This document lists over 200 articles written by Jagdish N Singh published in the National Herald and other newspapers between 1995-2008. The articles cover topics related to international terrorism, foreign policy, geopolitics, and defense issues pertaining to countries like the US, China, Russia, and India. They also include analyses of international organizations like the UN and trends in world affairs.
This document provides an overview of several wars in Asia and the Middle East involving the United States since World War II. It discusses the Korean War where North Korea was backed by China and the U.S. supported South Korea. It also covers the Vietnam War where the U.S. fought communist rebels in North Vietnam supported by China. The document then summarizes the war in Afghanistan where the U.S. targeted Al Qaeda training camps after 9/11 and the war in Iraq where the U.S. invaded to depose Saddam Hussein and search for weapons of mass destruction. Most recently, it discusses the U.S. shift to focus its efforts on fighting terrorists in Afghanistan.
This document provides an overview of common core standards and objectives for a unit on wars in Asia and the Middle East. It covers several wars including the Korean War, Vietnam War, Afghanistan War, and Iraq War. Students will learn about the causes and consequences of these wars while developing writing, research, and collaboration skills. The unit utilizes readings, videos, class discussions, and a test to help students understand important historical events and their relevance today.
Richard Nixon was elected president in 1968 and re-elected in 1972. His presidency was marked by diplomatic successes like opening relations with China and arms limitations with the USSR, but was ultimately cut short by the Watergate scandal. Gerald Ford assumed the presidency after Nixon's resignation and pardoned Nixon to help the nation heal. Ford faced economic challenges of inflation and an energy crisis. His foreign policy focused on recovering US respect after the Vietnam War.
Richard Nixon was elected president in 1968 and re-elected in 1972. His foreign policy successes included establishing diplomatic relations with China, negotiating arms limitations with the Soviet Union, and ending U.S. involvement in Vietnam. However, the Watergate scandal erupted in 1972-1973 involving the break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters and subsequent cover-up, ultimately leading to Nixon's resignation in 1974 to avoid impeachment. His domestic policies were overshadowed by economic troubles including inflation and the 1973 oil crisis. Gerald Ford succeeded Nixon as president and granted him a full pardon for any Watergate crimes.
Richard Nixon was president from 1969-1974. He pursued a foreign policy of détente, improving relations with China and the Soviet Union. However, the Watergate scandal, involving a break-in at the Democratic headquarters and Nixon's subsequent attempts to cover it up, led to his resignation in 1974 to avoid impeachment. Gerald Ford then became president and sought to move past Watergate by pardoning Nixon, though this hurt his popularity.
The document provides an overview of the Iraq conflict from the pre-war era through efforts for resolution. It discusses the ethnic and religious breakdown of Iraq's population, early conflicts with Iran and Kuwait, and the strategic, political and economic reasons cited for the US invasion. The impacts examined include effects on US power, Iraq's humanitarian crisis, environmental damage, impacts on US forces, increase in jihadists, destruction of cultural heritage, and Iraqi civil society efforts toward conflict resolution such as women's peace groups.
Cuban Missile Crisis A Case Study of Fear for the Cold WarTyler Mayer
This document provides background information on a thesis paper about fear during the Cuban Missile Crisis. It acknowledges those who helped with research and acknowledges key sources used. It then provides context about the Crisis, including the discovery of Soviet missiles in Cuba, American response and escalating tensions. It discusses how existing scholarship has analyzed the Crisis but argues more can be done to examine the evolution of public fear in the U.S. before, during and after the pivotal 13 days when nuclear war seemed possible.
- The document provides biographical details about the Kennedy family tree, including Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and their political careers. It discusses how Joseph Sr. helped launch the political careers of his sons and details some of the major events and accomplishments in JFK and RFK's lives, including JFK's service in WWII and presidency.
This document provides an overview of several wars in Asia and the Middle East involving the United States since World War II. It discusses the Korean War where North Korea was backed by China and the U.S. supported South Korea. It also covers the Vietnam War where the U.S. fought communist rebels in North Vietnam supported by China. The document then summarizes the war in Afghanistan where the U.S. targeted Al Qaeda training camps after 9/11 and the war in Iraq where the U.S. invaded to depose Saddam Hussein and search for weapons of mass destruction. Most recently, it discusses the U.S. shift to focus its efforts on fighting terrorists in Afghanistan.
This document provides an overview of common core standards and objectives for a unit on wars in Asia and the Middle East. It covers several wars including the Korean War, Vietnam War, Afghanistan War, and Iraq War. Students will learn about the causes and consequences of these wars while developing writing, research, and collaboration skills. The unit utilizes readings, videos, class discussions, and a test to help students understand important historical events and their relevance today.
Richard Nixon was elected president in 1968 and re-elected in 1972. His presidency was marked by diplomatic successes like opening relations with China and arms limitations with the USSR, but was ultimately cut short by the Watergate scandal. Gerald Ford assumed the presidency after Nixon's resignation and pardoned Nixon to help the nation heal. Ford faced economic challenges of inflation and an energy crisis. His foreign policy focused on recovering US respect after the Vietnam War.
Richard Nixon was elected president in 1968 and re-elected in 1972. His foreign policy successes included establishing diplomatic relations with China, negotiating arms limitations with the Soviet Union, and ending U.S. involvement in Vietnam. However, the Watergate scandal erupted in 1972-1973 involving the break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters and subsequent cover-up, ultimately leading to Nixon's resignation in 1974 to avoid impeachment. His domestic policies were overshadowed by economic troubles including inflation and the 1973 oil crisis. Gerald Ford succeeded Nixon as president and granted him a full pardon for any Watergate crimes.
Richard Nixon was president from 1969-1974. He pursued a foreign policy of détente, improving relations with China and the Soviet Union. However, the Watergate scandal, involving a break-in at the Democratic headquarters and Nixon's subsequent attempts to cover it up, led to his resignation in 1974 to avoid impeachment. Gerald Ford then became president and sought to move past Watergate by pardoning Nixon, though this hurt his popularity.
The document provides an overview of the Iraq conflict from the pre-war era through efforts for resolution. It discusses the ethnic and religious breakdown of Iraq's population, early conflicts with Iran and Kuwait, and the strategic, political and economic reasons cited for the US invasion. The impacts examined include effects on US power, Iraq's humanitarian crisis, environmental damage, impacts on US forces, increase in jihadists, destruction of cultural heritage, and Iraqi civil society efforts toward conflict resolution such as women's peace groups.
Cuban Missile Crisis A Case Study of Fear for the Cold WarTyler Mayer
This document provides background information on a thesis paper about fear during the Cuban Missile Crisis. It acknowledges those who helped with research and acknowledges key sources used. It then provides context about the Crisis, including the discovery of Soviet missiles in Cuba, American response and escalating tensions. It discusses how existing scholarship has analyzed the Crisis but argues more can be done to examine the evolution of public fear in the U.S. before, during and after the pivotal 13 days when nuclear war seemed possible.
- The document provides biographical details about the Kennedy family tree, including Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and their political careers. It discusses how Joseph Sr. helped launch the political careers of his sons and details some of the major events and accomplishments in JFK and RFK's lives, including JFK's service in WWII and presidency.
Jefferson Davis was born in 1808 in Kentucky. He had a military and political career before the Civil War. He served as the President of the Confederate States of America from 1861 to 1865. As president, he oversaw the Confederacy's war effort and defended the institution of slavery. The Confederacy ultimately lost the Civil War under his leadership.
This document provides information on the winners of the World Press Photo of the Year award from 1955 to 1981. Each entry includes the photographer's name and nationality, the organization they worked for, photo details like location and date, and a brief caption describing the content of the winning photo. The photos documented important historical events and social issues around the world, such as the desegregation of US schools, the Vietnam War, famine in Africa, and the military coup in Spain.
The Cold War was a decades-long ideological and geopolitical struggle between the United States and the Soviet Union that began following World War II. Key events that deepened tensions included Stalin reneging on allowing free elections in Eastern Europe, the Berlin Blockade, McCarthyism in the US, and the space race highlighted by the launch of Sputnik. Major crises like the Cuban Missile Crisis brought the two superpowers to the brink of nuclear war. Throughout the Cold War both sides sought to spread their influence and contain the other through military alliances like NATO and the Warsaw Pact as well as policies like containment and détente.
Nixon Through Bush documents key events during the Nixon presidency from 1968-1973. It discusses Nixon's election in 1968 amid turmoil over the Vietnam War and assassinations of Robert Kennedy and MLK. His use of a "Southern Strategy" and emphasis on détente with China and USSR. It also examines the Watergate scandal, from the 1972 break-in through Nixon's involvement in the coverup and subsequent investigations.
The CIA in Indonesia and the Secret War in Laos-Book ReviewsAgha A
This document provides a summary of a book review for the book "Feet to the Fire-CIA Covert Operations in Indonesia-1957-58". In 3 sentences:
The book provides great detail on how the CIA covertly intervened in Indonesia's politics in the late 1950s to destabilize the Sukarno regime and support dissident officers, but it lacks strategic analysis of why the intervention ultimately failed. The reviewer argues the book is strong on operational details but weak on analyzing the strategic failures in Washington's assessment. Overall it is an in-depth look at CIA operations in Indonesia but could have provided more critical analysis of why the grand plan failed.
C:\Documents And Settings\Bb093005\Desktop\DanishDanish Khan
The document discusses arms races between nations. It notes that over $1 trillion is spent annually on military expenditures worldwide. Nations buy arms for reasons of security, prestige, domestic politics, technology, and economics. While arms have helped prevent some wars, the rapid growth of the arms industry and spending on weapons is leading the world towards increased global problems and potential destruction rather than solving serious issues. Some argue that arms can be used for peace when deployed by organizations like the UN, but others maintain that arms races increase instability and the risk of war.
This document provides a biography of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, covering his career prior to becoming president, his election and reelection, key foreign and domestic policies and events during his presidency from 1953 to 1961, and civil rights issues during this time period. Some of Eisenhower's accomplishments included leading the allied forces in Europe during World War 2, establishing the Interstate Highway System, responding to the Soviet launch of Sputnik by creating NASA, and using federal troops to enforce desegregation in Little Rock. However, he also faced losses such as the spread of communism in Cuba and Vietnam during his terms in office.
Este documento presenta un proyecto de plan de lectura para alumnos de 2o curso de primaria. Incluye una justificación del plan de lectura, sus objetivos generales, una secuencialización de objetivos y contenidos por niveles de 1o a 4o curso, criterios de evaluación, metodología, competencias básicas y actividades sugeridas. El plan busca fomentar el hábito de la lectura en los estudiantes y desarrollar su expresión oral y escrita a través de diferentes actividades y el uso de la bibli
Bantierra y la firma Inga Food, perteneciente al Grupo Nutreco, han firmado esta mañana un convenio por el cual Caja Rural de Aragón se convierte en entidad financiera de referencia para una de las empresas líderes en el sector porcino a nivel mundial.
Honda Jazz generasi baru hadir dengan desain yang lebih sporty dan ruang kabin yang luas. Mobil ini dilengkapi fitur keselamatan maju serta performa mesin yang tangguh namun hemat bahan bakar. Honda Jazz generasi baru hadir untuk memenuhi gaya hidup pengguna yang aktif dan dinamis.
El documento describe los componentes principales de una computadora, incluyendo el hardware y software. Explica que el hardware se refiere a las partes físicas como el monitor, teclado, ratón, mientras que el software son los componentes lógicos. También describe los diferentes tipos de periféricos como de entrada, salida y mixtos, dando ejemplos como el mouse, teclado, monitor e impresora.
This document provides product information for MCFA SAP and contact details for Sortimo including a free phone number, email address, website, and fax number to get in touch regarding the MCFA SAP product.
Moodboard- Market research into existing genres availableLeloo Ming
The document describes a mood board made up of different existing music genre magazines that provides ideas for the layout, color, images, context, celebrities, props, and clothing for a new music magazine. Most magazines feature a main image of the celebrity being profiled and use colors associated with the genre of music. For example, rock magazines tend to use darker colors while R&B and pop magazines use warmer, more colorful schemes that reflect the more uplifting nature of those genres. Important text on the covers, like headlines and names, typically appear in larger fonts. Images on the covers mainly consist of front-on close-up or medium close-up shots of celebrities surrounded by additional text.
El documento presenta una introducción a los géneros y formatos radiofónicos. Explica los géneros periodísticos, literarios y musicales comúnmente utilizados en radio. También describe diversos formatos como promocionales, cápsulas y programas. Finalmente, analiza aspectos del periodismo radiofónico como la redacción de noticias, los géneros periodísticos y el formato de los noticiarios.
This document provides information on various training workshops conducted by Bob Seshadri to improve business and sales skills. It describes workshops on customer experience, CRM, business preparation, CEO selling skills, and retail sales training. The customer experience workshop focuses on enhancing the customer experience and increasing customer satisfaction and retention. The CRM workshop teaches how to develop customer relationship programs to optimize long-term value. The business preparation workshop outlines skills needed to succeed in today's competitive business environment. The CEO selling skills workshop discusses why CEOs need selling skills. And the retail sales training workshop provides techniques for skills like qualifying prospects, presenting products, handling objections, and closing deals.
The document summarizes the discovery and history of the Lod Mosaic, a large and well-preserved Roman mosaic floor uncovered in Israel in 1996. Dating to around 300 AD, the mosaic was part of a wealthy merchant's home and features depictions of animals from three continents. It spent over 1800 years buried before being preserved and transported to Waddesdon Manor in the UK for display. The mosaic provides insights into the history of the region and individuals who may have walked on it, like St. George. Its discovery and preservation have excited archaeologists and art experts.
Jefferson Davis was born in 1808 in Kentucky. He had a military and political career before the Civil War. He served as the President of the Confederate States of America from 1861 to 1865. As president, he oversaw the Confederacy's war effort and defended the institution of slavery. The Confederacy ultimately lost the Civil War under his leadership.
This document provides information on the winners of the World Press Photo of the Year award from 1955 to 1981. Each entry includes the photographer's name and nationality, the organization they worked for, photo details like location and date, and a brief caption describing the content of the winning photo. The photos documented important historical events and social issues around the world, such as the desegregation of US schools, the Vietnam War, famine in Africa, and the military coup in Spain.
The Cold War was a decades-long ideological and geopolitical struggle between the United States and the Soviet Union that began following World War II. Key events that deepened tensions included Stalin reneging on allowing free elections in Eastern Europe, the Berlin Blockade, McCarthyism in the US, and the space race highlighted by the launch of Sputnik. Major crises like the Cuban Missile Crisis brought the two superpowers to the brink of nuclear war. Throughout the Cold War both sides sought to spread their influence and contain the other through military alliances like NATO and the Warsaw Pact as well as policies like containment and détente.
Nixon Through Bush documents key events during the Nixon presidency from 1968-1973. It discusses Nixon's election in 1968 amid turmoil over the Vietnam War and assassinations of Robert Kennedy and MLK. His use of a "Southern Strategy" and emphasis on détente with China and USSR. It also examines the Watergate scandal, from the 1972 break-in through Nixon's involvement in the coverup and subsequent investigations.
The CIA in Indonesia and the Secret War in Laos-Book ReviewsAgha A
This document provides a summary of a book review for the book "Feet to the Fire-CIA Covert Operations in Indonesia-1957-58". In 3 sentences:
The book provides great detail on how the CIA covertly intervened in Indonesia's politics in the late 1950s to destabilize the Sukarno regime and support dissident officers, but it lacks strategic analysis of why the intervention ultimately failed. The reviewer argues the book is strong on operational details but weak on analyzing the strategic failures in Washington's assessment. Overall it is an in-depth look at CIA operations in Indonesia but could have provided more critical analysis of why the grand plan failed.
C:\Documents And Settings\Bb093005\Desktop\DanishDanish Khan
The document discusses arms races between nations. It notes that over $1 trillion is spent annually on military expenditures worldwide. Nations buy arms for reasons of security, prestige, domestic politics, technology, and economics. While arms have helped prevent some wars, the rapid growth of the arms industry and spending on weapons is leading the world towards increased global problems and potential destruction rather than solving serious issues. Some argue that arms can be used for peace when deployed by organizations like the UN, but others maintain that arms races increase instability and the risk of war.
This document provides a biography of President Dwight D. Eisenhower, covering his career prior to becoming president, his election and reelection, key foreign and domestic policies and events during his presidency from 1953 to 1961, and civil rights issues during this time period. Some of Eisenhower's accomplishments included leading the allied forces in Europe during World War 2, establishing the Interstate Highway System, responding to the Soviet launch of Sputnik by creating NASA, and using federal troops to enforce desegregation in Little Rock. However, he also faced losses such as the spread of communism in Cuba and Vietnam during his terms in office.
Este documento presenta un proyecto de plan de lectura para alumnos de 2o curso de primaria. Incluye una justificación del plan de lectura, sus objetivos generales, una secuencialización de objetivos y contenidos por niveles de 1o a 4o curso, criterios de evaluación, metodología, competencias básicas y actividades sugeridas. El plan busca fomentar el hábito de la lectura en los estudiantes y desarrollar su expresión oral y escrita a través de diferentes actividades y el uso de la bibli
Bantierra y la firma Inga Food, perteneciente al Grupo Nutreco, han firmado esta mañana un convenio por el cual Caja Rural de Aragón se convierte en entidad financiera de referencia para una de las empresas líderes en el sector porcino a nivel mundial.
Honda Jazz generasi baru hadir dengan desain yang lebih sporty dan ruang kabin yang luas. Mobil ini dilengkapi fitur keselamatan maju serta performa mesin yang tangguh namun hemat bahan bakar. Honda Jazz generasi baru hadir untuk memenuhi gaya hidup pengguna yang aktif dan dinamis.
El documento describe los componentes principales de una computadora, incluyendo el hardware y software. Explica que el hardware se refiere a las partes físicas como el monitor, teclado, ratón, mientras que el software son los componentes lógicos. También describe los diferentes tipos de periféricos como de entrada, salida y mixtos, dando ejemplos como el mouse, teclado, monitor e impresora.
This document provides product information for MCFA SAP and contact details for Sortimo including a free phone number, email address, website, and fax number to get in touch regarding the MCFA SAP product.
Moodboard- Market research into existing genres availableLeloo Ming
The document describes a mood board made up of different existing music genre magazines that provides ideas for the layout, color, images, context, celebrities, props, and clothing for a new music magazine. Most magazines feature a main image of the celebrity being profiled and use colors associated with the genre of music. For example, rock magazines tend to use darker colors while R&B and pop magazines use warmer, more colorful schemes that reflect the more uplifting nature of those genres. Important text on the covers, like headlines and names, typically appear in larger fonts. Images on the covers mainly consist of front-on close-up or medium close-up shots of celebrities surrounded by additional text.
El documento presenta una introducción a los géneros y formatos radiofónicos. Explica los géneros periodísticos, literarios y musicales comúnmente utilizados en radio. También describe diversos formatos como promocionales, cápsulas y programas. Finalmente, analiza aspectos del periodismo radiofónico como la redacción de noticias, los géneros periodísticos y el formato de los noticiarios.
This document provides information on various training workshops conducted by Bob Seshadri to improve business and sales skills. It describes workshops on customer experience, CRM, business preparation, CEO selling skills, and retail sales training. The customer experience workshop focuses on enhancing the customer experience and increasing customer satisfaction and retention. The CRM workshop teaches how to develop customer relationship programs to optimize long-term value. The business preparation workshop outlines skills needed to succeed in today's competitive business environment. The CEO selling skills workshop discusses why CEOs need selling skills. And the retail sales training workshop provides techniques for skills like qualifying prospects, presenting products, handling objections, and closing deals.
The document summarizes the discovery and history of the Lod Mosaic, a large and well-preserved Roman mosaic floor uncovered in Israel in 1996. Dating to around 300 AD, the mosaic was part of a wealthy merchant's home and features depictions of animals from three continents. It spent over 1800 years buried before being preserved and transported to Waddesdon Manor in the UK for display. The mosaic provides insights into the history of the region and individuals who may have walked on it, like St. George. Its discovery and preservation have excited archaeologists and art experts.
El Museo de Arte Ruso de San Petersburgo se ubica en el antiguo palacio Mijáilovski, edificado en 1819-1825. El palacio fue construido originalmente como residencia para el príncipe Mijail, hermano de Alejandro I. Actualmente, el museo alberga una colección de más de 300,000 obras de arte ruso, la cual creció significativamente después de la Revolución Rusa a través de la nacionalización de obras privadas.
This document contains an unstructured collection of letters, numbers, and symbols with no clear meaning. It includes some lists of characteristics of a good person with traits like honest, kind, friendly, helpful and responsible. However, much of the text is garbled and does not appear to form coherent sentences, paragraphs or convey a clear message.
El almacenamiento en la nube permite a los usuarios almacenar y acceder a sus datos de forma remota a través de Internet, almacenados típicamente en servidores administrados por un proveedor del servicio. Existen servicios públicos gratuitos para usuarios privados hasta cierta cantidad de datos, así como opciones privadas o híbridas diseñadas para empresas u organizaciones.
This document provides a list of competitive ingredients for feed including amino acids, minerals, vitamins, and other products such as betaine and pea protein that a company called CHEMENTRY supplies as their global source. It also includes contact information for the company located in Rego Park, NY and their product development manager for any additional feed ingredient needs.
The document discusses how the media portrayed different opinions on the Vietnam War. It notes that Soviet news propaganda depicted the US Pentagon putting pressure on Congress to fund the war, while the media in the US showed both sides of the issue. Some press promoted anti-war rallies, though some rallies included violence while others were peaceful. The document also mentions that people who avoided the military draft were tried and jailed, but then portrayed as heroes by the press.
2The Civil Rights Efforts of John F. KennedyKevin J. Doherty.docxgilbertkpeters11344
2
The Civil Rights Efforts of John F. Kennedy
Kevin J. Doherty 4013232
HIST102 – American History since 1877
Professor Carl Bradshaw
January 4, 2011
President John F. Kennedy is mostly remembered because of his assassination. However, events that occurred during his time in office were quite important to the history of the United States. Although it may not have been viewed as such at the time, the civil rights movement was possibly the most important issue and the president’s efforts toward solving the matter may have been his greatest accomplishments. President Kennedy was juggling, as most presidents do, quite a few pressing issues at the same time. The civil rights movement was not his priority, but it played an important role in the way he ran the country. The president made some very impressive headway in the fight for true equality in the United States and abroad.
Civil rights never seemed to be at the top of President Kennedy’s priority list, but there is no doubt that he was more sympathetic to the issue and movement than previous presidents. In fact, Steven Lawson quotes Dr. Martin Luther King as saying that Kennedy had “schizophrenic tendencies” when dealing with the civil rights movement. He continues to explain that the president came from an upper class background in Boston and he had no personal understanding of the inequality that African-Americans dealt with in the south.
However, theology expert Mark Massa points out that he was the first Catholic to be elected president and, because he was Catholic, he had to deal with a lot of discrimination during his campaign.
While he never dealt with anything like African-Americans in the Jim Crow south, this may have given him some personal insight and reason to sympathize.
Although President Kennedy may have been sympathetic toward the civil rights activists, he always seemed to be reactionary in nature as opposed to proactive. Thomas Borstelmann, expert in modern history, explains that the racial struggle, at the time, was mostly fought between Democrats. The president “felt he had to work both sides of the street”.
Angering the southern Democrats could bring repercussions concerning other legislation that Kennedy wanted to pass. Maybe this could explain the “schizophrenia” Dr. King noticed.
Foreign policy (mostly concerning the Cold War) was always the President’s top priority. He was working toward bettering the civil liberties of oppressed people in Africa at the time and trying to win them over to democracy in a sort of turf war with the Soviet Union. However, any instances of unrest surrounding civil rights in the United States the president considered to be embarrassing on the international front. Borstelmann explains that Kennedy worked with civil rights activist groups such as the Congress on Racial Equality (CORE) and Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) to try and keep demonstrations peaceful.
How, after all, could the United State.
The document provides a timeline of key events during the Cold War period from 1945-1989. Some notable events included the Yalta and Potsdam conferences in 1945 that divided postwar Germany and Berlin between the USSR and Western allies. The Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan were responses to the spread of communism in Eastern Europe. The Berlin Blockade and airlift marked increased tensions. NATO and the Warsaw Pact were formed as opposing military alliances. An arms race developed between the USSR and US, including space achievements like Sputnik. Uprisings in Hungary and Czechoslovakia were crushed by Soviet forces.
The document provides a timeline of key events during the Cold War between 1945-1991. It begins with the Yalta and Potsdam conferences in 1945 where the Allied powers agreed to divide Germany and Berlin into occupation zones but tensions were rising between the US and USSR. The timeline then lists major events in the escalating arms race and conflicts between the US and Soviet-led communist bloc, including various crises and wars, until the decline and fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 marking the end of the Cold War.
The document provides a timeline of key events during the Cold War period from 1945-1989. Some notable events included the Yalta and Potsdam conferences which established divisions in Germany and Berlin; the Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan which aimed to counter Soviet influence in Europe; the Berlin Blockade and airlift which marked increased tensions; the formation of opposing military alliances NATO and the Warsaw Pact; and the arms race including space race achievements. The timeline also notes events like the Hungarian uprising showing tensions between the Soviet bloc and independence movements.
Ashford 5: - Week 4 - Instructor Guidance
Week 4 - Instructor Guidance
HIS 206: United States History II
Instructor Guidance
Week 4
Congratulations to everyone to making it to week four! We are officially past the half way mark. This is a good time to take a step back and take stock of everything you have learned so far. If you are behind on your work for the course, it might be a good time to reach out to your instructor to see what you can do to get caught up.
This is also a good time to go over the sources that you have found for your final project, reading carefully and closely. It might help to keep researching at the Ashford Library (see the week three guidance for more help finding sources). As you read over your sources, ask yourself “what are they saying about the topic, and how can I use what they are saying to support what I want to say”. Also, take notes as you read, so that you can go back and use useful materials from sources. Use quotes sparingly and make sure that you explain the quote and put it in the context of your own thinking.
This week’s guidance will cover the following areas:
1. Utilizing Feedback
2. Checklist and Assignments for Week 4
3. Topics covered this week
4. Source list
Utilizing Feedback
Video Transcript
Go to top of page
Checklist and Assignments for Week 4
√
Week Four Learning Activities
Due Date
Review Announcements
Tuesday – Day 1
Review and reflect on Instructor Guidance
Tuesday – Day 1
Read Assigned Readings and View Assigned Videos
No later than Day 3
Post initial response to Discussion 1 – A Single American Nation
Thursday – Day 3
Contribute 100 words to Discussion 2 – Open Forum
Monday – Day 7
Complete Week Four Quiz
Monday – Day 7
Post two responses to peers in Discussions 1 and 2
Monday – Day 7
Watch “End of Course Survey” Video
Monday – Day 7
Go to top of page
Topics Covered This Week
Timeline
1946 February 22
George Kennan’s “Long Telegram” from Moscow outlines the need to contain communism.
1947 March 12
Truman Doctrine is announced.
1947 June 5
Secretary of State George Marshall announces “Marshall Plan” to rebuild Europe.
1948 June
The Berlin Blockade begins.
1948 July
Executive Order 9981 initiates the desegregation of the military.
1949 April
NATO is formed.
1949 August 29
The USSR tests its first nuclear weapon.
1949 October 1
Mao Tse-tung declares formation of the People’s Republic of China.
1950 February 9
Joseph McCarthy declares there are 205 enemies within the state department.
1950 June 25
The Korean War begins.
1951
Color television is introduced.
1952
Car seat belts are introduced.
1952
The U.S. explodes the first hydrogen bomb over the Marshall Islands.
1953
James Crick and Francis Watson create DNA model.
1953 March 5
Soviet leader, Joseph Stalin, dies.
1953 June 19
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg are executed for conspiracy to commit espionage.
1953 July
Fighting in the Korean War ends with a divided Korea.
1953 August 12
Soviet Union explodes first hydrogen bomb.
1.
The document provides background information on the Cold War and the gradual thawing of relations between the US and USSR in the 1970s. It discusses key events like Nixon's visit to China in 1972, the first Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT I) in the same year, and increasing efforts at détente between the two superpowers through diplomacy and arms control negotiations. However, tensions increased again in the late 1970s after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Cold War Tensions Increase - 1945-1952.pptxSamKuruvilla5
This document discusses different historical perspectives on the origins of the Cold War between 1945-1991. It begins by providing context for rising tensions between former World War 2 allies the US and USSR. It then outlines the traditional, revisionist, and post-revisionist views that emerged in the West. The traditional view blamed Soviet intransigence, while the revisionist view saw US economic imperialism as the cause. The post-revisionist view argued it was a complex interaction between both sides. Soviet views also evolved over time from solely blaming US imperialism to more nuanced accounts after Stalin's death.
1) The 1950s were characterized by the Red Scare and fears of communist infiltration in the US government.
2) The Korean War broke out in 1950 when North Korea invaded South Korea, leading to UN and US involvement in the war.
3) Events like the Rosenberg trial and Senator McCarthy's accusations of communism contributed to the climate of fear around communism in America during this period.
The Cold War was a long-standing rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union that lasted from 1946 to 1991. It involved political, economic and military tensions rather than direct military conflict. A key event was the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, when the U.S. discovered Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba. The Cold War ended in the late 1980s with reforms in the Soviet Union under Mikhail Gorbachev that led to the dissolution of the USSR in 1991.
The document provides an overview of a paper about the U.S. perception of French and British leadership during the 1956 Suez Canal Crisis. The paper will argue that the U.S. saw the French and British actions as deceitful, diplomatically aggressive, and motivated by greed. It will analyze U.S.-European relations in the context of colonialism and containment policy during the Cold War. The document outlines the structure of the paper and identifies key historical context, arguments, and secondary sources that will be addressed.
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The Cold War developed between the United States and Soviet Union after World War II and lasted until the late 1980s. It began due to tensions over differing ideologies of capitalism and communism. The relationship fluctuated between periods of confrontation and détente, with tensions heightened during times like the Cuban Missile Crisis. Interpretations differ on who was primarily responsible for starting the Cold War.
The Vietnam War began as American involvement to prevent the spread of communism in Southeast Asia. The U.S. supported South Vietnam against North Vietnam and communist Viet Cong forces. Despite massive U.S. bombing and troop escalation, North Vietnam launched the surprise Tet Offensive in 1968, weakening U.S. public support for the war. Growing anti-war sentiment led to large protests and influenced Lyndon Johnson's decision not to seek re-election. Richard Nixon took office promising to end the war but secretly expanded bombing of Cambodia and Laos. After years of fighting and over 58,000 U.S. deaths, the U.S. withdrew from Vietnam in 1973 following a ceasefire agreement. North Vietnam reunited
This is a presentation of my letters as published in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post in the past seven years (2011-2004).
The document summarizes the ongoing challenges facing India's democracy as outlined by the author Jagdish N Singh. It notes that while India has seen economic growth, the majority of the population, especially marginalized groups, have not benefited and continue to suffer from issues like poverty, illiteracy, malnutrition and discrimination. The document criticizes the political leadership for failing to address these contradictions as envisioned by the architects of the Indian constitution like Ambedkar. It argues that the dominance of unworthy political elements and decline of democratic institutions have weakened the republic. The document calls for reforms to make democracy more meaningful and relevant for ordinary citizens.
The document discusses several topics:
1) The proposed amendment to India's Citizenship Act to absorb religious migrants from Pakistan and Bangladesh is praised, but it is suggested to also extend protections to other persecuted religious groups.
2) India is called to respect the rights of all people on its territory and address reports of mistreatment of some migrants.
3) Most states in the world today are described as "utterly callous" towards citizens like women and minorities, making them illegitimate. An international mechanism is called for to compel fair treatment of citizens.
The document discusses several issues related to women's rights and gender discrimination in India. It notes that while the Indian constitution guarantees equality, in practice there remains a large gulf in gender justice. Successive governments have done little to improve the situation. India ranks poorly on gender equality indices and crimes against women such as rape are still common. While some laws have been strengthened after recent reforms, women remain reluctant to report crimes due to security, social and other barriers. The document argues that more needs to be done to protect women's rights and remove barriers to justice in India.
This document discusses Maulana Yahya Nomani's views on jihad and the relationship between Muslims and non-Muslim states. Nomani argues that in the modern world, proxy wars and communal conflicts in the name of jihad are not permissible if the non-Muslim state allows Muslims to practice and propagate Islam freely. Muslims living in non-Muslim states have a duty to peacefully invite others to Islam using reasoned arguments rather than violence. Nomani believes this view is more in line with the spirit of shariah and God's revelation compared to interpretations used to justify terrorism. The document recommends spreading Nomani's ideas to counter political actors who distort Islamic teachings for their own gain.
The document discusses India's relationship with freedom and democracy. It notes that while documents like the Magna Carta and speeches by leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. promoted freedom and equality, realities today are still imperfect. India's record on development and hunger is not strong, and the caste system continues to negatively impact Dalits. While reforms have been introduced, the system persists and upper castes still dominate government, media, and business. True equality and an end to caste-based discrimination have not been achieved.
The document discusses issues related to Dalits, minorities, and secularism in India. It notes that while India's constitution treats citizens well, problems still remain. The condition of Dalits, tribals, women, and minorities is still pitiable. A CPI-M letter notes the condition of Dalits has worsened, and laws meant to protect them are not fully implemented. The document also discusses concerns about religious freedom for minorities in India raised in a USCIRF report, and calls for the government to adhere to principles of secularism and equal treatment of all faiths.
The document discusses how Indian political leaders have failed to uphold the ideals of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, the principal architect of India's constitution. While paying lip service to Ambedkar and his fight against caste hierarchy, most leaders have done little to dismantle casteism. Indian democracy has also failed to ensure multifaceted development and equal opportunities for all citizens, as Ambedkar envisioned. Poverty, illiteracy and threats to security continue to plague the lives of many. The emergence of communal, casteist and corrupt forces in politics has undermined Ambedkar's vision for an egalitarian India.
This document discusses Maulana Yahya Nomani's views on jihad and the relationship between Muslims and non-Muslim states. Nomani argues that in the modern world, proxy wars and communal conflicts cannot be justified in the name of jihad against non-Muslim states that allow Muslims to freely practice and propagate their faith. Muslims living in non-Muslim states have a duty to peacefully invite others to Islam using reasoned arguments rather than violence. Nomani believes this view is more aligned with the spirit of shariah and God's revelation compared to misinterpretations used to justify terrorism. The document recommends spreading Nomani's ideas to counter political actors who distort Islamic teachings for their own gain
The document summarizes a book that examines the relationship between the US and Israel and debunks myths about their alliance. It argues that US support for Israel is based on shared values and interests between the societies, not on the influence of Jewish lobbies. While governments act based on national interests, broader public and congressional support in the US is guided by beliefs that Israel's existence fulfills biblical prophecy. The book is presented as providing useful context for policymakers in the US, Israel, and other nations like India on developing cooperative relationships.
The document discusses the spread of the extremist Wahhabi ideology by regimes in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states. It argues that this ideology contradicts the true spirit of Islam, which promotes liberalism, equality, justice, and respect for all religions. It criticizes Western leaders for supporting these regimes and failing to curb the propagation of Wahhabism, which spreads hatred against non-Muslims and non-Wahhabi Muslims. The document calls on Western nations to instead support progressive Islamic voices that promote peace, pluralism and human rights.
The document discusses the oppression of minorities in Pakistan. It notes that since Pakistan's inception, successive regimes have violated the rights of minorities as enshrined in international standards. Minorities like Hindus, Christians, Ahmadis and Shias have faced discrimination, violence and forced conversions. The root cause is a lack of enlightened leadership and the influence of extremist Islamic groups on politicians seeking power. However, liberal forces now have an opportunity in the upcoming elections to promote progressive values of democracy, pluralism and human rights by appealing to Pakistan's original syncretic traditions and sidelining corrupt political elements.
This document analyzes the ambivalent policies of Russia, China, and India towards Iran's nuclear program. While generally supporting UN resolutions against Iran's nuclear ambitions, these countries oppose harsh sanctions. Their ambivalence stems from both converging and diverging interests with Iran. Russia and China benefit economically from arms sales and oil imports from Iran. India also relies on Iranian oil and seeks to strengthen economic and strategic ties. However, these countries also want to avoid angering Western powers or destabilizing the Middle East.
1. Jagdish N Singh’s Articles
On International Terrorism ---
Undefined Slogans, National Herald, July 8, 2007
Anatomy Of Terrorism, National Herald, July 15, 2007
Liberating From Racism, National Herald, July 22, 2007
Of Wise Counsels, National Herald, July 29, 2007
Of Wilsonians, National Herald, August 5, 2007
Lack Of Morality, National Herald, August 12. 2007
Lack Of Vision, National Herald, August 19, 2007
Policy Of Elites, National Herald, August 26, 2007.
Catalyst For Violence, National Herald, September 2, 2007.
Civil Mandate, National Herald, September 23, 2007
Keeping Faith, National Herald, September 30, 2007.
Of Progressive Forces, October 7, 2007.
Society in Peril, October 14, 2007.
America’s Predicament, November 4, 2007
Cult of Violence, December 2, 2007.
Talking To Opponents, December 16, 2007.
Iran’s Nuclear Programme, December 23, 2007.
Threat To America, December 30, 2007.
Soul Of Democracy, January 20, 2008.
New Vision, January 6, 2008.
New Dilemmas, January 13,2008.
For Credible Mechanism, February 3, 2008.
Dream And Doctrine, February 10, 2008.
Cautious Optimism, February 17, 2008.
**************
--“It happens in America too,” National Herald, New Delhi, September 21, 2003.
--“Of Communist morality,” NH, September 14, 2003.
--“Ignorance in not wisdom,” NH, September 7, 2003
--“A war to be fought and won,” NH, August 31, 2003.
--“No healing touch for Army?” NH, August 3, 2003.
--“Options against terrorists,” NH, July 27, 2003.“
--“ Blackwill’s bonhomie,” NH, July 20, 2003.
--“ Dalai’s Gandhian approach,” NH, July 6, 2003.
--“India needs a ‘Durga’,” NH June 22, 2003.
--“Battle is ours, not America’s,” NH, June 15, 2003.
--“It’s best to court the ‘queen’,”NH, June 8, 2003.
--“Iraq: Are we dumb or numb?, ”NH , June 1, 2003.
--“Doolittle Award for Donald,” NH, May 18, 2003.
--“Where is the smoking gun,” NH, May 11, 2003.
--“Operation vandalism in Iraq,” NH, April 27, 2003.
--“UN role in post-Saddam Iraq,” NH, April 13, 2003.
--“For and against war,” NH, March 30, 2003.
--“Models nations choose,” NH, March 23, 2003.
--“Gorbachev to Saddam: follow me,” NH, March 16, 2003.
--“For a victory without war,” NH, March 2, 2003.
--“Can Bush become a dictator?” NH, February 23, 2003.
--“US war: to be or not to be,” NH, January 19, 2003.
1
2. --“Pains in democracy,” NH, June 30, 2002.
--“ Three Cheers to democracy,” NH, June 23, 2002.
--“Bush war : how real?,” NH, June 9, 2002.
--“Of General’s game,” NH, May 5, 2002.
--“Of counter-terrorism,” NH, April 28, 2002.
--“Ramifications of new US war,” NH, April 21, 2002.
-- “State of America Today”, NH ,April 14, 2002.
--“ UN funds, poverty and WTO,” NH, February 17, 2002.
--“ Of General and Jehadis,” NH, January 20, 2002.
--“CIA unlikely to lay hands on foreign leaders,” NH, October 25, 2001.
--“Of communist mentors,” NH, October 28, 2001.
--“ Will Shabana wake up Atal?” NH, October 21, 2001.
--“Will Govt listen to Sonia,” NH, October 14, 2001.
--“Bio-terrorism leaves America defenceless,” NH, October 10, 2001.
--“Can Bush lose propaganda war?,” NH ,October 7, 2001.
--“ Will war end with Laden,” NH, September 30, 2001.
--“Michaels or Osama ally,” NH, August 26, 2001.
--“Of Dubya’s role models,” NH, August 12, 2001.
--“Osamas will smile meanwhile,” NH, August 5, 2001.
--“Who calls shots in US?” NH, July 29,2001.
--“ Bridging the rich-poor gulf,” NH, July 15, 2001.
--“ Bush Jr in love with CIA,” NH, June 24, 2001.
--“Ray of Hope in New American Approach,” Financial Express, New Delhi, February
15, 1995.
-- “Repression of human rights, ”The Independent, Bombay September 24, 1993.
*************************
Columns
Diplomatique
1. Is Primakov growing into America’s bad boys? Jan 31, 1999
2. An ‘American Century’ of partial successes. Jan 24, 1999
3. Pathetic U.S. hypocrisy over N-proliferation. Jan 17, 1999
4. Complacency unwise despite claims on LCA Jan 10, 1999
5. Despite US, India must develop tactical N-weapons. Jan 3, 1999
6. India should explore Taiwan’s trade potential. Dec. 27,1998
7. Rigidity mars efforts to resolve Sino-Indian row. Dec. 20, 98
8. Need for Chinese initiatives to win India’s trust. Dec. 13, 98
9. Urgent need to stem the rot in Sino-Indian ties. Dec 6, 98
10. Arafat all set to declare Palestine statehood. Dec. 13, 98
11. Taiwan : Neither by hook nor by crook. Nov 1, 98
12. Indo-US dialogue well on the track. Oct. 4, 98
13. A case for more consumption by poor. Sept. 27, 98
14. Equating India and Pakistan over Kashmir. Sept. 13, 98
15. Cynicism over patent advantage. Sept 6, 98
16. Imperatives of an investment-friendly India. Aug. 23, 98
17. IMF : A remedy worse the disease. Aug. 9, 98
18. Big power fears over Rome convention. Aug. 2, 98
19. US caution on sanctions guided by past. July 26, 98
20. No proof yet of world Bank’s anti India bias, July 19, 98
21. Farcical game of international credit rating, July 12, 98
22. Case of pot calling the kettle black, July 5, 98
2
3. 23. Dragon was there : nobody invented it, June 28,98
24. Think before you shoot, Mr. Helms, May 17, 98
25. The great hitch over children’s rights, May 10, 98
26. World Trade Organisation : myths and realities, April 26, 98
27. Human rights in India, April 19, 98
28. ‘Akhand Bharat’ PM and his Defence Minister, April 12, 1998
29. Part success in India’s anti-drug measures, March 29, 98
30. Consensus vital for economic reforms, March 29, 98
31. Options for India : Is Islamic threat a Western bogey? Feb 22, 98
32. Sharif’s Long record of peace overtures, Feb 15, 98
33. Fresh measures needed to solve Angolan imbroglio, Feb 1, 98
34. Ties with France : Indian market in Chirac’s calculus, Jan 25, 98
35. Clinton faces hawks on his Cuba initiative, Jan 18, 98
36. Nuclear haves queering disarmament pitch, Dec 28, 97
37. Kyoto protocol does not make world safe, Dec 21, 97
38. Clinton’s re-think vital on land-mines ban, Dec 14, 97
39. Secular nations must join battle against terrorism, Dec 7, 97
40. Clinton must make Congress pay to Annan, Nov 23, 97
41. Sino-Russian model for other Asian hot spots, Nov 16, 97
42. New Delhi must cash in upon Indo-US bonhomie, Nov 9, 97
43. What about violation of human rights in West, Oct 19, 97
44. ‘Super’ farce of disarmament, Oct 5, 97
45. Jiang has miles to go for absolute power, Sept 28, 97
46. No legitimacy in Washington’s Council reforms plan, Sept 21, 97
47. Are Indo-Russian trade targets elusive, Sept. 14, 97
48. Is the Dalai Lama losing his hold over Tibetans, Sept. 7, 97
*********************
Columns/ Diplomatique-II /Analysis/ Defenscan/ General
1. South Block and NMD, National Herald, March 4, 2001
2. Nehru never secretive, March 18, 2001
3. Why not emulate Nehru, March 25, 2001.
4. What about our own Buddhas, April 22, 2001
5. More loyal than the King, May 6, 2001
6. Politics bars tigers from WHO, May 13, 2001
7. Nukes as aid to foreign policy, May 20, 2001
8. Gifts in good governance, May 27, 2001
9. Of a wayward from Harvard, June 3, 2001
10. George, beware of saffron spies, June 10, 2001
11. The dragon apes Uncle Sam, June 17, 2001
12. Bush Jr. in love with CIA. June 24, 01
13. What about other war criminals ?, July 8, 01
14. Bridging the rich-poor gulf, July 15, 01
15. Who cares for environment, July 22, 01
16. Who calls shots in US, July 29, 2001.
17. Osama’s will smile meanwhile, August 5, 01
18. Of Dubya’s role models, August 12, 01
19. Can Swamy change China, August 19, 01
20. Michaels or Osama ally ? August 26, 01
21. The mightiest is weaker, September 16, 01.
22. Nixon like act sans vision, September 23, 01
3
4. 23. Will war end with Laden ? September 30, 01
24. Can Bush lose propaganda war, October 7, 01
25. Will Govt listen to Sonia ? October 14, 01
26. Will Shabana wake up Atal, October 21, 01
27. Of communist mentors, October 28, 01
28. Who cares for ideology ?, December 30, 01
29. Does India await Zhu Rongji ? January 6, 02
30. China line will not take far, Jan. 13, 02
31. Of General and Jehadis, Jan 20, 02
32. Manley, play own music, February 3, 02
33. Aircraft to statecraft, Feb. 10, 02
34. UN funds, poverty and WTO , Feb 17, 02
35. Kalam calls, who cares, March 3, 02
36. Second strike: talk, reality, march 10, 02
37. Questions Chinese pose, March 17, 02
38. Of a game of interests, March 24, 02.
39. Of foreign policy realities, March 31, 02
40. Double standards on nukes, April 7, 02
41. China , Russia likely to dilute resistance to NMD, March 8, 2001.
42. China’s sincerity to peace doubtful, March 15, 01 ( Analyses... )
43. Fate of defence reforms uncertain, March 22, 01
44. India’s social image abroad high, March 29, 01
45. US likely to bargain hard on FMCT, April 12, 01
46. Washington firm on missile defence plan, April 19,01
47. Prospects of Indo-US relations bright, April 26, 01
48. Washington set to stand by Taipei, May 10, 01
49. Sea change in Taiwan’s defence policy, May 17, 01
50. Bush, Putin to tread pragmatically, May 24, 01
51. Nuclear weapons systems not accident proof, June 14, 01
52. New Delhi, Beijing still to get to serious business, June 21, 01
53. Dialogue can foster peace in Tibet, June 28, 01
54. US sanctions against India unlikely to stay, July 26,01
55. Bush unlikely to be tough with Putin, August 2, 01
56. The rich imposing agenda on the poor, August 22, 01
57. Scepticism over rail link in Tibet, September 13, 01.
58. Indo-Russian defence ties on firm footing, September 27, 01
59. Russia may replace Britain in AJT deal, October 4, 01
60. Bio-terrorism leaves America defenceless, October 10, 01
61. CIA unlikely to lay hands on foreign leaders, October 25, 01
62. Increase in India’s agro exports likely, November 1, 01
63. Russia’s trade with India, China on the rise, Nov 22, 01
64. Future of Kyoto protocol uncertain, Nov 29, 01
65. Secrecy part of US diplomacy, Dec. 6, 01
66. Great power status in Russian psyche, Dec 13, 01
67. India’s nuclear doctrine pragmatic, January 17, 02
68. State of America today, April 14, 02( Diplomatique-III....)
69. Ramifications of new US war, April 21, 02
70. Of counter-terrorism, April 28, 02
71. Of General’s game, May 5, 02
72. Of Taiwan’s case in WHO, May 26 , 02
73. Proving critics wrong, June 2, 02
4
5. 74. Bush war: how real, June 9, 02
75. Making Bank effective, June 16, 02
76. Three cheers to democracy, June 23, 02
77. Pains in democracy, June 30, 02
78. Can EU compete with US ? , July 7,02
79. Nukes are to stay, July 14, 02
80. Are all nations equal, July 21, 02
81. Of credible intelligence, July 28, 02
82. For a strategy of vision, Aug. 4, 02
83. General’s illusion on J&K, August 11, 02
84. What is the rush, Bush ? Aug 18, 02
85. Of a sober Bush, August 25, 02
86. Of poor nation’s agenda, September 1, 02
87. Who is being un-Indian ?, September 8, 02.
88. Of anti-Islamic image, September 15, 02
89. ‘Makers’ of a great India, September 22, 02
90. Anti-human is never just, Sept. 29, 02
91. Recognising women’s might, October 6, 02
92. Towards a developed India, Oct. 27, 02
93. Making media bias free, Nov. 03, 02
94. Where lies truth on Iraq ? Nov 17,02
95. Marxism the Jiang way, November 17, 02
96. Moves on Tibetan chessboard, Nov 24, 02
97. Turning words into deeds, December 1,02
98. Pak policy: whom to believe ?, December 8, 02
99. Nehru nostalgia of the living, Dec 15, 02
100. Rein in fascists, save India, December 22, 02.
101. Whither bluff and bluster ? December 29, 02.
102. Beijing under US scanner, Aug 29, 02 ( Defenscan.....)
103. Does India import faulty spares? , Sept.5, 02
104. Will India dump British Hawk?, Sept 12, 02
105. Moving towards a blue water navy, Sept 19, 02
106. Plea against blue navy ill-founded, Sept. 26, 02
107. Need for defence modernisation, Oct 10, 02
108. Boost in India-Oman relations likely, Oct. 24, 02
109. Stress on intelligence capabilities, Oct. 31, 02
110. Taiwan boosts self defence , Nov 7, 02.
111. IAF ready to take a leap forward, Nov 14, 02
112. More intense war against Iraq likely, Nov 21, 02
113. Indo-US defence ties on upswing, Nov 28, 02
114. Arrow deal hangs in balance, Dec 5, 02
115. Nuclear weapons at sea not targetable : Navy, Dec 12, 02.
116. American strategy against WMD, Dec 19, 02
117. Bringing Beijing, Dharamsala together, Aug 30, 02 ( General pieces....)
118. Optimism in Sino-Tibetan dialogue, Sept. 15, 02
119. Seminar on modernising Indian Army concludes, Sept 22,02.
120. Govt’s determination to protect sea frontiers: George, Oct. 27, 02
121. War clouds still hover over Iraq, Nov. 12, 02
122. US plan against Iraq, Nov 14, 02
123. Change of guard unlikely to reflect on world view, Nov 17, 02
124. Russia may urge Pak to dismantle terrorist outfits, Dec. 2, 02
5
6. 125. Russia, China, India strategic contours uncertain, Dec. 9, 02
126. Sinha must take a cue from Manmohan, Dec. 21, 02
127. Indo-US military exercise, September 29,02
128. Rumsfeld refuses to see any other way
129. Highlighting role of good NGOs, Dec. 30, 01
130. Working for development, March 31, 02
131. Growing India-China détente, Nov 16, 2003 ( Diplomatique-IV)
132. What makes Putin US soul mate?, Nov 2, 03
133. Hats off to our Services, Oct. 19,03
134. NIE a slur on democracy, Oct. 5, 03
135. Mulling Padmanabhan Plan, Sept 28, 03.
136. It happens in America too, Sept. 21, 03
137. Of communist morality, Sep 14, 03
138. Ignorance is not wisdom, Sept. 7, 03
139. A war to be fought and won, Aug 31, 03
140. A lament by Vajpayee fan, Aug 24, 03
141. China following a vision, Aug 17, 03.
142. Democracy beckons you, Sir, Aug 10, 03.
143. No healing touch for Army, Aug 13, 03.
144. Options against terrorists, July 27, 03.
145. Blackwill’s bonhomie, July 20, 03
146. Time to corner communalists, July 13, 03
147. Dalai’s Gandhian approach, July 6, 03
148. Vajpayee’s Beijing opera, June 29, 03.
149. India needs a ‘Durga, ’ June 22, 03
150. Battle is ours, not America’s, June 15, 03
151. It is best to court the Queen, June 8, 03
152. Iraq: are we dumb or numb ?, June 1, 02
153. Doolittle Award for Donald, may 18, 03
154. Where is the ‘smoking gun’?, May 11, 03
155. Denying credit to Taiwan, May 4, 03
156. Operation vandalism in Iraq, April 27, 03
157. China eyes Tibetan oil, April 20, 03
158. UN role in post-Saddam Iraq, April 13, 03
159. For and against a war, March 30, 03
160. Models nations choose, March 23, 03.
161. Gorbachev to Saddam : follow me, March 16, 03
162. Taming Kim: Is US serious ?, March 9, 03
163. For a victory without war, March 2, 03.
164. Can Bush become a dictator ?, Feb 23, 03
165. What queers the pitch ?, Feb 16, 03
166. George changes, will China change ?, Feb 9, 03.
167. Neither brothers nor foes, Feb 2, 03
168. India’s good friend in Europe, Jan 26, 03
169. US war: to be or not to be, Jan. 19, 03
170. All this talk of ‘second strike,’ Jan 12, 03.
171. No let up in armament race, May 1, 03 ( Defenscan...)
172. War as a lab to test weapons, April 24, 03
173. US military up-gradation constant, March 27, 03
174. Defence gets is due abroad, March 13, 03.
175. Rift over America’s North Korea policy, March 6, 03
6
7. 176. India’s peacekeeping role laudable, Feb 27, 03
177. N. Korea’s nukes a real threat, Feb 20, 03
178. Giving navy its due, Jan 30, 03
179. Need to review nuclear doctrine, Jan 23, 03
180. Culture of delay in matters of defence too, Jan 16, 03.
181. New heights in Indo-Brazil ties, Dec 14, 03. ( New Diplomatique )
182. Time for Dhaka to act, Dec. 21, 03
183. Gifts of peace on Christmas, December 28, 03
184. Girls still top in illiteracy, Jan 4, 04
185. China nurses cross-Strait gaps, Jan 11, 04
186. Power corrupts but not all, Jan. 25, 04
187. Viva the Republic ever and again, Feb 1, 04
188. Pardoning an unethical N-father, Feb 8, 04
189. Of Taiwan’s feats, Jan 18, 04
190. India and US : democratic ties, Feb 15, 04
191. Serving humanity for better ties, Feb 22, 04
192. Will Perez help India too, Feb 29, 04
193. Saving democracy in Taiwan, March 14, 04
194. Indo-US ties on upswing, April 4, 04
195. Of Republic’s shields, April 11, 04
196. Dawn of New World, April 18, 04
197. Achieving new heights, April 25, 04
198. Of Nehru-Kalam Vision, May 9. 04
199. Triumph of democracy, May 16, 04
200. Of the Select Few, May 23, 04
201. Who will checkmate Kim, June 6, 04
202. Divide not real, June 13, 04.
203. Building Indo-US ties, June 20, 2004.
204. A Season of Doves, June 27, 2004.
205. Of Unique partners, July 4, 2004.
206. New American calculus, July 11, 2004.
207. Caring For Defence, July 18, 2004.
208. An error of policy, July 25, 2004.
209. What about vision, August 1, 2004.
210. Of A Policy Debate, August 29, 04.
211. Combating Corruption, September 5, 04
212. Defence on Track, September12, 04.
213. Doves’ Vision, Sept. 19, 04.
214. Combating Terror, Sept. 26, 04.
215. Keeping Forces Fit, Oct. 10, 04.
216. Of Future Tibet, October 17, 04.
217. Changing Equations, October 24, 04.
218. Of A Strategic Vision, October 31, 04.
219. Of Credible Defence, November 21,04.
220. Studies on Terrorism, November 28, 04.
221. Of Policy Options, December 5, 04.
222. Of Critics’ Company, December 12, 04.
223. Of A Counter-Vision, December 19, 2004.
***************
Analyses
7
8. 1. India ever conscious of strategic imperatives, June 22, 98
2. War brings security awareness, June 22, 95
3. Scope to boost Indo-Kuwaiti ties, June 23, 95
4. N-tests & disarmament September 4, 95
5. Tokyo’s nuclear discourse : real or apparent September 11, 95
6. Joshi Govt. under infra-party strains September 18, 95
7. A mismanaged intellectual enterprise, September 16, 95
8. Politics of turns and U-turns, October 16, 95
9. P.M’s priority to primary education, September 25, 95
10. Improving higher education, October 2, 95
11. Pak gameplane in Kashmir, October 9,95
12. Ensuring speedy justice, October 23, 95
13. Russia may prune troops, October 29, 95
14. Chinese economy : a message for India, October 30, 95
15. Japan : The Whiteman’s target, November 6, 95
16. A matter of U.S. arrogance, November 12, 95
17. The forget everything syndrome, November 19, 95
18. Of a Weberian machine, November 26, 1995
19. Rise in investments : IMF, December 3, 95
20. Bosnians must look inwards, December 10, 95
21. For from high profile ties-December 17, 1995
22. OIC’s jaundiced view, December 24, 1995
23. A case for greater reforms, Jan 1, 96
24. The dark and bright sides of the year that was January 7, 96
25. Boost to Indo-UK ties, January 14, 96
26. Indo-Canadian bonhomie January 21, 96
27. Strengthening the UN system February 4, 96
28. UN must be empowered for new role : Starcevic Februrary 15, 96
29. Prospects of START-II, March 3, 96
30. Taipei allures Beijing, Delhi April 14, 96
31. India aware of its role in enhancing Asia-Pacific regional cooperation-
July 25,96
32. Strategic uncertainty dogs Asia-Pacific, July 6, 95
33. Will Taipei new diplomacy click? July 96
34. Cong. BJP evenly poised in Raipur
35. Keen tussle in Durg
36. India stays neutral in clinton-Ghali row? August 16, 96
37. Storm in Gowda’s tea cup August 31, 96
38. Positive signs on the horizon September 4, 1996
39. Modern wars not affordable : Abid March 14, 96
40. Stage set to boost Indo-Bangladesh ties
41. After Laloo Who? October 20, 96
42. Bullets unlikely to turn the tide News analysis, November 6, 96
43. Expanding horizons of Sino- Russian ties January 16, 97
44. Indo-Israeli ties : Need to go beyond January 30, 97
45. Australia, Asia need to understand each other better February 13,97
46. No set backs on China’s horizons anticipated February 20, 97
47. “No change in Taiwan’s Tibet policy” February 18, 1997
48. China for ban on fissile material February 19, 97
49. Pak scribe hopeful of dialogue, March 5, 97
8
9. 50. Xinjiang unrest linked to PoK, Taliban March 8, 97
51. CWC has few takers in Washington, Moscow, Beijing March 6, 97
52. India, Egypt pact on aviation, tourism likely April 7, 97
53. No threat to Gujral doctrine April 12, 97
54. Bonn-Tehran rift may not last long April 15, 97
55. Russo-Iranian ties real politik in nature April 24, 97
56. ‘Sino-Russian pact to foil US designs’ April 24, 97
57. Chemical weapons pact : disarmament a far cry April 28, 97
58. Casual wheat import no sign of deficiency April 29, 97
59. National Security Council likely April 30, 97
60. Blair to continue Major’s policy towards India May 8, 97
61. Blair to toe Major’s policy
62. Pact with Chechnya raises high hopes in Moscow May 17, 97
63. Russia, Chechnya pact
64. Declining trends in US reportage on India May 19, 97
65. Mobutu Was CIA creation, says N.Y. Times , May 22, 97
66. Majority hails Russia’s reunion with Byelorussia May 30, 97
67. American sceptical about UN June 4, 97
68. Kesri’ s win hailed by Chhattisgarh Congmen, June 20, 97
69. UN to remember Kazakh writer July 7, 97
70. Gujral doctrine may mend Pak attindc August 9, 97
71. Pattern against Russo-Japanese bonhomie August 21, 97.
******************
Taiwan Journal :
1. Tibet Cries out for global support,
Taiwan Journal, January 18, 2008.
2. World must unit against junta,
Taiwan Journal, November 23, 07.
3. Beijing should uphold peace pledge,
Taiwan Journal, September 17, 2004.
4. Progress slow in preventing nuke sales,
Taiwan Journal, July 30, 2004.
5. Reagan backed Asian aspirations,
Taiwan Journal ,June 25, 2004.
6. Taiwan-India economic ties growing,
Taiwan Journal, Taipei, May 14, 2004.
7. Fruitful Taiwan-China relations require direct govt-to-govt links,
Taiwan Journal, May 7, 2004.
8. Taiwan democracy a model for China,
Taiwan Journal, Taipei, Jan 9, 2004.
9. UN seat for Taiwan key to peace,
Taiwan Journal, Taipei, Dec. 5, 2003.
10. Will China reciprocate in border dispute talks,
Taiwan Journal, Taipei ,Nov. 28, 03.
11. Time for WHO to accept Taiwan,
Taiwan Journal, Taipei , July 25, 03.
9. Beijing flouts international norms,
Taiwan Journal, Taipei , July 4, 03.
10. North Korean nuclear weapons programme shows its disregard
for regional peace,
9
10. Taiwan Journal, Taipei , June 13, 03
11. SARS raises stakes on Taiwan’s WHO bid,
Taiwan Journal, Taipei, May 23, 2003.
12. Democracies must form security alliance,
Taiwan Journal, Taipei , May 9, 2003.
13. Chen moves to improve relations with Tibet,
Taiwan Journal, Taipei , Feb. 21, 03.
14. Taiwan-India trade ties have great potential,
Taiwan Journal, Taipei, Jan. 31, 2003.
( Also, “Denying credit to Taiwan” in a compilation of International Resolutions and
Media Reports, entitled “ Supporting Taiwan’s Bid to join the WHO,” Government
Information Office, Taiwan, November 2003 ( I Edition )
*********************
Other Articles
* Decrying Reforms For Political Ends,
National Herald, New Delhi, May 19,1995.
* Devil And His Due,
The Telegraph, Calcutta, Feb. 28,1995.
∗ Indian support For Kuwaiti PoWs Will Help To Boost Ties,
Financial Express, New Delhi, Feb. 22, 1995.
∗ A Bane of Two Republics,
National Herald, New Delhi, Feb. 23, 1995.
∗ International Terrorism : Ray of Hope In New American Approach,
Financial Express, New Delhi, Feb. 15, 1995.
∗ U.S. Foreign Policy Under Strains,
National Herald, New Delhi, Feb. 2, 1995.
∗ Pak commitment To UNA Farce,
National Herald, New Delhi, Jan 19, 1995.
∗ New U.S. Congress Will Have More Bark Than Bite,
Financial Express, New Delhi, Jan. 18, 1995.
∗ U.S. Administration Keeps Armament In Hiding,
National Herald, New Delhi, Jan 12, 1995.
∗ Human Rights : Condemn, Not Follow, West,
National Herald, New Delhi, Jan 5, 1995.
∗ Fault Lies Not In Reforms But In State-level Politics,
National Herald, New Delhi, December 29, 1994.
∗ India’s Image : Need to Arrest Wrong Signals,
National Herald, New Delhi, December 22, 1994.
∗ U.S. Need To Check Terrorism,
National Herald, New Delhi, December 15, 1994.
∗ Dilution in Indo-U.S. ties unlikely,
N.H, December 8, 1994.
∗ Need To Declare Pak A Terrorist State,
National Herald (International), New Delhi, Oct. 14-20, 1994.
∗ East Asia Economic Growth Eye-sore To West,
National Herald, August 11, 1994.
∗ Sanctions Against Iraq Must End,
National Herald, August 11, 1994.
10
11. ∗ Good Luck, Mr. Wisner,
National Herald, July 24, 1994.
∗ Kissinger : An Intellectual Force,
The Independent, Bombay, April 20, 1994.
∗ Need For Comprehensive Disarmament,
National Herald, April 18, 1994.
∗ U.P., Bihar : Shadow of Underworld Dons,
National Herald, April 18, 1994.
∗ Faring Well On Human Rights Count,
National Herald, March 10, 1994.
∗ Repression And Human Rights,
The Independent, Bombay, September 24, 1993.
∗ Indo-US Relations : Risks In Nuclear Ambiguity,
Financial Express, New Delhi, Aug. 8, 1993.
∗ India and Botswana : Scope For Mutually Beneficial Ties,
The Pioneer, New Delhi, June 21, 1993.
∗ Norodom Sihanouk : A Prince For All Seasons,
The Pioneer, New Delhi, June 9, 1993.
∗ Foreign Investment : The Lessons India Can Learn From China,
Financial Express, New Delhi, June 6, 1993.
∗ Towards Stronger Ties (Indo-Israeli Talks),
Financial Express, New Delhi, May 23, 1993.
∗ Saddamning A Nation,
Financial Express, New Delhi, May 16, 1993.
∗ Imbalances In India’s trade With Norway : An Interview With Norwegian
Ambassador Jon A Gaarder,
The Pioneer, New Delhi, April 12, 1993.
∗ No Reason To End Rapprochement (Indo-America),
The Independent, Bombay, January 21, 1993.
∗ India And Russia Will Continue To Be Friends,
The Independent, Bombay, January 13, 1993.
∗ Miles To Go Together (America & S. Korea),
The Independent, Bombay, December 29, 1992.
∗ Let India Learn A Hundred Lessons From China,
The Independent, Bombay, December 15, 1992.
∗ Emerging Consensus Between India And Greece : An interview with Greek
Ambassador Alaxander Philon,
The Pioneer, New Delhi, November 30, 1992.
∗ The Tunisian Evolution,
The Pioneer, New Delhi, November 23, 1992.
∗ India Must Exercise Nuclear Option,
The Pioneer, New Delhi, November 13, 1992.
∗ Ray Appointment Will Not Sour Ties,
The Independent, Bombay, November 5, 1992.
∗ Janas Savimbi : A Profile,
The Pioneer, New Delhi, September 30, 1992.
∗ Pentagon Under Eclipse,
11
12. Financial Express, New Delhi, July 16, 1992.
∗ Indo-Iraqi Ties Strong Enough : An interview with Iraqi Ambassador Dr. Abdul
Wadood El Shekhly,
The Pioneer, New Delhi, July 13, 1992.
∗ Sanctions Against India : Naivety of U.S. Leadership,
National Herald, New Delhi, June 30, 1992.
∗ Mutually Beneficial ties,
The Independent, Bombay, June 2, 1992.
∗ Indo-Sudanese relations are surprisingly strong,
The Pioneer, New Delhi, June 1, 1992.
∗ US Sanctions Diplomacy,
The Pioneer, New Delhi, May 30, 1992.
∗ Shadow of Fundamentalism,
The Independent, Bombay, May 5, 1992.
∗ Indo-UAE Ties moving from strength to strength,
The Pioneer, New Delhi, May 4, 1992.
∗ US Trade retaliation remote,
Financial Express, New Delhi, April 25, 1992.
∗ Integrate with World Economy or perish,
The Independent, Bombay, March 24, 1992.
∗ Can Bill Clinton Convince Middle America?
National Herald, Feb 16, 1992.
∗ US Presidential Election : Democratic Race,
Free Press, February 4, 1992.
∗ India in World Scenario,
Free Press, January 21, 1992.
∗ America and India : Bridging the Gulf,
Free Press, October 21, 1991.
∗ Greater Need for Non-alignment,
Free Press, November 4, 1991.
∗ New World Order Threat to Non-Alignment,
Free Press, August 9, 1991.
∗ Winds of change in Economy,
Free Press, July 27, 1991.
∗ Gorbachev’s G-7 Mission,
Free Press, July 20, 1991.
∗ India ‘s US Diplomacy Needs Change,
Free Press, July 6, 1991.
∗ India and America : In the Valley of Bonhomie,
Free Press, June 25, 1991.
∗ The Balancing Act of Gorbachev,
Free Press, May 26, 1991.
∗ Bush Theme in North America,
Free Press, May 8, 1991.
∗ Foggy Bottom Vs Pentagon’s Pakistan,
Free Press, May 1, 1991.
12
13. ∗ European Honey moon with a Federation,
Free Press, Indore, March 11, 1991.
∗ Nelson Mandela :A Judgement of History,
Free Press, Indore, March 11, 1991.
∗ The spectre of a Consumerist wave,
Free Press, Indore, October 3, 1990.
∗ Humanity in Peril,
Third Concept, New Delhi, Vol. 28, June 1989.
∗ Myth of Peace,
Third Concept, New Delhi, Vol 23, January 1989.
∗ Can Peace be Salvaged?
Sunday Herald, October 30, 1988.
∗ Mubarak treads cautiously,
Sunday Herald (National Herald), New Delhi and Lucknow,
May 1, 1988.
∗ A critique on cynicism,
Sunday Herald (National Herald), New Delhi and Lucknow, April
10, 1988.
∗ Nuclear Diplomacy,
Sunday Herald (National Herald), New Delhi and Lucknow,
Februrary 14, 1988.
∗ Benazir’s predicament : Still miles to go,
Sunday Herald (National Herald), New Delhi and Lucknow,
January 24, 1988.
∗ Pakistan in the Russian Calculus,
Caravan, New Delhi, November 1, 1987.
∗ The Indian Ocean Imbroglio,
The Indian Nation, September 5, 1987.
∗ Colonial complex in Fiji,
The Indian Nation, July 15, 1987.
∗ Doom of Zia,
Caravan, July (1), 1987.
∗ Defence Tangle,
The Indian Nation, June 23, 1987.
∗ Beijing’s India Strategy,
Caravan, New Delhi, June 11, 1987.
∗ Pak-Soviet rapprochement : constraints ahead,
The Indian Nation, April 24, 1987.
∗ Kremlin factor in Sino-India border dispute,
The Indian Nation, March 27, 1987.
∗ Revolution for democracy in China,
The Indian Nation, March 4, 1987.
∗ Need for grassroots movements,
The Indian Nation, January 6, 1987.
∗ Amid the Iceland blues,
The Indian Nation, November 26, 1986.
13
14. ∗ Gloom over Indian Ocean,
The Indian Nation, November 3, 1986.
∗ Lest civilisation may perish,
The Indian Nation, October 27, 1986.
∗ In defence of peace,
The Indian Nation, October 7, 1986.
∗ Autocrats then and now,
The Indian Nation, September 27, 1986.
∗ Mockery of Democracy,
The Indian Nation, September 5, 1986.
∗ Working for peace,
Sunday Herald, (National Herald), April 13, 1986.
∗ An era of indispensable bureaucracy I-II,
The Indian Nation, Patna, April 5 - July 21, 1985.
**************************
Book Reviews
∗ Constitutionalist Insurgency in Finland.
Steven Duncan Huxley, Soumen Historiallican Seure (Finish Historical Society),
Helsinki, 1990, pp 284. ……….Review in the Gandhi Marg, Vol. 14, No. 3, Dt.
Dec. 1992.
∗ Indian Ocean and Asian Security : Yugeni Rumyantsev, Allied Publishers, New
Delhi, 1989.
-Review in Sunday Herald, May 7, 1989.
∗ The Philosophy of New Thinking by Nikobai Nikolsky; Disarmament For
Development, Edited by Ivan Kovalenko and Rais Touzmahammadov; and Global
Problems of Civilisation by Ivan Frolov, Allied Publishers, New Delhi, 1989.
-Review in Sunday Herald, New Delhi, April 22, 1990.
∗ Benazir’s Pakistan, Edited by M.D. Dharamdasani, Shalimar Publishing House,
Varanasi, 1989.
-Review in Sunday Herald, New Delhi, July 30, 1989.
∗ Southern Asia - Pacific : A Region of Turbulence
Edited by M. Rasgotra, V.D. Chopra and K.P. Mishra, Continental Publishing
House, New Delhi, 1988.
A trilogy - Reviews published in Sunday Herald, New Delhi December 11,
1988, April 23, 1989 and July 9, 1989.
∗ Democratic Telethon. Studies in Jamahiriya System.
Zaheer M. Quraishi and Meeraj Quraisni,
Aktar Publishers, New Delhi 1989. -Review published in Third World
Impact, New Delhi, Vol 1, January 1990.
****************
Edits in National Herald :
1. No to NPT, May 22, 1995..
2. Vetoing peace, May 23, 1995.
3. Problems for Buddhists, May 27, 1995.
4. Naxals in Bihar, May 29, 1995
5. Regrettable delay, June 1, 1995
6. Ineffective embargo June 3, 1995
14
15. 7. CPM debacle, June 5, 1995
8. Nuclear hypocrisy June 10, 1995
9. Democracy a far cry, June 15, 1995.
10. Belated step, June 17, 1995
11. Deal likely, June 19, 1995
12. Boost to Yeltsin, June 21, 1995.
13. Sino-US row, June 23, 1995
14. A pre-emptive move, June 24, 1995
15. Indo-Bangladesh talks, June 28, 1995
16. Dastardly attempt, June 29, 1995
17. Violence in Karachi June 30, 1995
18. US-Japan auto deal July 4 , 1995
19. Major’s triumph July 6 , 1995
20. Rural uplift July 11 , 1995
21. Suu Kyi’s release July 12 , 1995
22. Reconciliation at last July 14 , 1995
23. Sino-German deal July 18, 1995
24. Heed Pressler July 20, 1995
25. India - S. Africa ties , July 21 , 1995
26. Thai coalition July 24, 1995
27. Koel Karo project, July 25 , 1995
28. OECD looks east , July 27, 1995
29. Attend to Infrastructure, July 28 , 1995
30. DD-CNN tie-up , July 31 , 1995
31. Balkan imbroglio, August 2, 1995.
32. New ASEAN member, August 3, 1995.
33. G. Parthasarathy, August 4, 1995.
34. Bihar’s industrial scene, August 7, 1995.
35. China’s defence, August 9, 1995.
36. West Asia moves, August 12, 1995.
37. Clinton’s Nuclear move, August 15, 1995.
38. A firm resolve, August 17, 1995.
39. Blinkered perspective, August 22, 1995.
40. Historic accord, August 23, 1995.
41. Words of wisdom, August 24, 1995.
42. A wavering Tokyo, August 26, 1995.
43. Algeria’s politics, August 29, 1995.
44. Kuwaiti POWs, August 30, 1995.
45. Privatising varsities, August 31, 1995.
46. NATO Strikes-September, September 4, 1995
47. Bejing’s discomfiture, September 7, 1995
48. Bihar civic polls, September 7, 1995
49. Hardened Stance, September 11, 1995
50. Shuttle diplomacy, September 15, 1995
51. Women’s rights, September 18, 1995
52. Nuclear hegemony, September 20, 1995
53. Primary education, September 23, 1995
54. Taba Accord, September 26, 1995
55. B.J.P’S problems, September 29, 1995
56. Mine disaster, October 6, 1995
57. Quicker justice, October 11, 1995
15
16. 58. Elusive truce, October 12, 1995
59. Be constructive, October 16, 1995
60. PHD chamber move on literacy welcome, October 19, 1995
61. High-handed tactics of customs will not do, October 23, 1995
62. US must heed Russia on Balkans peace, October 26, 1995
63. Irritants wont hurt Japan-US relations, October 28, 1995 .
64. Miles to go for EV monetary unification, November 1, 1995.
65. Islamic fundamentalism, flawed U.S. policy, November 4, 1995.
66. Investment agreement to boost Indo-Dutch ties, November 13, 1995.
67. The shame of Nigeria’s military rulers, November 14, 1995.
68. France must think afresh on deal with Pakistan, November 17, 1995.
69. Qiao shi’s visit augurs well for India, China, November 20, 1995.
70. APEC plan for trade, investment on track, November 24, 1995.
71. Syria should respond to Peres initiative, November 28, 1995.
72. Indian investors must respond to Namibia call, November 29, 1995.
73. Uncertainty over poll outcome in Russia, December 2, 1995.
74. Economic initiatives impress top banker, December 4, 1995.
75. UNIDO needs support not pulling down, December 6, 1995.
76. Firmer EU stance on Nigeria needed, December 7, 1995.
77. Concert of North gaining appeal, December 8, 1995.
78. Chinese reservations on ASEAN nuclear treaty, December 112, 1995.
79. Double standards of the nuclear haves, December 14, 1995.
80. Bosnian war is over peace irritants remain, December 16, 1995.
81. ASEAM accords India higher dialogue status, December 20, 1995.
82. Kabul’s troubles due to external interference, December 25, 1995.
83. G-7 Stand should not mar India-Canada ties, December 30, 1995.
84. India-Singapore ties poised for growth, January 6, 1996.
85. U.S. must heed Russia on Nato expansion, January 9, 1996.
86. A towering personality passes away, January 10, 1996.
87. Lame excuse for Pak nuclear programme, January 13, 1996.
88. New deal gives Kabul a respite, January 16, 1996.
89. Government has right educational priorities, January 18, 1996.
90. Stage set for boost in Indo-Thai ties, January 20, 1996.
91. A victory for Arafat and democracy, January 23, 1996.
92. U.S. digs up a cold war truth, January 26, 1996.
93. E.U. should know India is part of Asia, January 29, 1996.
94. A fitting choice for Gandhi peace prize, January 30, 1996.
95. Indo-Israel trade ties talking shape, February 1, 1996.
96. C.T.B.T. has to be linked with disarmament, February 5, 1996.
97. U.S. likely to condone Pak-China nuclear ties, February 8, 1996.
98. Cut in nuclear arms not in sight, February 10, 1996.
99. China gets Russian fighter technology, February 13, 1996.
100. Yet another bid by US & Japan to sort out issues, February 15, 1996.
101. Algerian militants on a negative course, February 19, 1996.
102. Tension over Chinese posture on Taiwan, February 21, 1996.
103. Double standards in U.S. N-diplomacy, February 24, 1996.
104. U.S. must heed India’s C.T.B.T. proposals, February 26, 1996.
105. WTO augurs well for trade disputes, March 1, 1996
106. U.N. financial crisis may render it vain, March 4, 1996
107. Brinkmanship in Taiwan strait, March 14 1996
108. Africa Initiative needs support, March 20, 1996
16
17. 109. UN gives due importance to human rights, March 25, 1996
110. Successful Taiwan polls should end tension, March 26, 1996.
111. Nuclear proliferation no concern for haves, April 1, 1996.
112. Not many backers for Pak move on Kashmir, April 3, 1996.
113. Primakov visit promotes Indo-Russian ties, April 4, 1996.
114. Many hurdles on way to European integration, April 8, 1996.
115. Reunification trends in CIS states, April 9, 1996.
116. M.P. Congressmen should face polls together , April 11, 1996.
117. A respite from violence for Karachi, April 13, 1996.
118. Italian coalition offers an opportunity, challenge, April 25, 1996.
119. Bihar poll violence needs close watch, April 29, 1996.
120. Making money out of deadly land mines, May 3, 1996.
121. Trivialities stall South African constitution, May 6, 1996.
122. Kashmir is not a religious issue, May 8, 1996.
123. Nuclear double standards will continue, May 11, 1996.
124. Secular parties should cooperate to stall BJP, May 13, 1996.
125. Cautious stand needed on Asian defence issues, May 18, 1996.
126. OIC members ignore Kashmir realities ,May 22, 1996.
127. Ramos recognises India’s regional potential, May 27, 1996.
128. Nuclear superiority not the way to disarmament, May 28, 1996.
129. U.S.-China shadow boxing over IPR, June 1, 1996.
130. Get Irish peace talks going, June 5, 1996.
131. Clinton wants Bosnian mission to succeed, June 7, 1996.
132. Secular parties face challenge in Turkey, June 12, 1996.
133. WTO move for trade-labour linkage must be resisted, June 14, 1996.
134. India can’t ignore Pak missile threat, June 15, 1996.
135. Yeltsin wins as expected promises new era, July 6, 1996.
136. Afghan peace prospects still hazy, July 9, 1996.
137. Stress on trade in Bonn’s diplomacy, July 11, 1996.
138. India must say no to CTBT draft, July 16, 1996.
139. World court verdict snits nuclear haves, July 19, 1996.
140. U.S. concern over security of troops in Gulf, July 23, 1996.
141. U.N. security Council has to be more broad-based, July 25, 1996.
142. U.S. should not ignore beam in its eye, July 29, 1996.
143. India cannot accept an unfair CTBT draft, July 31, 1996.
144. Compulsions, complications in catching Karadzic, August 6, 1996.
145. Indo-Nepal ties get a boost, August 12, 1996.
146. Serbian, Croat leaders can help Bosnia, August 14, 1996.
147. Of modern imperatives and national freedom, August 15, 1996.
148. A difficult agenda for Erbakan, August 17, 1996.
149. Still some way to go for Chechen peace, August 21, 1996.
150. Indo-U.S. cooperation in energy continues, August 23, 1996.
151. Working of WTO should be transparent, August 28, 1996.
152. Indo-UK ties on firm footing, August 31, 1996.
153. Removing irritants in Sino-Australia ties, September 5, 1996.
154. Plug the porous borders of North-east, September 9, 1996.
155. India’s principled stand has little support in U.N. , September 12, 1996.
156. Useful Indo-U.S. talks on bilateral ties, September 14, 1996.
157. A positive trend in Indo-Bangla ties, September 18, 1996.
158. U.S. moves in Iraq cause concern, September 28, 1996.
159. Socialists promise better days for Greeks, October 1, 1996.
17
18. 160. Mongolia sets out on a new path, October 4, 1996.
161. Trade interests pit Europe against U.S. , October 7, 1996.
162. Savimbi must adopt a helpful stance, October 9, 1996.
163. Round two may see Dole gunning for Clinton, October 17, 1996.
164. Unenviable task ahead for B’desh President, October 18, 1996.
165. Instability factor in India’s failure at U.N. , October 23, 1996.
166. Kurds must find a way amongst themselves, October 24, 1996.
167. Indo-Russia ties: plenty scope for improvement, October 26, 1996.
168. Central Asia calls for more attention, October 29, 1996.
169. A fruitful round of Indo-German talks, October 30, 1996.
170. Indo-US defence ties on firm lines, October 31, 1996.
171. A timely assurance on arms supply, November 4, 1996.
172. Indian ocean economic community desirable, November 8 1996.
173. India, France must exploits potential for co-operation, November 12, 1996.
174. Hopefully Pak has will to act outs talks offer, November 14, 1996.
175. Neighbours move closer to solve an old dispute, November 16, 1996.
176. ECS comments on bogus parties need attention, November 21, 1996.
177. Let UN General Assembly decide Ghali issue, November 22, 1996.
178. Economic ties dominate Sino-US relations, November 27, 1996.
179. India gaining support for entry into APEC, November 30, 1996.
180. Jiang’s visit opens a new era in India-Chinese ties, December 3, 1996.
181. A good successor to Dr. Boutros Ghali , December 17, 1996.
182. European Union moves ahead, December 19, 1996.
183. US more critical of Israeli policies, December 21, 1996.
184. Need to boost public sector reform, December 25, 1996.
185. Deuba Ministry gets a reprieve, December 27, 1996.
186. Noting to worry about airpower, December 30, 1996.
187. Pak poll scene far from bright, January 1, 1997.
188. Confusion over Agni needs to be removed, January 6, 1997.
189. Negative US report on India’s N-programme, January 7, 1997.
190. Extending the Indo-UK extradition treaty, January 8, 1997.
191. Navy needs something more than two submarines, January 11, 1997.
192. WTO ruling on textiles has been fair, January 14, 1997.
193. Clearing the hurdles to Nato expansion, January 16, 1997.
194. Turkey-Greece tensions pose threat to peace, January 17, 1997.
195. Another hitch cleared for W Asian peace, January 18, 1997.
196. Europe should shed bias against migrant labour, January 22, 1997.
197. Clinton starts second term with hope, January 25, 1997.
198. Crisis in Great Lakes nearer solution, January 29, 1997.
199. Germany must see India’s compulsions, January 30, 1997.
200. U.N. chief should not be subservient to US, February 3, 1997.
201. Light Combat Aircraft is in sight at least, February 13, 1997.
202. Chemical disarmament still in a limbo, February 17, 1997.
203. US overlooks its own human rights record, February 18, 1997.
204. India must resist more nuclear arm-twisting, February 21, 1997.
205. Oil price issue needs deft handling, February 24, 1997.
206. Irritants mar EV consolidation moves, March 1, 1997.
207. Good move by S. Africa to ban landmines, March 5, 1997.
208. Indian Ocean forum augurs well for the region, March 10, 1997.
209. Bangladesh democracy faces a challenge, March 12, 1997.
210. Yeltsin administers shock therapy, March 14, 1997.
18
19. 211. Mood for Indo-Pak talks upbeat, March 17 , 1997.
212. Bihar’s law and order needs firm handing, March 20, 1997.
213. India way down in defence spending, March 21, 1997.
214. Problem of compliance with WTO rules, March 26, 1997.
215. Close ties with Russia bilateral in nature, March 29, 1997.
216. IT agreement will help India’s economy, March 31, 1997.
217. Japan has to do more to placate China, April 3, 1997.
218. South Asia syb-group is a constructive step, April 8, 1997.
219. India and Egypt must boost ties with Iran, April 13, 1997.
220. Europe in dilemma over ties with Iran, April 15, 1997.
221. Russia-Belarus union good for both, April 16, 1997.
222. Cuban issue continues to irritate US-EU ties, April 22, 1997.
223. UN mandate on Albania is week, April 23, 1997.
224. Myanmar should heed pro-democracy voices, April 25, 1997.
225. Government’s reassuring commitment to reforms, April 26, 1997.
226. Japanese trade pressure is unjustified, April 29, 1997.
227. Problems crop up in wheat procurement, April 30, 1997.
228. Sustainable development a far cry, May 1, 1997.
229. Chakma repatriation removes an irritant, May 3, 1997.
230. U.S. Japan ties make headway, May 6, 1997.
231. World Banks laudable debt-relief moves, May 8, 1997.
232. Weizman-Arafat talks remove an irritant, May 10, 1997.
233. Russia too hardly for disarmament, May 11, 1997.
234. Kashmiri Pandits deserve a better deal, May 13, 1997.
235. Centre-Right protest in Italy over policies, May 14, 1997.
236. Cohen’s defence agenda may face problems, May 16, 1997.
237. SAARC declaration a positive step, May 17, 1997.
238. Problems mar prospects of Indo-Russian trade, May 20, 1997.
239. US bid to develop new nuclear weapons, May 21, 1997.
240. Kabila must avoid the Mobutu path, May 22, 1997.
241. PM should note CAG’s rebuke of MEA, May 23, 1997.
242. Primacy of commerce guides US-China ties, May 26, 1997.
243. Warning of Major quakes in North-east region, May 28, 1997.
244. Challenges before new Iranian President, May 29, 1997.
245. Need to redefine growth pattern, May 30, 1997.
246. Imperatives of ban on land mines, May 31, 1997.
247. Need to revitalise Russian Army, June 3, 1997.
248. Fleet accord to boost Russia-Ukraine ties, June 4, 1997.
249. Mubarak must push the stalled peace process, June 5, 1997.
250. Liberals manage to win Canadian polls, June 9, 1997.
251. Indo-Pak hotline appositive step, June 12, 1997.
252. Retain subsidies for social sector, June 21, 1997.
253. M.P. makes strides in social welfare, June 23, 1997.
254. Denver package deals with hardy perennials, June 24, 1997.
255. Leaders should arrest drift in Cambodia, June 26, 1997.
256. US should practise, not preach on environment, June 27, 1997.
257. Focus on better aid utilisation, June 30, 1997.
258. Hong Kong retains its system as part of China, July 1, 1997.
259. Chemical Weapons pact augurs well for peace, July 2, 1997.
260. India must resist pressures at WTO, July 3, 1997.
261. Reassurance needed on Russian arms, July 4, 1997.
19
20. 262. Naxal movement in M.P. needs attention, July 7, 1997.
263. Yeltsin cannot ignore armed forces for long, July 8, 1997.
264. Assess the missile threat objectively, July 14, 1997.
265. Indo-Japanese agreement a positive move, July 16, 1997.
266. Problems in Beijing’s Taiwan agenda, July 18, 1997.
267. Enforce law on forest in letter and spirit, July 23, 1997.
268. Russia at losing end in trade with EU, July 25, 1997.
269. US proposal on UN Council positive, July 30, 1997.
270. India fully merits APEC membership, July 31, 1997.
271. Tokyo and Moscow reach out to each other, August 2, 1997.
272. Arrangement to boost Indo-Japanese ties, August 5, 1997.
273. High-tech areas in ambit of ties with Hanoi, August 7, 1997.
274. Move forward to solve border dispute, August 9, 1997.
275. Iran must refrain from offending Germany, August 11, 1997.
276. It isn’t smooth sailing yet for Hun Sen, August 13, 1997.
277. A new cold war in Central Asia? , August 15, 1997.
278. Hiccups should not derail the initiative, August 18, 1997.
279. Paying lip service to disarmament as usual, August 20, 1997.
280. Indo-Nepal ties get a further boost, August 21 , 1997.
281. Muted reaction to US moves on Tibet, August 23, 1997.
282. Kenya’s task of ensuring credibility of polls, August 28, 1997.
283. Pak must put an end to India-bashing, August 30, 1997.
284. Non-proliferation of missiles a far cry, September 1, 1997.
285. Russia keeps India’s defence needs in mind, September 2, 1997.
286. New challenges before Thai government, September 4, 1997.
287. Beijing says ‘no’ to US mediation on Tibet, September 5, 1997.
288. India should document its knowledge on herbs, September 6, 1997.
289. Promoting commercial ties with France, September 8, 1997.
290. Sino-Japanese ties getting better, September 10, 1997.
291. US must fully support ban on land mines, September 13, 1997.
292. Beijing should stick to promises on H.K. , September 16, 1997.
293. Developing Nations must heed UNCTAD counsel, September 19, 1997.
294. US groups backs India’s bid for council seat, September 20, 1997.
295. Jiang sticks to Deng’s politics and economics, September 24, 1997.
296. Sharif should give up anti India rhetoric, September 25, 1997.
297. Significant break through in Irish peace talks, September 27, 1997.
298. Annan-proposed reforms need to be supported, September 29, 1997.
299. Danube dams issue still to be settled , October 1, 1997.
300. A step forward in stalled peace process, October 2, 1997.
301. India committed to ‘Atom for peace’, October 6, 1997.
302. Europe, US divided over NATO expansion, October 9, 1997.
303. Corporate views shape Sino-US ties, October 12 , 1997.
304. Indo-Egyptian ties on firm footing, October 14 , 1997.
305. US sees Harkat in its true colours, October 15 , 1997.
306. Japan now inclined to ban landmines, October 18, 1997.
307. Another African nation falls to rebels, October 20, 1997
308. Major breakthrough in Russo Japanese relations, November 7, 1997.
309. Sooner the Iraqi crisis is defused, the better, November 9, 1997..
310.US uniquely to stop n-exports, November 10, 1997..
310. Denial regime in focus at four nation summit, November 11, 1997.
311.Sino-Russian pact not against other nations, November 12, 1997..
20
21. 312New US programme goes against arms control. , November 13, 1997.
313.Focus on disarmament in the seas, November 17, 1997.
314Annan must be tough on UN arrears, November 18, 1997..
315.Suitcase bombs a threat to world community, November 19, 1997..
316.Nuclear have not sincere to disarmament, November 21, 1997..
317.Grim job scenario hurts European Union. , November 22, 1997.
318 Will US gunboat diplomacy work ? , November 24, 1997.
319 US must move stalled peace process, November 25, 1997..
320. United Command doing well in Assam, November 27, 1997..
321. Budgetary cuts may hit UNIDO mission, November 28 , 1997..
322.APEC should grapple with stark realities, December 1, 1997.
323.SAARC moves to end child labour , December 2, 1997.
324.killers should not go unpunished. , December 4, 1997.
325.Iraq’s oil-for- food plan must get a boost. , December 5, 1997.
326.Sharif should further democracy. , December 6, 1997.
327.Ottawa convention is historic indeed. , December 8, 1997.
328.Mossad may have halted peace process. , December 9, 1997.
329.ASEAN under pressure on Myanmmar. , December 11, 1997.
330.OIC a hostage to hard-liners’s agenda. , December 12, 1997.
331.US not to dismantle nuclear weapons. , December 13, 1997.
332.Major breakthrough eludes Kyoto summit. , December 15, 1997.
333.US must take care of its children too. , December 16 , 1997.
334.US hobnobbing with the Taliben to affect peace. , December 17, 1997.
335.India and China must boost ties further. , December 18, 1997.
336.Mandela’s successor has tough tasks ahead. , December 19, 1997.
337.Solution to Saharwi problem in sight. , December 20, 1997.
338.US troops to Bosnia won’t leave early. , December 22, 1997.
339. Hard tasks before new Korean President. , December 23, 1997.
340. doubts over Russian reactor must be ended, December 24, 1997.
341.Pak claim on economy is far from convincing. , December 25, 1997.
342.India must not sign the FMCT, December 27, 1997..
343.Peace remains elusive in Angola. , December 29, 1997.
344.UN must encase new trends in Afghanistan, December 30, 1997.
345 Kaunda’s detention a shameful act, January 1, 1998.
346. US-Iran may try to build bridges, January 2, 1998. .
347.Need to boost India’s economic image, January 14, 1998.
348.World needs a criminal court which delivers, January 15, 1998.
349.Israeli moves obstruct peace process, January 16, 1998.
350. Of hegemony and the United States, January 17, 1998..
351Towards free trade in South Asia by 2001, January 19, 1998..
352. Need for caution on SAIL’s layoff plan, January 20, 1998..
353.Bhutan’s stance on Dorji embarrassing for India, January 21, 1998.
354.EU in dilemma over exodus of Kurds, January 22, 1998.
355. New start to Irish peace talks, January 23, 1998.
356.US must not act alone in Gulf, January 24, 1998.
357.Clinton may be in deep trouble now, January 26, 1998.
358. A forward move in Indo-French ties, January 28, 1998.
359. Significant guidelines on human cloning, January 30, 1998.
360.Expose killers and political links in J&K, February 2, 1998.
361.WB focus on poverty reduction for India, February 3, 1998.
362.Lankan Tamils reject UNP proposals, February 4, 1998..
21
22. 363.Pak should not deviate from path of dialogue, February 5, 1998..
364.US should seek diplomatic way-out, February 6, 1998..
365.Efforts on in improving Sino-Japanese ties, February 9, 1998..
366.Pak’s not too happy a human rights record, February 11, 1998..
367. Congress for improved Indo-US ties, February 12, 1998..
368. Decline in Sharif’s popularity ratings, February 16, 1998..
369.BJP’s new approach to nuclear option, February 18, 1998..
370.Chakma accord is well on track, February 20, 1998.
371.Kofi Annan’s visit raises hopes, February 21, 1998..
372. WTO should pull up North on new barriers, February 23, 1998..
373.Sharif in China: little to write about home, February 25, 1998.
374 Let UN deal in Gulf prevail, February 27, 1998..
375.Major setback for Nawaz Sharif, February 28, 1998.
376.What about big powers’ weapons of destruction, March 2, 1998..
377.Washington must give diplomacy a chance, March 3, 1998.
378.Developing countries say no to US proposal, March 5, 1998.
379.Clinton’s IMF package runs into rough weather, March 6, 1998.
380. IMF must appreciate Jakarta’s compulsions, March 7, 1998.
381.Chinese economy sound, yet many gaps around, March 12, 1998.
382.Difficult time ahead for Suharto, March 13, 1998.
383.Indo-Russian arms deal runs into trouble, March 17, 1998..
384.India -China oil pact mutually beneficial, March 20, 1998.
385. US should heed Annan’s appeal on UN arrears, March 21, 1998..
386.Zhu Rongji has delicate task ahead, March 24, 1998. .
387.Child Labour a scar on country’s face, March 26, 1998.
388.International Criminal Court in the making, March 27, 1998.
389.Tough time ahead for Russia, March 28, 1998.
390.Re-thinking in UK on welfare state, March 31, 1998.
391. Need to boost FDI in telecom sector, April 1, 1998.
392. India, Pak could try trade to break the ice, April 2, 1998.
393. G-15 should get its act together before Geneva, April 3, 1998.
394.Export front needs urgent attention, April 4, 1998.
395. Food Aid to North Korea should be stepped up, April 10, 1998.
396. Bangkok meet lays stress on social sector, April 14, 1998.
397. Hopefully, the Stormont agreement should hold, April 15, 1998.
398. Indo-US ties on promising track, April 16, 1998.
399. US economy needs skilled foreign labour, April 17, 1998.
400. Constant vigil needed on defence front, April 20, 1998.
401 Crisis brewing in Russian government, April 22, 1998
402 Security policy should cover all borders, April 23, 1998
403 USA’s basmati would be like India’s champagne, April 24, 1998
404 Clinton’s IMF package runs into rough weather, April 25, 1998
405 NPT panel must work for total disarmament, April 27, 1998 .
406 Spirit of cooperation marks Dhaka summit, April 30, 1998 .
407 Time for Afghan leaders to sort out differences, May 4, 1998.
408 President’s visits will warm up ties with Peru, May 5, 1998.
409 Missile non-proliferation in Asia a far cry, May 6, 1998.
410 US decision not in tune with WTO, May 7, 1998.
411 LTTE promise to UN on children’s rights, May 12, 1998.
412 Unenviable plight of Pak minorities, May 14, 1998.
413 Sierra Leone draws Britain’s attention, May 15, 1998.
22
23. 414 Sanctions will have limited impact on WB financing, May 19, 1998.
415 UN should not side track nuclear disarmament, June 9, 1998.
416. Pakistan will do well to talk to India, June 10, 1998.
417. shocking disclosure on US use of nerve gas, June 11, 1998.
418. Dublin initiative mirrors India’s view point, June 12, 1998.
419. Strong checks needed on rough money laundering, June 13, 1998.
420. Start of cold war against India, June 15, 1998.
421. Thatcher-Tutored Blair will be aggressive in EU, June 17, 1998.
422. Sheikh Hasina’s visit timely and useful, June 18, 1998.
423. Limited scope for arms purchase from Ukraine, June 22, 1998.
424. Another instance of treaty violation by the west, June 23, 1998.
425. A tough UN mission awaits Holbrooke, June 24, 1998.
426. Moody’s credit rating lacks credibility, June 26, 1998.
427. India China Pakistan meet on nuclear issue desirable, June 27, 1998.
428. American indifference to India’s security concerns, June 29, 1998.
429. A report too serious to be ignored, June 30, 1998.
430. Yeltsin continues to have his problems, July 1, 1998.
431. Indo-Belgium trade ties on the upswing, July 2, 1998.
432. Political parties should heed FICCI’s call, July 4, 1998.
433. Welcome moves to dilute American sanctions, July 6, 1998.
434. France set to do business with India, July 7, 1998.
435. Cook spoiling relations with India, July 8, 1998.
436. World Bank has displayed professional credentials, July 9, 1998.
437. Imperatives of revamping national security council, July 13, 1998.
438. Up-gradation of Virat vital for maritime security, July 14, 1998.
439. NATO-Ukraine ties must not ignore Russian views, July 15, 1998.
440. A rough patch in US nuclear deal with North Korea, July 16, 1998.
441. Almaty summit promotes regional cooperation, July 17, 1998.
442. Pak stance on CTBT linked to economic mess, July 18, 1998.
443. Primacy of commerce dictates US sanctions policy, July 20, 1998.
444. Dealing with crimes against humanity, July 23, 1998.
445. Allowing market to move exchange rates, July 25, 1998.
446. Iran’s missile plan under keen watch, July 27, 1998.
447. Obuchi’s turn to revive Japan’s economy, July 29, 1998.
448. US government realising the futility of sanctions, July 30, 1998.
449. A good move by India to enhance SAARC trade ,August 1, 1998.
450. Myanmar should heed the voice of democracy, August 3, 1998.
451. A positive development in war torn Sudan, August 4, 1998.
452. EU move goes against spirit of free trade, August 5, 1998.
453. Shimla pact offers best solution, August 6, 1998.
454. New tension in Gulf can be avoided, August 7, 1998.
455. Armed forces should get a fair deal, August 10, 1998.
456. New challenges stare Arafat in face, August 11, 1998.
457. US being made to pay for its flawed policies, August 12, 1998.
458. UN moves to bridge gaps in education, August 13, 1998.
459. World bank’s estimates on India are realistic, August 14, 1998.
460. Hurdles in foreign investment must go, August 18, 1998.
461. Taliban must heed Moscow’s warning, August 20, 1998.
462. US agency floats a cock and bull story, August 21, 1998.
463. A Welcome move on patents cooperation, August 22, 1998.
464. New forum to promote free trade in Asia, August 25, 1998.
23
24. 465. World bank sees merit in public sector, August 26, 1998.
466. Pak fundamentalism also getting exposed, August 27, 1998.
467. African leaders should help solve Congo crisis, August 28, 1998.
468. End to sanctions against Libya in sight, August 31, 1998.
469. Yeltsin offers concessions to Duma for consensus , September 1, 1998.
470. Big powers preaching peace selling arms, September 2, 1998.
471. nuclear disarmament has not lost validity, September 3, 1998.
472. North Korean missile test causes concern, September 7, 1998.
473. Trouble ahead for Nawaj Shariff, September 8, 1998.
474. Indirect US support to human rights violations, September 9, 1998.
475. Kofi Annan looks west while chastising east, September 10, 1998.
476. Germany more appreciative of India’s position now, September 12, 1998.
477. Forging understanding on nuclear issue, September 14, 1998.
478. LCA project makes slow and steady progress, September 15, 1998.
479. Turning a blind eye to Pak’s nuclear build-up, September 16, 1998.
480. Clear message to Taliban by UN security council, September 17, 1998.
481. Developing defence against modern weapons, September 18, 1998.
482. North consumption at the cost of south, September 21, 1998.
483. Product patents not against India’s interest, September 23, 1998.
484. Doctor Kalaam’s suggestion deserves examination, September 24, 1998.
485. India for no first use of nukes, September 25, 1998.
486. Growing consciousness over environment, September 26, 1998.
487. World Bank must not toe US line , September 28, 1998.
488. IMF appreciates India’s path, September 30, 1998.
489. Don’t take chances with Rushdie’s security , October 1, 1998.
490. Nations inching towards total ban on landmines, October 5, 1998.
491. US would do well to ease sanctions, October 7, 1998.
492. Realistic step to boost Indo-EU trade, October 8, 1998.
493. UK ministers should avoid anti-India utterances, October 12, 1998.
494. US should look into its own human rights record, October 13, 1998.
495. A turn for the better in Kosovo, October 15, 1998.
496. Amartya Sen does the country proud, October 16, 1998.
497. Concerted campaign needed to fight AIDS menace, October 17, 1998.
498. Coordination needed to combat drug menace, October 19, 1998.
499. China and Taiwan talk to each other, October 21, 1998.
500. Pinochet arrest questions his diplomatic immunity, October 22, 1998.
501. There should be no let up in missile development, October 23, 1998.
502. New Italian government may impart greater stability, October 24, 1998.
503. UN guidelines to help eradicate child labour, October 26, 1998.
504. Revival of naval group good for Indo-US ties, October 27, 1998.
505. Nuclear disarmament ; P5 should demonstrate sincerity, October 28, 1998.
506. No room for compromise on security concerns, October 29, 1998.
507. Criticism of Dalai-Vajpayee meet not justified, October 309, 1998.
508. Indo-French strategic dialogue timely, October 31, 1998.
509. US senate passes bill to topple Saddam, November 2, 1998.
510. Third world seeks equity on environment, November 3, 1998.
511. Thawing the chill in India-China relations, November 4, 1998.
512. APEC meet turns out to be a damp squib, November 23, 1998.
513. Clinton’s Japan policy guided by trade, November 24, 1998.
514. Confusion over Talbott, Jaswant parleys, November 25, 1998.
515. Tough decisions needed to protect environment, November 27, 1998.
24
25. 516. China need not sing the US nuclear song, November 28, 1998.
517. Sure and steady, Euro is on its way, November 30, 1998.
518. Time to end P5 monopoly in the United Nations , December 2, 1998.
519. Appoint a full-fledged foreign minister , December 3, 1998.
520. Give the services their due , December 4, 1998.
521. Road to Myanmmar will help border security , December 5, 1998.
522. Power pact in mutual interest of India, Pak , December 7, 1998.
523. Still miles to go for European defence force , December 8, 1998.
524. UN disarmament call reflects India’s view , December 9, 1998.
525. Needless obstacles mar West Asian Peace , December 10, 1998.
526. Is America mending fences with Iran , December 11, 1998.
527. Appreciable progress in Missile defence , December 15, 1998.
528. US nuclear agenda ignores Indian interest , December 16, 1998.
529. Army has its role in China’s diplomacy , December 17, 1998.
530. Asean gains further momentum , December 18, 1998.
531. WB report strengthens India’s case on imports , December 21, 1998.
532. Impeached president sticks to his gun , December 22, 1998.
533. Initiatives to strengthen ties with Russia , December 23, 1998.
534. Neither Dalai Lama nor Beijing appears serious , December 28, 1998.
535. Whipping up anti-India feelings will not help , January 4, 1999.
536. US turns blind eye to China’s arms development, January 5, 1999.
537. Solution to Y2K problem in sight, January 6, 1999.
538. Putting satellites to military use necessary, January 7, 1999.
539. Will Clinton ignore the new report on China, January 11, 1999.
540. Mahathir’s next challenge in the coming polls, January 13, 1999.
541. Clinton needs to set right foreign policy record, January 14, 1999.
542. Services should more say in defence policy, January 16, 1999.
543. US has a warped policy on non-proliferation, January 18, 1999.
544. A useful acquisition for Indian army, January 19, 1999.
545. Unreasonable US stance on hi-tech transfer, January 21, 1999.
546. More evidence of Sino-Pak nuclear tie up, January 22, 1999.
547. Clinton’s foreign policy claims off the mark, January 23, 1999.
548. Sense of realism dawns on US policy makers, January 25, 1999.
549. Israeli premiere queering West Asian peace pitch, January 26, 1999.
550. Missile programme must continue, January 28, 1999.
551. Strains in US Russian ties remain intact, January 29, 1999.
552. US missile defence has many hurdles to cross, January 30, 1999.
553. Start-II still facing rough weather , February 1, 1999.
554. India may look to Russia for AWACS, February 2 1999.
555. ADS project likely to beep up Indian Navy, February 3 1999.
556. China’s protest against n-dialogue untenable, February 4 1999.
557. Russia - Finland ties on the upswing , February 5, 1999.
558. Sino-US strategic axis ; a new insight, February 6, 1999.
559. Joint US Russia missile defence plan mooted, February 8, 1999.
560. Japan would do well to understand India, February 10,1999.
561. India can not define its minimum n-deterrence, February 12,1999.
562. Don’t neglect conventional defence need, February 13, 1999
563. Chinese missile cause further scare in East Asia, February 15,1999.
564. US may veer around to easing sanctions, February 17, 1999.
565. Sunderji’s strategic vision needs to be followed, February18,1999.
566. G-15 summit fails to tackle problems, February19,1999.
25
26. 567. Contact group should not ride rough shod over Serbia, February20,1999.
568. US supplying weapons to non-democratic governments, February22,1999.
569. Iraq should mend fences with neighbour, February27, 1999.
570. US must heed Russia plea for aid on Y2K , March 5, 1999.
571. India-Myanmmar ties need to be strengthened , March 8, 1999.
572. Strains surface in Sino-American ties, April 9, 1999.
573. Clinton’s Softness towards China annoys critics, April 10,1999.
574. Agni test in tune with credible nuclear deterrence policy, April12, 1999.
575. Pakistani equating itself with India not realistic, April13, 1999.
576. NATO approach to Balkans conflict faulty, April14, 1999.
577. China steps up export to improve economy, April15, 1999.
578. Missile test should not affect Indo-Pak ties, April16, 1999.
579. Akayev visit boosts Indo-Kyrgyz ties, April17, 1999.
580. Dutch trial of Lockerbie suspects a step forward, April 19,1999.
581. US exports a factor in China’s nuclear plan, April20,1999.
582. NATO causing ecological disaster in Balkans, April21, 1999.
583. Criticism of T-90 tanks not fair, April22, 1999.
584. Forth coming JWG meet good for India-China ties, April 24,1999.
585. Check use of army for civilian duties, April26, 1999.
586. Pak need not worry over new face of Indian government, April 27,1999.
587. Imperatives of a foreign policy consensus today, May 3, 1999.
588. T-90 tanks acquisition augurs well for India, May 3, 1999.
589. Baseless spying charge against India, May 4,1999.
590. KLA’s doubtful credentials to Champion the cause, May5, 1999.
591. Mandela favours bilateral track on Kashmir, May 7, 1999.
592. India-China talks did not cut any ice, May 8, 1999.
593. Defence programme in tune with security environment May 10,1999.
594. Asean expansion augurs well for region, May11, 1999.
595. IOR grouping expects Pak to go by rules, May12, 1999.
596. Sharif’s deeds do not match his words , May14, 1999.
597. Air Chief’s concern calls for concrete action, May21, 1999.
598. G-8 must take into account Belgrade’s reservations, May24, 1999.
599. Duma plays safe with Yeltsin’s choice, May26, 1999.
600. Challenges before Nepali congress, May27, 1999.
601. APEC should not ignore crucial issues, May28, 1999.
602. US UK succeed in getting Milosevic indicted, May29, 1999.
603. WTO must review its verdict against India, May31, 1999.
604. Pursuing economic reforms can nullify sanctions, June 4, 1999.
605. India should study the ground situation on CTBT, June 5,1999.
606. Lack of political will to reach out to poor, June 9, 1999.
607. Still miles to go for peace in West Asia, June10, 1999.
608. Serb fears must be kept in mind during withdrawal, June11, 1999.
609. Hongkongers must not act in haste, June12,1999.
610. Ensure safe landing for MIR space station, June14, 1999.
611. Balkans still not out of the woods, June16, 1999..
612. Lifting sanctions will benefit U.S. India, June17, 1999..
613. Russian presence will benefit Balkans, June19, 1999..
614. Navy’s move to acquire self-sufficiency, June21, 1999..
615. NATO-Russia understanding will help Balkans, June22, 1999..
616. Further boost to Indo-B’desh ties, June23, 1999..
617. Child labour : poverty factor cannot be ignored, June24, 1999..
26
27. 618. G-8 takes care of Japan’s security, June25, 1999..
619. China rightly upset over TMD system, June26, 1999..
620. Neglecting UNIDO will harm Third World, June29, 1999..
621. US would do well to pay up its UN dues, June30, 1999.
622. Poor nations must use funds properly, July 1, 1999.
623. EU will have to focus on industrial activity, July 2, 1999..
624. SAIL should be assisted to regain profitability, July 3, 1999..
625. Strengthening country’s naval power, July 5, 1999..
626. Dealing with Dalai Lama will help China, July 6, 1999..
627. N-nations going in for sea-based weapons, July 8, 1999..
630. Theatre Missile Defence fate uncertain, July 12, 1999..
631. Be better equipped for high altitude warfare, July20, 1999..
632. Much ado about technology theft, July 21, 1999..
633. Idea of star Wars being revived, July 22, 1999..
634. Scepticism over American missile programme, July 24, 1999.
635. India must have high tech surveillance systems, August 19, 1999..
636. N-Technology cannot escape globalization, August 20, 1999.
637. Time to end economic embargo against Iraq, August 20, 1999.
638. Credible deterrence but at a cost, August 21, 1999.
639. System to cripple enemy missile in the offing, August 23, 1999.
640. US criticism of India’s N-doctrine unfair, August 249, 1999.
641. Sri Lanka aims at national consensus, August 25, 1999.
642. Pak arms build-up needs to be watched, August 26, 1999.
643. China can do without advising N-restraint, August 27, 1999.
644. Different standards for US arms build-up, August 28, 1999.
645. India must contest WTO verdict, August 30, 1999.
646. Double Standards on missile as on nuclear issue, September 1, 1999. .
647. Have no complacency on strategic front, September 2, 1999.
648. Nations must cooperate to fight terrorist groups, September 3, 1999.
649. US approach on TMD cause of tension, September 6, 1999.
650. Barak, Arafat must retain will for peace, September 7, 1999.
651. Concerted action needed against terrorism, September 8, 1999.
652. Indo-Israeli ties likely to grow further, September 9, 1999.
653. Govt. should clarify charges on Kargil, September 10, 1999.
654. Pak mischief in Kashmir bound to fail, September 11, 1999
655. Tension in Taiwan straight not in interest of peace, September 13, 1999.
656. US still indecisive on N. test ban treaty, September 14, 1999.
657. Pakistan cares a fig for international law, September 16, 1999.
658. Pakistan, September 16, 1999 // // //
659. Defence modernisation need of the hour, September 20, 1999.
660. Pakistan must cease to aid terrorism, September 21, 1999
661. MOD should clarify doubts on Russian copters, September 22, 1999.
662. German economy yet to take of, September 23, 1999
663. Indo-Israeli ties : nothing beyond normal, September 24, 1999.
664. Pak bid at Hague likely to backfire, September 25, 1999.
665. Need to prevent accidental use of nuclear weapons, September 27, 1999.
666. New military concept in tune with strategic needs, September 28, 1999.
667. India must push sea-based nuclear deterrence, September 29, 1999
668. China, India should speak as friends, September 30, 1999.
669. Tackle international terrorism at its source, October 1, 1999 .
670. US Govt. has to rectify policy anomalies, October 2, 1999.
27
28. 671. Annan must have broad view of development, October 4, 1999.
672. All is not well with globalisation, October 6, 1999.
673. Japan’s N-accident has a lesson for India, October 7, 1999
674. Can Clinton tackle CTBT problem at home? , October 8, 1999
675. Arms control yes, but not for Washington, October 11, 1999.
676. US arms supply to Pak will help terrorism, October 12, 1999.
677. Irritants continue to mar US-N. Korea ties, October 13, 1999 .
678. US, Russia voice concern over South Asia , November 3, 1999.
679. India caverns in US has challenges ahead, November 4, 1999.
680. Kumaratunga has an edge over others, November 5, 1999.
681. Another voice for peace shows the way, November 6, 1999.
682. Australia retains ties with monarchy, November 9, 1999.
683. Bush Jr. fails a test, evokes a laugh, November 10, 1999.
684. US missile can plan fuel arms race, November 11, 1999.
685. President’s visit boosts ties with Austria, November 12, 1999.
686. US should let Moscow deal with Chechnya, November 13, 1999
687. Beijing should talk to Dalai Lama, November 16, 1999.
688. AJT acquisition augurs well for country, November 17, 1999.
689. Russian hardware for Indian defence, November 18, 1999.
690. US-China trade deal a positive step, November 19, 1999.
691. Lack of consistency in US N-approach, November 20, 1999
692. Product patenting good for the country, November 22, 1999.
693. Good UK move to rein in Angolan rebels, November 23, 1999.
694. ISRO’s deal with French space agency, November 25, 1999.
695. Japan must appreciate India’s concerns, November 26, 1999.
696. India has a strong case in downing of Pak aircraft, November 27, 1999.
697. Russia should not be pushed into missile race, November 29, 1999.
698. West Asia peace process on optimistic course, November 30, 1999.
699. Resumption of Indo-US military ties, December 1, 1999 .
700. Paramilitary forces have to be modernised, December 2, 1999.
701. China supports Russia’s War against rebels, December 3, 1999.
702. Don’t add to tensions in East Asia, December 8, 1999.
703. North Korea Warming up to Japan, US, December 9, 1999.
704. Indo-Russian defence tie-up on track, December 10, 1999.
705. High-tech communication must for Indian Army, December 11, 1999.
706. Anti-conversion Bill needs a review, December 13, 1999.
707. DRDO must get adequate funds, December 14, 1999.
708. UNIDO should not be starved of funds, December 15, 1999.
709. US leadership record not without blemish, December 16, 1999.
710. Keep up the tempo of farm development, December 18, 1999.
711. Union to benefit Moscow, Minsk, December 20, 1999 .
712. Vigil on border must not be slackened, December 21, 1999.
713. Tackling terrorism with a humane law, January 4, 2000.
714. Lessons of hijack should be learnt, January 5, 2000.
715. Vital step towards naval preparedness, January 6, 2000.
716. Challenges before US cyber defence plan, January 11, 2000.
717. Effective N-deterrence will be sea-based, January 13, 2000.
718. Israel a good ally in fight against terrorism, January 14, 2000.
719. US should appreciate India’s security needs, January 15, 2000.
720. Indo-British ties set to improve, January 18, 2000.
721. Step up diplomacy against Pak regime, January 19, 2000.
28
29. 722. Beijing’s business with Pak goes on as usual, January 20, 2000.
723. Changes in Russian strategic perspective, January 21, 2000.
724. Transparency needed in purchase of AJTS, January 22, 2000.
725. General should heed US message on terrorism, January 24, 2000.
726. Russia-China missile defence in offing, January 25, 2000
727. UN sounds like the West on N-issues, January 26, 2000.
728. Military exercise in Thar just routine, February 19, 2000..
729. India’s nuclear doctrine take note of realities, February 22, 2000.
730. A defence cooperation on right track, February 23, 2000.
731. Indo-US friction on N-issue persists, February 24, 2000
732. Invest more on R & D for defence production, February 25, 2000.
733. India must have a blue water Navy, February 28, 2000.
734. China seeks to preserve P-5 N-monopoly, February 29, 2000.
735. Hike in defence more apparent than real, March 6, 2000 .
736. China-Taiwan business too good to go to war, March 8, 2000.
737. India must change its business ways, March 9, 2000.
738. Cyber techniques will decide future wars, March 10, 2000.
739. US should be tough with Musharraf, March 11, 2000.
740. Good case for business with Taiwan, March 20, 2000.
741. An encouraging verdict by Israel’s judiciary, March 21, 2000.
742. Prospect of peace in West Asia brighten up, March 23, 2000.
743. Musharraf should step out of cold war mindset, March 24, 2000.
744. Change of guard unlikely to affect IMF policy, March 25, 2000.
745. Little erosion in Chinese army’s influence, March 27, 2000 .
746. India should not lower its guard against Pak, March 28, 2000.
747. Will US now act on China’s nuclear aid to Pak ?, March 29, 2000.
748. India-Israeli ties on the upswing, March 30, 2000, .
749. Hurdles in US Congress over China’s WTO entry, April 1, 2000.
750. West Asia peace talks : not all is lost, April 2, 2000.
751. Govt. must be proactive on eco-technology issue, April 4, 2000.
752. Indo-Vietnamese ties get a boost, April 5, 2000.
753. Lack of consistency in US arms supply out look, April 11, 2000.
754. Imperative of updating defence capabilities, April 12, 2000.
755. The sorry plight of N. Korean children, April 24, 2000.
756. China’s human rights record in focus, April 26, 2000.
757. Chen overtures conducive to peace in Taiwan Straits, April 28, 2000.
758. Working for N-dominance or disarmament? , May 1, 2000 .
759. Growth, poverty alleviation can go together, May 4, 2000.
760. US-China normal trade relations in focus, May 5, 2000.
761. Problems in the way of NATO expansion, May 6, 2000.
762. Bharatpur fire calls for a thorough probe, May 8, 2000.
763. Multi-pronged strategy needed to fight AIDS, May 10, 2000.
764. India has impeccable N-credentials, May 11, 2000.
765. Top vigilance needed on the security front, May 12, 2000.
766. Initiate the process of dialogue in Sri-Lanka, May 13, 2000.
767. How prepared are we for the wars of future, May 15, 2000.
768. Stress on Navy in tune with strategic need, May 16, 2000.
769. India-Russia defence ties on solid grounds, May 17, 2000.
770. Break through eludes Indo-Sino dialogue, May 18, 2000.
771. No cause for India to lower its N-guard, May 19, 2000.
772. Ban on LTTE : a step in right direction, May 20, 2000.
29
30. 773. India poised for a sustainable N-arsenal, May 22, 2000.
774. Nuclear disarmament remains a far cry, May 23, 2000.
775. India-Israel ties not directed against others, May 24, 2000.
776. Indian left should note China’s stance on WTO, May 25, 2000.
777. US missile project will aggravate arms race, May 26, 2000.
778. A boost to NATO expansion agenda, May 27, 2000.
779. Vote on China trade Bill in interest of US, May 29, 2000.
780. China should back India in UN Council, May 30, 2000.
781. N-powers should heed India on disarmament, May 31, 2000.
782. US has a new thesis on military presence , June 2, 2000 .
783. US doctrine would fuel arms race, June 3, 2000.
784. Panel must ensure a safe N-programme, June 5, 2000.
785. No complacency on defence front, June 6, 2000.
786. US over playing the threat from ‘rogue’ states, June 9, 2000.
30
31. 787.Terrorist threat : will US tackle it force fully? , June 12, 2000
788.Poland’s spanner in European defence plan, June 13, 2000.
789.Importance of acquiring advanced jet trainers, June 14, 2000.
790.Pak plea for N-restraint mere propaganda., June 17, 2000.
791.Steps to boost defence ties with Russia, July 1, 2000 .
792.Reaching out to the European Union, July 3, 2000.
793.Indo-US strategy to counter terrorism, September 28, 2000.
794.Russian high-tech expertise needed, September 29, 2000.
795. Normalisation of ties between the Koreas, October 2, 2000 .
796. Deal with Russia to fortify defence, October 17, 2000.
797. Future of CTBT is uncertain, October 19, 2000.
798. Train fighter pilots to avoid accidents, October 21, 2000.
799. Keep strict vigil on Pak border, October 25, 2000.
800. US trade pact with China augurs well, October 30, 2000 .
801. Unified defence set-up : step in right direction , November 1, 2000.
802. Needed: a joint chief for three services, November 4, 2000.
803. Russia’s navy geared for modernisation, November 6, 2000.
804. Indo-US ties can do with some more warmth, November 7, 2000.
805. Imperative of upgrading naval aircraft, November 11, 2000.
806. Concrete steps needed to improve Sino-Indian ties, November 13, 2000.
807. India must have say in UN peacekeeping, November 15, 2000.
808. Use rupee debt funds for trade growth with Russia, November 16, 2000.
809. Challenges before European defence force, November 23, 2000.
810. Moscow agrees to revision of ABM Treaty, November 27, 2000.
811. OIC has no right to pontificate on J&K, November 28, 2000 .
812. India should strengthen regional economic ties December 1, 2000.
813. North’s perspective on environment faulty , December 2, 2000.
814. Genuine NGOs have nothing to fear, December 6, 2000.
815. Nuclear air command as a viable deterrence, December 8, 2000.
816. China, Taiwan should resume dialogue, December 11, 2000 .
817 .Imperatives of total nuclear disarmament , January 2, 2001.
818 Need for direct links between China and Taiwan, January 4, 2001
819 . Irritants in Indo-US ties can be sorted out, January 6, 2001.
820 . Indo-Vietnamese ties can be enhanced further, January 12, 2001.
821 . A welcome visit to enhance ties, January 13, 2001.
822 . Some positive content marks Li’s visit, January 18, 2001.
823 . Strengthening naval defences in East, January 20, 2001.
824 . Pak under pressure to distance jehadis, January 23, 2001.
825 . Promoting self-reliance in defence, January 24, 2001.
826 . A reasonable proposal on Milosevic trial, January 30, 2001.
827 . India should look after its own n-interests , February 1, 2001 .
828 . Globalization should be equitable, February 3, 2001.
829 . Lockerbie trial: Still unanswered questions, February 6, 2001.
830 . Slowdown in growth belies government claims, February 8, 2001.
831 . Step up per acre yield of crop, February 10, 2001.
832 . LCA project: still a long way to go, February 15, 2001.
833 . Bitter pill of NMD, February 16, 2001.
834 . Reaching out to Myanmar for right reasons, February 19, 2001.
835 . Desirable acquisition from Russia, February 21, 2001.
836 . Contradictory signals from Bush administration, February 23, 2001.
837 . Environment: North has to be more positive , March 2, 2001.
31
32. 838 . Defence coordination needs improvement, March 6, 2001.
839 . Time to forge a united front against terrorism, March 12, 2001.
840 . US policy on China may cause tension, March 9, 2001.
841 . Cooperate with Russia in space research, March 14, 2001.
842 . US should rethink anti-Iraq policy, March 24, 2001.
843 . Arms race is alive and doing well, March 22, 2001.
844 . EU’s misplaced position on India and CTBT, April 11, 2001.
845 . Indo-US ties on right track, April 12, 2001.
846 . Imperatives of timely naval modernization, April 16, 2001.
847 . US-China stand-off: tough talks ahead, April 18, 2001.
848 . US views Russia with cold war glasses, April 21, 2001.
849 . India joins elitist space club, April 23, 2001.
850Washington must call a spade a spade, May 3, 2001.
851 Military ties with US can be restored, May 8, 2001.
852Hasty support to NMD not wise, May 17, 2001.
853For peace Musharraf has to be more serious, May 19, 2001.
854Why dilly dally over CDS appointment, May 25, 2001.
855Kyoto Pact: Japan turn to toe US line , July 7, 2001 .
856What is called for is statesmanship, July 14, 2001 .
857Self segregation cause of racial tension in Britain, July 17, 2001 .
858North must contain global warning, July 207, 2001 .
859Welcome steps to revive Indo-US defence ties, July 24, 2001 .
860US Russia debate missile defence, July 26, 2001 .
861Kyoto Protocol still miles to go, July 31, 2001 .
862Sino-Pak missile tie-up a cause for concern , August 14, 2001 .
863Delay in acquiring AJT proving costly, August 17, 2001
864Resolve the debate over n-command, August 18, 2001
865Punishing Milosevic alone will not be fair, August 22, 2001
866Defence management on right track, August 30, 2001 .
867Imperatives of naval modernisation, September 12, 2001 .
868Joint front needed against terrorism, September 14, 2001
869UN should be involved in war against terrorism, September 21, 2001
870Confine to attacking terror networks, September 24, 2001
871Taliban refuses to see reason, September 25, 2001
872Implement air safety measures soon, September 29, 2001 .
873War against terrorism on high moral ground , October 5, 2001 .
874Pak aided terrorism should be in focus, October 6, 2001 .
875Services should get their due, October 11, 2001 .
876Don’t sacrifice democratic spirits, October 15, 2001 .
877Reassuring the minorities will strengthen secularism, October 16, 2001 .
878Ensure against the misuse of the proposed law, October 22, 2001 .
879Search for a post Taliban set up, October 29, 2001.
880A fruitful visit of German Chancellor, November 1, 2001 .
881Mori visit : bridging the gap, November 5,2001 .
882Pak double standards on terrorism, November 12,2001 .
883T-90 tanks will do to India’s military muscle, November16, 2001 .
884Hoon’s furitful visit to India, November22,2001 .
885. Putin’s stance on CTBT untenable, November24, 2001 .
886. Benazir Bhutton talks language of peace, November28, 2001 .
887Time for America to pay up UN dues, November30, 2001 .
888It would be a folly to attack Iraq, December 4, 2001.
32
33. 889Indo-Pak dialogue may be considered, December 7, 2001.
890Renewing Indo-US defence ties, December12, 2001.
891Pak should move on the path of peace, December14, 2001.
892US declares ABM a relic of past, December17, 2001.
893Imperatives of an effective defence, December28, 2001.
894China should address India’s concerns, January 11, 2002.
895All eyes on future Pakistan moves, January 15, 2002.
896Zhu visit adds to friendly ties, January 17, 2002.
897US persists in denying technology to India, January 22, 2002.
898Indian intelligence has to shape up, January 28, 2002.
899Quake relief effort in Gujarat is shocking, January 29, 2002.
900Agni is a routine missile test, January 30, 2002.
901No signs of change in Pak’s anti-India policy, February 2, 2002.
902Indo-US ties on a good wicket, February 5, 2002.
903Indian arms industry needs a boost, February 9, 2002.
904A further boost to Indo-Russian ties, February13, 2002.
905Rich must do more for poor: Vajpayee, February15, 2002.
906Axis of evils: a flawed theory, February16, 2002.
907US should heed its European allies, February21, 2002.
908Non-military steps also needed against terrorism, February25, 2002.
909Sri Lanka should support peace efforts , March 6, 2002.
910US steel, not free trade, is Bush’s priority, March 11,2002.
911Few takers for Bush’s Iraq policy, March13, 2002.
912NMD will lead to arms race, March19, 2002.
913Musharraf must be tougher with fanatics, March25, 2002.
914China should address India’s security concerns, April 4, 2002.
915Policy can be more effective than aid, April 8, 2002.
916US should see through General’s game, April 10, 2002.
917Challenges before Pughwash movement , April 13, 2002.
918Who is afraid of Pak’s nuke threat, April 18, 2002.
919War against terrorism, the General’s way, April 20, 2002.
920US-EU differ over West Asia crisis, April 24, 2002.
921Musharraf strategy to cling to power, April 27, 2002.
922US dilly dallying over West Asia crisis, May 1 , 2002.
923Reach out to Iran in friendship, May 4 , 2002.
924Keep diplomatic option open even now, May24 , 2002.
925Pak missile tests were a propaganda act, May29 , 2002.
926 Pakistan defies world opinion, May30 , 2002.
927Pak seeking third party mediation in Kashmir, June 3, 2002.
928Will US take a cue from EU on environment ? , June 8, 2002.
929Another report indicting Gujarat government, June 11, 2002.
930How effective can Bush’s homeland security be ? , June 14, 2002.
931US has to be more involved in West Asia crisis, June 21, 2002.
932EU has to cross many hurdles, July 4, 2002.
933Stepping up Indo-US military co-operation, July 13, 2002.
934End to terrorism not in sight , July16, 2002.
935N-command should be firmly in place, July 19, 2002.
936Remedy worse than the disease, July22, 2002.
937Slow progress on the missile front, July 23, 2002.
938End to terrorism not yet in sight, July 25, 2002.
939West Asia : US must have an even-handed approach, July 27, 2002.
33
34. 940Powell balancing act favours Pakistan, July 30, 2002.
941Follow Kabul’s example on landmine ban, July 31,2002.
942Pak should heed the message from Brunei, August 2 , 2002 .
943Aid part of US war on terror, August 7 , 2002 .
944US policy on Iran not helpful, August 10 , 2002 .
945Inherent risks of US arms sale to Pak, August 13 , 2002 .
946Attacking Iraq will cause mass resentment, August 15 , 2002 .
947Don’t delay AJT deal further, August 21 , 2002 .
948Bush must be cautious on Iraq, August 30 , 2002 .
949Indo-Russian defence ties need a boost, September 4, 2002.
950Military move against Iraq will be a folly, September 7, 2002.
951US remains adamant in Johannesburg too, September 11, 2002.
952US must consider military course, September 14, 2002.
953Lack of thrust in present diplomacy, September 18, 2002.
954Indo-Canadian ties set to improve, September 23, 2002.
955Iraq must tread the UN path carefully, September 27, 2002.
956UN should not be taken for granted, October 1 , 2002.
957Unilateral approach should be avoided, October 5 , 2002.
958Strengthening ties with Malaysia, October 8 , 2002.
959India-China ties call for reciprocity, October 11 , 2002.
960Scrapping of pact may not curb North Korea, October 24 , 2002.
961Let not sovereignty of Iraq be undermined, October 26 , 2002.
962Keeping bilateral row out of SAARC summit, October 31 , 2002.
963COP- 8 and spectre of global warning , November 2 , 2002.
964Commonwealth calls Musharraf’s bluff, November 7 , 2002.
965Senate control clears way for Bush’s agenda, November 11 , 2002.
966IAF’s revamp should be expedited, November 14 , 2002.
967Saddam makes a wise decision, November 15 , 2002.
968US intents suspect in Baghdad eyes, November 23 , 2002.
969Centre’s ad-hocism over drought, November 26 , 2002.
970Musharraf’s mask of democracy, November 28 , 2002.
971G-20 concern over terror financing , December 2, 2002.
972What is behind tirade against Gorshkov ? , December 5, 2002.
973Coercive diplomacy a futile exercise, December 11, 2002.
974New dimension to Indo-Russian concord, December 16, 2002.
975Welcome enactment on right to information. , December 18, 2002.
976Pyongyang’s nuclear faux pas alarming , December 28, 2002.
977Stability in Iraq as challenging as ever, November 14, 2003.
*****************
978Another milestone in missile development, November 12, 2003.
979Mining sector needs greater attention, November 7, 2003.
980Diluting POTA a welcome move, October 29, 2003.
981Conserve wild life as a mission, October 27, 2003.
982US unilateralism is still unacceptable, October 16, 2003.
983US claims on Iraq WMD again questioned., September 30, 2003.
984Kofi Annan finds fault with Bush doctrine., September 26, 2003.
985Need for positive UN consensus on Iraq., September 20, 2003.
986Sharon visit to India consolidates ties., September 12, 2003.
987Greater UN involvement in Iraq is needed., September 04, 2003.
988Step up the pace of missile development , August 26, 2003.
989Indo-US defence ties improving, August 12, 2003.
34
35. 990Chinese intrusion a matter of concern, August 07, 2003.
991No change apparent in Pak’s Kashmir policy , May 15, 2003.
992SARS taking a toll on Chinese economy, May 13, 2003.
993Pak should focus on relevant issues, May 09, 2003.
994China remains in the grip of SARS, May 01, 2003.
995A brewing crisis in Far East, April 29, 2003
996Let weapon inspectors do their job, April 25, 2003.
997US should opt for talks with Syria, April 22, 2003.
998N. Korean nuclear stand off, April 17, 2003 .
999Countries toe US line, April 03, 2003.
1000 In Gulf an ongoing battle of wits, April 02, 2003.
1001 The unfolding against Iraq , March 27, 2003.
1002 Check North Korea’s nuclear ambitions, March 25, 2003.
1003 No easy task for Chinese leadership, March 19, 2003.
1004 PM declares India’s anti-war consensus, March 14, 2003.
1005 US insists on going against the tide, March 10, 2003.
1006 US persists with its military approach, March 05, 2003.
1007 NAM’s voice is against war, March 03,2003.
1008 Divisions in Arab ranks over Iraq, February 22, 2003.
1009 Europe seeks to resolve difference over Iraq , February 20, 2003.
1010 North Korea’s threat potential is real, February 17, 2003.
1011 General denies all, expects Putin’s help, February 12, 2003.
1012 Sham of a second resolution on Iraq, February 05, 2003.
1013 Changing perception on India-China ties, January 31, 2003.
1014 India-Iran economic strategy for region, January 28, 2003.
1015 Indo-Russian defence deal reassuring, January 21, 2003.
1016 No room for laxity on defence front, January 20, 2003.
1017 Missile programme needs urgent boost, January 15, 2003.
1018 Underplaying India’s strategic needs, January 11, 2003.
1019 India should advise US against war postures, January 09, 2003.
1020 NCA is welcome but leaves many gaps, January 07, 2003.
1021 Ties with US matter more to Beijing, January 06, 2003.
1022 MoD must recompense Sukhoi delivery lapse, December 25, 2003.
1023 Naval modernisation on track, December 04, 2003.
1024 US should reiterate one China policy, December 11, 2003.
1025 Saddam ,at last, in US custody, December 16, 2003.
1026 Issues that divide European Union, December 19, 2003.
1027 SAARC security has to be foolproof, December 27, 2003.
1028 IAEA attests Libya’s nuclear transparency, December 31, 2003.
1029 US plans for Iraq going awry, January 9, 2004.
1030 Admiral Gorshkov is finally arriving, January 23, 2004.
1031 Tight-rope walk for General Musharraf, February 4, 2004.
1032 What happened to CDS appointment? , February20, 2004.
1033 Building closer ties with Asian markets, February13, 2004.
1034 Useful high tech deal with Israel, March10, 2004
1035 Third world forum seeks UN reforms, MAR.13,2004.
1036 Another step forward in Sino-Indian ties, April 3, 2004.
1037 Russian fears over new- look NATO , April 06, 2004.
1038 Violence on increase in Iraq April 09, 2004.
1039 Modi government must go now April 17, 2004.
1040 Usual ups and downs in US-China ties April 22, 2004.
35
36. 1041 Pak must do more on terror front April 24, 2004.
1042 Picture in Iraq remains blurred April 26, 2004.
1043 BJP’s new found love for minorities April 28, 2004.
1044 Push ahead with naval modernisation, May 03, 2004.
1045 Persisting concerns over North Korean weapons, May 05, 2004.
1046 Prisoner abuse: US must act, May 10, 2004.
1047 Welcome move for India-China ties, May 13, 2004.
1048 BJP going against political traditions, May 19, 2004.
1049 Promise of reforms with human face, May 21, 2004.
1050 Cracks in fortress EU remain exposed., June 24, 2004.
1051 North Korean n-impasse persists. ., June 29, 2004.
1052 Dialogue needs to be sustained. ., June 30, 2004.
1053 Stability in Iraq not yet in sight., July 03, 2004.
1054 No ambiguity in Iraq policy., July 10, 2004.
1055 Defence spending still moderate., July 13, 2004.
1056 Improving the image of US foreign policy., July 16, 2004.
1057 Pak should also curb anti-India terrorism., July 21, 2004.
1058 Maintaining momentum in ties with China. ., July 24, 2004.
1059 SAARC moves ahead on economic front., July 27, 2004.
1060 US intelligence has its limits. ., July 29, 2004.
1061 India-China ties on the upswing, August 02, 2004.
1062 Combating corruption in government, September 01, 2004
1063 DRDO has its hands full, September 06, 2004.
1064 Composite dialogue makes progress, September 09, 2004.
1065 No scope for withdrawing Special Powers Act, September 17, 2004.
1066 A good setting for Indo-Pak summit, September 25, 2004.
1067 PM calls for a just world order, September 29, 2004.
1068 Hu Jintao in top gear now, October 04, 2004.
1069 Doubts about Indian scientists are baseless , October 07, 2004.
1070 Avoid impediments in composite dialogue, October 11, 2004.
1071 Congress machinery in place for relief, December 30, 2004.
1072 Urgent need for warning system, December 31, 2004.
1073 Administration in place to tackle relief, Jan 4, 2005.
1074 Health plans are people-oriented, Jan 11, 05.
1075 Combating AIDS: media has a role, Jan 15, 05.
1076 Master plan : listen to the critics too, Jan 18, 05.
1077 India , Bhutan ties get a boost, Jan 28, 2005.
1078 Growing convergence of Sino-Indian views, Feb 1, 05.
1079 EU-US differences surface, Feb8, 05.
1080 King must restore order, Feb 12, 2005.
1081 Need to heed PM’s advice on AIDS, Feb 15, 05.
1082 Towards forging Asian gas grid, Feb 18, 05.
1083 Strengthening ties between India and Italy, Feb 22, 05.
1084 Sooner six-party talks resume, the better, Feb 24, 05.
1085 Strides in co-operation with Kazakhstan, Feb 28, 05.
1086 Russia to fuel Iran’s energy, March 3, 05.
1087 Keep the pace of defence modernisation, March 7, 05.
1088 Shades of accommodation on Iran-EU talks, March 15, 05.
1089 Transition complete in China, March 19, 05.
1090 Making mountain our of molehills, March 22, 05.
36
37. 1091 Can Wolfowitz deliver on poverty issues, March 24, 05.
1092 Kashmir will benefit from Baglihar project, March 28, 05.
1093 Kyrgyz leaders have tough challenges ahead, March 29, 05.
1094 Indonesian quakes: India on alert, April 1, 2005.
1095 Improving IAF flight safety, April 6, 2005
1096 F-15 sale to Pakistan ignores history, April 8, 2005
1097 Challenges before Iraqi leadership, April 11, 2005.
1098 Kelkar stress on self reliance, April 14, 2005
1099 CBI probe into arms deal must proceed, April 18, 2005
1100 Indo-Pak relations on firm footing, April 22, 2005
1101 Need to define new economic agenda, April 25, 2005
1102 Pak must close terror tap fully, April 27, 2005
1103 Weizman from hawk to dove, May 3, 05.
1104 Indo-Japanese ties on firm footing, May 4, 05
1105 King must keep his commitment, May 6, 05.
1106 French blow to EU constitution, June 1, 2005
1107 Another naval base, June 4, 05.
1108 Heed ASSOCHAM on rural housing, June 11, 2005.
37