Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Clinton’s Challenge in India

Author: Evan A. Feigenbaum, Senior Fellow for East, Central, and South Asia
For fifty years until the late 1990s, the United States mostly ignored India, treating it as a South Asian regional power with little weight on the global stage. India’s anemic rate of growth gave it little stake in the global economy. Its nonaligned foreign policy made diplomatic coordination difficult. To the extent Washington focused on India at all, too often its spotlight shined solely on the India-Pakistan relationship: their rivalry, military competition, dueling nuclear weapons programs, and their several wars.
 
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Most Recent
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- Woman power fires ISRO’s trek : N. Valarmathi headed the launch of RISAT-1
- Royal Society Elects Scientists as New Fellows for 2012
- Vikram J Singh named Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for South and Southeast Asia
- Illegal Indians quitting recession-hit UK?
- Asia Society’s Indian American president and CEO Vishakha Desai to step down
- 11 Indian Pilgrims Die in Nepal Air Crash; 5 Survive
- Teen cleared of murder, convicted of conspiracy & assault in fatal beating of NJ’s Divyendu Sinha
- SABA endorses Judge Sanjay Kumar’s re-election bid
- Indian origin Kamal Bawa donates sustainability award money




