially during P.V.Narasimha's term, the foreign office had a privileged policy planning division. The great G.Parthasarthy once headed it. Pranab Mukherjee, who is a deep man, would understand the need for such a quasi-autonomous advisory body to the Union cabinet.

The policy planning division and the National Security Council need not clash on turf. Policy planning can look ahead on all areas of diplomacy with a pure political or politico-military accent. The NSC can be involved in more current and of course future national security issues.

A visionary outside policy planning chief would first audit all of India's diplomatic-military failures and successes, and draw lessons from it to apply in future. Necessarily, the exercise has to be tailored to fit contemporary requirements. But such an audit would emerge patterns of India's strong and weak areas. If this audit as well draws experts from military, political and economic streams, it would contribute enormously to the project to make India a surefooted power. But simultaneously, we have to dare.

We have to expand to our full political, economic, diplomatic and military potential.
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Post by shyamd »

Former RAW chief says Pakistan getting closer to Russia, Israel
[quote]NEW DELHI: Former Research and Analysing Wing (RAW) chief Vikram Sood has warned that Pakistan is getting closer to Russia and even Israel, and cautioned that these developments are not good omens for New Delhi.

In a research article for the upcoming issue of the journal ‘Indian Defence Review’, Sood also warned the government against pursuing its newly-found friendship with the US at the cost of it relations with Russia. “If India pulls away from Russia in its newly-found friendship with the US, New Delhi would only be pursuing short term and short-sighted strategic policies,â€
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Post by Rye »

[quote]
Sood said that the spate of assassination attempts, suicide attacks and events in Balochistan, Wazsiristan and Bajaur were “not a happy signal for Pakistan’s armed forces. “The anti-incumbency factor, as we call it here, can afflict the Pakistan Army as well,â€
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Post by ramana »

I wonder if he saw the upcoming article on AIII in the IDR too? 8)
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Post by shyamd »

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China, Russia back India`s aspirations at UN
New Delhi, Feb 14: China and Russia on Wednesday supported India`s ambition to play a "greater role" in the UN as the three countries favoured creation of a "fair and balanced" global system and opposed "confrontationist approaches" to resolve international issues, in apparent reference to the US.

The three countries, "with growing international influence", also deplored "selective approaches" and "double standards" to fight global terrorism.

Foreign ministers of the three countries, who held wide-ranging talks here, decided to push their ties under the trilateral format, saying it was beneficial for the security and stability of the region as well as the world.

They decided to strengthen cooperation in energy, trade, high-technology, transport, civil aviation and economy and in this context a meeting of trilateral business forum will be held later this year to explore specific possibilities.

External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee, Russian Minister Sergei Lavrov and Chinese minister Li Zhaoxing held thorough discussions on issues like Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, North Korea and Middle East.

They emphasised the need for multilateralism to resolve international issues with central role being given to the UN which should be made "efficient and transparent" and reflect contemporary world realities.

The Chinese and Russian side said they attach "great importance to the status of India in international affairs and understand and support India`s aspirations to play a greater role in the un," a joint communique said.
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Post by ShibaPJ »

A very good article on emerging dynamics in global energy security.

India surveys the energy war

Time stood still in the Indian strategic thinking in the post-Soviet era. And when last week Russian President Vladimir Putin articulated on the tensions that have come to prevail in the international system, many were rudely surprised.

Actually, these tensions have been accumulating over the past 10-year period. Indeed, they were inevitable.

They are implicit in the inability of the newly emerging power centers in the 21st century world order -- such as Russia, China , India, Brazil , etc -- finding themselves unable to reconcile with any imposition of a 'unipolar' world order.

Simply put, these power centres are too conscious of their own tryst with destiny.

Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee's recent visit to Iran calls out from the rooftop that the Indian strategic community has a lot of catching up to do. See the timing of the visit.

The United States has been stealthily finessing a pretext for launching a military attack on Iran. It has been prevailing on close allies and friends to stay clear of bilateral political exchanges with Teheran. Isolation and containment of Iran and a 'regime change' in Iran have become the leitmotif of US foreign policy.

Did Washington make an exception for India, or was India, after all, never really belonging to the gallery of Washington's close or 'natural' allies?

At any rate, New Delhi acted in its best interests when Indian Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee paid a two-day visit to Teheran on February 6-7.

He made it unequivocally clear in his media comments that India opposed any use of force against Iran.

Apart from underlining that expansion of relations with Iran is important for India, Mukherjee described Iran as a factor for stability in the region. That is to say, India disregards Washington's propaganda that Iran is a terrorist state that is threatening regimes in neighbouring countries.

Equally, Mukherjee called for the Iran nuclear file to be sent back to the International Atomic Energy Agency as the competent forum to handle the issue.

In sum, Mukherjee made out with great poise and resoluteness that New Delhi has its own independent foreign policy toward Iran.

Clearly, Mukherjee's visit had a single-minded purpose -- to set a political climate in India's bilateral relations with Iran that will be conducive to the advancement of energy cooperation between the two countries.

Much is at stake here. The proposals for a gas pipeline from Iran to India via Pakistan and a 25-year deal on liquefied natural gas have been languishing. Difficulties still lie ahead. Meanwhile, we are running against time.

Indeed, there are larger dimensions. India-Iran energy cooperation forms a crucial vector of emergent Asian security.

This became apparent during Russian President Vladimir Putin's visit to New Delhi on January 25-26, where the focus was on all-around cooperation between the two countries in the field of energy. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh characterised energy security as 'the most important of the emerging dimensions' of the Indo-Russian strategic partnership.

He said, 'Russia's position as a global leader on energy issues is widely recognised. We look forward to long-term partnership with Russia in this vital field.'

Two working groups were constituted to examine both upstream cooperation (access for Indian participation in the funding, exploration and development of oil and gas fields in Russia) and downstream cooperation (participation by Russian companies in marketing oil products and LNG in India).

Moscow has repeatedly shown interest in taking part in the financing and construction of the Iran-India gas pipeline.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov, who accompanied Putin to New Delhi, stated, 'We are pegging big hopes on the Gazprom-GAIL [Russian and Indian gas companies] strategic partnership, including joint efforts in building the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline.'

Russian companies are evidently conscious of the huge volume of business generated through the transportation of Iranian gas to the rapidly growing South Asian market, apart from the highly lucrative distribution and retailing of the gas in India and Pakistan.

For receiving the gas coming through the $7 billion pipeline, infrastructure development within India alone will generate business close to $40 billion.

But energy cooperation among Russia, Iran and India has a much wider backdrop than business opportunities.

Energy security is a subject where politics mixes with economics. India is keenly watching the tectonic shifts in the Eurasian gas market. Iran has proven gas reserves of about 28 trillion cubic meters, while its gas output increases by 10 per cent annually. Iran's export capacity is poised to grow dramatically.

New Delhi is keeping track that many of Europe's plans to diversify its gas supply involve Iran. Europe faces an acute gas shortage by 2015. A competitive struggle for Iranian gas between the European market and the Asian market has become unavoidable.

The outcome of the Russian-Iranian energy dialogue in the recent months naturally assumed great importance.

To be sure, New Delhi estimates that the prospects for the merging of Russian and Iranian gas-transportation networks have distinctly brightened.

The Iranian Supreme Leader's adviser on international affairs, Ali Akbar Velayati, who visited Moscow last week and held discussions with Putin has said that a 'turning point' in Iran's strategic cooperation with Russia has come.

Velayati alleged that Washington is trying its utmost to disrupt the emerging Russian-Iranian strategic cooperation in the transit of energy, as it will impact phenomenally on international security.

With Russia controlling 27 per cent of the world's gas reserves and Iran 15 per cent, cooperation between these countries is bound to have a huge potential in terms of global gas distribution.

Major Asian gas consumers like India (and China) seek to optimally exploit the opportunities arising out of the matrix of Russian-Iranian energy cooperation.

From the Indian perspective, Russia's resurgence as an assertive player on the global scene and Iran's preference to the Asian market combine well. They open up prospects of a unified Asian market for gas, involving Central Asian countries as well.

China anticipated the enormous implications of these developments for its energy security.

Last June, the Beijing Morning Post gave a detailed description of China's prospective plan for developing its domestic gas-pipeline network during the next 20 years in anticipation of gas supplies from Russia and Central Asian countries. According to the report, China 's 24,000-kilometer gas-pipeline grid will be expanded to 36,000km by 2010.

The emerging Asian market for gas is of crucial importance for India, too, if it is to get anywhere near seriously addressing its energy-security problems.

In comparison, the Indo-US nuclear deal will have a long gestation period. Nuclear energy will remain marginal to the Indian economy in the foreseeable future. In the geo-economic context of energy security, therefore, Indian and US interests are far apart.

Whereas the US favours European projects for diversifying gas supplies that will reduce the West's dependency on Russian supplies, India has a definite interest in Teheran's preference to direct the bulk of its gas resources to Asia.

India cannot attach credibility to the US counsel to trust the market instead of trying to 'lock in' energy supply, while Washington is actively promoting various oil and gas-pipeline projects heading toward the European market from the Caspian and Central Asian regions.

Without doubt, Russia will be actively supportive of the warming of Indo-Iranian ties, which went through a rough patch after India's vote against Iran at the IAEA in October 2005.

Significantly, a meeting of the foreign ministers of India, Russia and China in New Delhi set for February 24 closely follows Mukherjee's visit to Iran.

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said in Beijing that the three foreign ministers will discuss cooperation in the economic field and that their meeting will 'help the three countries to expand common ground and push forward trilateral mutually beneficial cooperation'.

Quite naturally, India and Russia share deep apprehension over Washington's aggressive stance against Iran. Any US military attack against Iran will threaten to have adverse consequences for India's energy supplies.

Again, while Washington can be expected single-mindedly to try to scuttle Indo-Iranian energy cooperation, Moscow will encourage such cooperation and offer to be party to it.

Finally, while Washington may have plans for inveigling India as a counterweight to China, Moscow hopes to foster greater Sino-Indian understanding within which an Asian market of energy producers and energy consumers could flourish.

History, after all, didn't end with the Cold War.

We now know with the hindsight of de-classified archival papers in the chancelleries of the great powers that the rhetoric of Winston Churchill's famous Foulton speech heralding the 'Iron Curtain' concealed a grim East-West struggle over the control over the Middle East's oil.

Mukherjee realises that the tectonic shift in the geopolitics of the Middle East and the American dance of death around Iran currently are rituals from the past.

But do the Indian strategic analysts hear and recognise the cymbals and the drumbeat of the pantomime in the Persian Gulf?
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Post by Gerard »

Tharoor to be inducted in government?
Former United Nations undersecretary general Shashi Tharoor, who ran unsuccessfully for the top post of the world body, may be inducted into Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's council of ministers, highly placed sources said.

The sources said Tharoor, who is believed to be close to Manmohan Singh, may be appointed minister of state for external affairs.
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Post by Rye »

WTF is going on? What is this self-promoting Tharoor doing coming anywhere near the MEA?

Granted, he has great value in a PR-type position for the GoI, as long as he follows the script and does not try any of this SAJA-type DIE nonsense.
Last edited by Rye on 18 Feb 2007 07:43, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by vsudhir »

Rye wrote:WTF is going on? What is this self-promoting dumass Tharoor doing coming anywhere near the MEA?
Rye saar,

Excellent synopsis there. Couldn't have put it better. Tharoor upon his glorous return from turtle bay is all set to further help the MEA 'go turtle' (aka belly-up)....
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Post by svinayak »

Rye wrote:WTF is going on? What is this self-promoting dumass Tharoor doing coming anywhere near the MEA?

Granted, he has great value in a PR-type position for the GoI, as long as he follows the script and does not try any of this SAJA-type DIE nonsense.
It should not be a surprise since he was one of the main architect of Indian policy of MMS PMO.
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Post by Calvin »

Lets not resort to name calling, fellas. Tharoor's exceptional articulation has value.
svinayak
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Post by svinayak »

www.pioneerdaily.com
Changing global equations
AJOY BOSE

India is in a sound position to deal with the US, Russia and China without antagonising any one of them in today's multi-polar world

After nearly one-and-a-half decades of the United States ruling the roost as the only super power in a unipolar world, there are signs that the times may be changing. Although the US still remains the strongest by far in terms of economic and military clout it is becoming increasingly clear that Washington is no longer in a position to impose its writ on the world. Indeed, we may be soon returning to the days of a balance of global power witnessed during the Cold War era without the ideological hype.

Curiously, while the ideological rhetoric of yesteryear pitching the Free World against Communism is completely missing, the US predominance is being primarily challenged by what used to be called the Red Menace in the good old days - the Russians and the Chinese. It is the rise of China and the re-emergence of Russia that has considerably circumscribed the scope of American supremacy. This would have been unimaginable after the collapse of the Soviet block at the beginning of the 1990s left the US not just triumphant but firmly in saddle for the leadership of the world.

Two significant developments over the past fortnight have highlighted the pricking of the American bubble. The first relates to the nuclear deal between the North Koreans and the US brokered by the Chinese who have clearly gained the most from this historic compromise. There is little doubt that Beijing has cleverly manoeuvred the earlier bluster by both Pyongyang and Washington to enhance its own stature in the entire Far Eastern region as well as in the global nuclear strategic debate.

The second and more glaring example of the United States waning influence has come in the shape of Russian President Vladimir Putin's public warning that Washington must stop overstepping its national borders. His stunning denouement of the Bush Administration at an international security conference in Munich earlier this month with German President Angela Merkel and US Defence Secretary Robert Gates in the audience underlines the amazing shifting equations of global power.

This was further compounded by several traditional European allies of the United States indicating tacit agreement with the Russian leader's criticism of Washington even as the old East European satellites of Soviet Russia sought to rally around the Bush Administration.

Significantly, the growing influence of China and Russia in the world is not just out of their military might but more so because of economic muscle. The breathtaking growth rate of a billion plus country like China had already positioned it as a potential rival to the US by the beginning of the new millennium. What has been far more astonishing is the turnaround of Russia from the post-Cold war shambles to a powerful nation using its vast energy resources to regain lost global clout this time backed by economic substance and not merely with guns and missiles.

What has made matters far worse for the US is its doomed misadventure in Iraq. While Washington's abject failure to bring peace and normalcy to the strife torn country has severely dented its image across the world, it dare not beat a retreat in the fear that this would leave its number one local adversary Iran holding all the cards in the region. Caught between the devil and the deep sea, the Bush Administration has been twisting and turning to find a way out even as China and Russia watch with barely concealed glee at the plight of what till recently was the world's only superpower.

For India, the fast changing international scenario presents both serious challenges and opportunities. Much of the love feast between New Delhi and Washington over the past few years was motivated by the latter's compulsion to push India as a counterweight to China's burgeoning influence in the region. This may have to change as the Bush Administration prepares to cosy up to China so that the latter does not form an axis with Russia. The deal with the North Koreans could well be the harbinger for far closer Sino-American ties in the near future.

At the same time it would be neither in the interest of Beijing or Washington to push India back into the arms of the Russians considering that there are already huge linkages involving military and nuclear cooperation. Similarly, Russia has its own reasons to not push Washington too far or allow China to exploit a rerun of the Cold War to come out on top of the heap. Considering these circumstances, India may well be in a position to tango with all the three big boys without antagonising any of them.

To some extent, the recent trilateral conference between the foreign ministers of India, China and Russia is a part of a new endeavour by New Delhi to remove the impression that it had moved to close to Washington. Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee's recent visit to Iran had a similar purpose. Yet, there is little doubt that the US continues to be an extremely useful partner to this country even if we need to factor in its decline in power.

Most importantly, those responsible for crafting foreign policy would have to keep an open mind choosing specific responses and initiatives to specific challenges and opportunities in a world where there are several key players but no single winner.
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