Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Three Points of View: The United States, Pakistan and India


A really nice article... the last few paragraphs under the 'Indian perspective' are especially very well analysed.
Sid.

"This report is republished with permission of STRATFOR"
By Peter Zeihan

In recent weeks, STRATFOR has explored how the U.S. government has been seeing its interests in the Middle East and South Asia shift. When it comes down to it, the United States is interested in stability at the highest level — a sort of cold equilibrium among the region’s major players that prevents any one of them, or a coalition of them — from overpowering the others and projecting power outward.

One of al Qaeda’s goals when it attacked the United States in 2001 was bringing about exactly what the United States most wants to avoid. The group hoped to provoke Washington into blundering into the region, enraging populations living under what al Qaeda saw as Western puppet regimes to the extent that they would rise up and unite into a single, continent-spanning Islamic power. The United States so blundered, but the people did not so rise. A transcontinental Islamic caliphate simply was never realistic, no matter how bad the U.S. provocation.

Subsequent military campaigns have since gutted al Qaeda’s ability to plot extraregional attacks.Al Qaeda’s franchises remain dangerous, but the core group is not particularly threatening beyond its hideouts in the Afghan-Pakistani border region.

As for the region, nine years of war have left it much disrupted. When the United States launched its military at the region, there were three balances of power that kept the place stable (or at least self-contained) from the American point of view. All these balances are now faltering. We have already addressed the Iran-Iraq balance of power, which was completely destroyed following the American invasion in 2003. We will address the Israeli-Arab balance of power in the future. This week, we shall dive into the region’s third balance, one that closely borders what will soon be the single largest contingent of U.S. military forces overseas: the Indo-Pakistani balance of power.

Pakistan and the Evolution of U.S. Strategy in Afghanistan

U.S. strategy in Afghanistan has changed dramatically since 2001. The war began in the early morning hours — Pakistan time — after the Sept. 11 attacks. Then-U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell called up then-Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf to inform him that he would be assisting the United States against al Qaeda, and if necessary, the Taliban. The key word there is “inform.” The White House had already spoken with — and obtained buy-in from — the leaders of Russia, the United Kingdom, France, China, Israel and, most notably, India. Musharraf was not given a choice in the matter. It was made clear that if he refused assistance, the Americans would consider Pakistan part of the problem rather than part of the solution — all with the blessings of the international community.


Three Points of View: The United States, Pakistan and India
(click here to enlarge image)

Islamabad was terrified — and with good reason; comply or refuse, the demise of Pakistan was an all-too-real potential outcome. The geography of Pakistan is extremely hostile. It is a desert country. What rain the country benefits from falls in the northern Indo-Pakistani border region, where the Himalayas wring moisture out of the monsoons. Those rains form the five rivers of the Greater Indus Valley, and irrigation works from those rivers turn dry areas green.

Accordingly, Pakistan is geographically and geopolitically doomed to perpetual struggle with poverty, instability and authoritarianism. This is because irrigated agriculture is far more expensive and labor-intensive than rain-fed agriculture. Irrigation drains the Indus’ tributaries such that the river is not navigable above Hyderabad, near the coast — drastically raising transport costs and inhibiting economic development. Reasonably well-watered mountains in the northwest guarantee an ethnically distinct population in those regions (the Pashtun), a resilient people prone to resisting the political power of the Punjabis in the Indus Basin. This, combined with the overpowering Indian military, results in a country with remarkably few options for generating capital even as it has remarkably high capital demands.

Islamabad’s one means of acquiring breathing room has involved co-opting the Pashtun population living in the mountainous northwestern periphery of the country. Governments before Musharraf had used Islamism to forge a common identity for these people, which not only included them as part of the Pakistani state (and so reduced their likelihood of rebellion) but also employed many of them as tools of foreign and military policy. Indeed, managing relationships with these disparate and peripheral ethnic populations allowed Pakistan to stabilize its own peripheral territory and to become the dominant outside power in Afghanistan as the Taliban (trained and equipped by Pakistan) took power after the Soviet withdrawal.

Thus, the Americans were ordering the Pakistanis on Sept. 12, 2001, to throw out the one strategy that allowed Pakistan to function. Pakistan complied not just out of fears of the Americans, but also out of fears of a potentially devastating U.S.-Indian alignment against Pakistan over the issue of Islamist terrorism in the wake of the Kashmiri militant attacks on the Indian parliament that almost led India and Pakistan to war in mid-2002. The Musharraf government hence complied, but only as much as it dared, given its own delicate position.

From the Pakistani point of view, things went downhill from there. Musharraf faced mounting opposition to his relationship with the Americans from the Pakistani public at large, from the army and intelligence staff who had forged relations with the militants and, of course, from the militants themselves. Pakistan’s halfhearted assistance to the Americans meant militants of all stripes — Afghan, Pakistani, Arab and others — were able to seek succor on the Pakistani side of the border, and then launch attacks against U.S. forces on the Afghan side of the border. The result was even more intense American political pressure on Pakistan to police its own militants and foreign militants seeking shelter there. Meanwhile, what assistance Pakistan did provide to the Americans led to the rise of a new batch of homegrown militants — the Pakistani Taliban — who sought to wreck the U.S.-Pakistani relationship by bringing down the government in Islamabad.

The Indian Perspective

The period between the Soviet collapse and the rise of the Taliban — the 1990s — saw India at a historical ebb in the power balance with Pakistan. The American reaction to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks changed all that. The U.S. military had eliminated Pakistan’s proxy government in Afghanistan, and ongoing American pressure was buckling the support structures that allowed Pakistan to function. So long as matters continued on this trajectory, New Delhi saw itself on track for a historically unprecedented dominance of the subcontinent.

But the American commitment to Afghanistan is not without its limits, and American pressure was not sustainable. At its heart, Afghanistan is a landlocked knot of arid mountains without the sort of sheltered, arable geography that is likely to give rise to a stable — much less economically viable — state. Any military reality that the Americans imposed would last only so long as U.S. forces remained in the country.

The alternative now being pursued is the current effort at Vietnamization of the conflict as a means of facilitating a full U.S. withdrawal. In order to keep the country from returning to the sort of anarchy that gave rise to al Qaeda, the United States needed a local power to oversee matters in Afghanistan. The only viable alternative — though the Americans had been berating it for years — was Pakistan.

If U.S. and Pakistan interests could be aligned, matters could fall into place rather quickly — and so they did once Islamabad realized the breadth and dangerous implications of its domestic insurgency. The five-year, $7.5 billion U.S. aid package to Pakistan approved in 2009 not only helped secure the arrangement, it likely reflects it. An unprecedented counterinsurgency and counterterrorism campaign conducted by the Pakistani military continues in the country’s tribal belt. While it has not focused on all the individuals and entities Washington might like, it has created real pressure on the Pakistani side of the border that has facilitated efforts on the Afghan side. For example, Islamabad has found a dramatic increase in American unmanned aerial vehicle strikes tolerable because at least some of those strikes are hitting Pakistani Taliban targets, as opposed to Afghan Taliban targets. The message is that certain rules cannot be broken without consequences.

Ultimately, with long experience bleeding the Soviets in Afghanistan, the United States was inherently wary of becoming involved in Afghanistan. In recent years, it has become all too clear how distant the prospect of a stable Afghanistan is. A tribal-ethnic balance of power overseen by Pakistan is another matter entirely, however. The great irony is that such a success could make the region look remarkably like it did on Sept. 10, 2001.

This would represent a reversal of India’s recent fortunes. In 10 years, India has gone from a historic low in the power balance with Pakistan to a historic high, watching U.S. support for Pakistan shift to pressure on Islamabad to do the kinds of things (if not the precise actions) India had long clamored for.

But now, U.S. and Pakistani interests not only appear aligned again, the two countries appear to be laying groundwork for the incorporation of elements of the Taliban into the Afghan state. The Indians are concerned that with American underwriting, the Pakistanis not only may be about to re-emerge as a major check on Indian ambitions, but in a form eerily familiar to the sort of state-militant partnership that so effectively limited Indian power in the past. They are right. The Indians also are concerned that Pakistani promises to the Americans about what sort of behavior militants in Afghanistan will be allowed to engage in will not sufficiently limit the militants’ activities — and in any event will do little to nothing to address the Kashmiri militant issue. Here, too, the Indians are probably right. The Americans want to leave — and if the price of departure is leaving behind an emboldened Pakistan supporting a militant structure that can target India, the Americans seem fine with making India pay that price.

Key Tags:

India Pakistan Relations, Balance of Power - South Asia, US India Relations, Af-Pak Strategy, Stratfor, Military Intelligence, Sidharth Mehta, Identity Crysys, Full Start, The Discussion Begins Here.

Monday, April 26, 2010

India @ Lalit Modi - Ab Tera Kya Hoga Kaaliya?


With the end of the reign of Mr. Lalit Modi in the IPL office, it will be interesting to know what will he do now for a living. Taking into consideration the current defamation of Lalit Modi, the following professions could be/are the choices for Modi to opt from:

Private Secretary/Assistant to Mayawati

The first and the foremost option for Mr. Dalit Modi, ooops Lalit Modi is to take charge of the office of Kumari Mayawati Ji. As per sources, Mayawati has been very excited since the time Mr. Modi was thrown out of the BCCI/IPL. With a lot of money in his bags, Mayawati feels Lalit's true calling is in Politics, and that too as her own personal assistant. She has sent the offer to Mr. Modi, stating she would like to train him under her own chatra-chhaya. In return, she has asked for another garland made of 'hari-patti'.


When news agencies last reached Mr. Modi, he was seriously giving a thought to Mayawati's generous offer. As he puts it to one of the news channels "The money in my bank account, and my current level of reputation is perfectly apt for starting a career in politics, so surely it is one of the options I am seriously contemplating on".

Eve-Teaser/Casanova/Male Stripper

This is the next best option for Lalit Modi. The money in his bank account is enough to get celebrity girls/models drooling over him. Confirmed sources have been giving unconfirmed news about Mr. Modi's recent affair with a South African model. When Mr. Modi was contacted during an IPL match to confirm the news, he was found with a famous bollywood actress as shown below.



The IPL cheerleaders have also given their full support and show of strength to Mr. Lalit Modi. They were also heard suggesting a new business plan to Modi for women's T20 cricket to be done in Europe/USA. When Mr. Modi was contacted about this, he mentioned that details of the business plan of women's cricket is already with Champa, Mr. Praful Patel's secretary, who shall leak the email to all media personalities very soon just as she did before, while emailing Mr. Shashi Tharoor for the DLF IPL business plan before the Kochi Team bid.

"Cheerleaders showing their athletic skills to Mr. Modi, trying to convince him they could play cricket as well"

Police Informer/Witness


Last but not the least, Mr. Modi, is also planning to take up a full time job of becoming a police informer/witness. He has the freedom to come out with all the names who were involved in the IPLGATE scandal. Mr. Modi was overheard saying, "I shall go down fighting, but I shall not fall so much that I would leave the others behind." He also stated the people of India are pushing him to take up the role of the Police Informer, but he mentioned a lot of hassles are in between like Politics, Women, and Cricket as well.

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Sidharth Mehta
Dubai, UAE
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Key Tags:
Political Crap,Unofficial Blog of IPL, Un-official blog of DLF IPL, Blog about IPL, Lalit Modi, IPL, Controversy, DLF, Shashi Tharoor, Zinta, Mayawati, Incredible India, The Great Indian Tamasha, The Great Indian Nightmare, Sidharth Mehta, Identity Crysys

Saturday, April 24, 2010

USA worried as cheerleaders could lose jobs if IPL gets banned


Washington D.C.:

The future of the Indian Premier League (IPL) and its commissioner Lalit Modi is in danger, and this is now sending jitters to the USA. If IPL closes shop, it is likely that USA will suffer a lot, since American cheerleaders working in it will lose jobs. Modi is said to have been let off in criminal cases in the USA earlier on the condition that he got Americans jobs later on.

Amidst the global recession and rising unemployment rate, the possibility of IPL's end has shocked the American economy. The New York Stock Exchange fell down 300 points reacting to this news. President Barack Obama has himself expressed deep concern and said, "This could jeopardize the future of hundreds of school- and college-girls who never dreamt of earning a decent living. Instead, they chose to go to India and show their dance moves. Today they are the only source of income to our country." Sensing the gravity of the issue, Obama further said, "This is not acceptable that our women are losing jobs because there are allegations of betting on IPL."



"We have full trust in Lalit. He might even start a league of women cricketers with us as players, if not anything else," said a cheerleader.

Political pundits predict this development could endanger the outsourcing business and could aggravate the anti-Indian sentiments among the Americans. "It can also put brakes on the Nuclear Deal which is very dear to India," said one.

Infosys founder N R Narayan Murthy has also sensed the side-effects and requested the government to let the IPL be the way it is. "We need to improve the image of India - we are the job givers, not job takers," he said. Obama has assured the public, however, that steps will be taken by the government to ensure that IPL should continue and provide job avenues for American women. "Despite everything, we are still the lions and the Indians timid mice. We will manage it," assured Obama.

IPL Commissioner Lalit Modi, without leaving the opportunity to gain some praise, tweeted that the whole idea of IPL was to provide young talented unemployed American women a way to earn decent living and a decent boyfriend (he himself). This tweet was made through Modi's account only, which was supposedly hacked earlier. "I want to help the downtrodden Americans... I spoiled so many of them when I was a student there, and they all honour me," tweeted Modi.

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Key Tags:
News That Matters Not, WTF News, IPL, Cheerleaders, Controversy, USA losing jobs, Sidharth Mehta, Identity Crysys

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

DLF IPL - Tharoor - Clean Bowled; Lalit Modi - Hit Wicket

For Shashi Tharoor, it was his first innings in the dirty world of Indian Politics. Never would he have imagined, that he would end up being the protagonist of Himesh Reshamiya's next mega blockbuster 'Aap Ka Tharoor' with Sunanda Pushkar & himself in the leading role, and Lalit Modi being played by Himesh himself. Lalit is highly embarrassed to know that Himesh will play his character, and therefore he called up Himesh to inform him about his eagerness to play his character himself, as it is, he is quite unsure of his career as the IPL chief.



The conclusion I take from all the things that have happened in the last one week is that stock prices of media companies owning news channels in India will surely go up & sky rocket even if it is a recession all over... Controversies galore it is for them, business rocking, with first the 'hamari beti ki shaadi' (Sania-Shoaib) to now the 'Pardeh Ke Peeche Kya Hai' controversy of the DLF IPL. In our country, controversies have happened, happen, and shall continue to happen on an average gap of 3-4 days from one another.

Lalit Modi, obviously never realized that his own tweet sent to tweak the image of Shashi Tharoor, & to make room for the Gujju Team, would in the end be the reason for a full investigation into the backoffice operations of how his team at the DLF IPL were working. With investigations on full swing, more nervousness can be felt in the Agriculture & Aviation ministry of India than by Lalit Modi & Shashi Tharoor. Though,it won't be surprising if everyone comes out clean, as these ministers are heavyweight's and are people having the power of numbers in the current government. It will be interesting to see how the congress government dare's to bare the dirt within it's own supporters.




The image consultants of Lalit Modi and the bandwagon are working overtime to see that their clients come out clean, but one thing is for sure, the image of IPL has taken a big hit in this entire controversy. But, just as the famous 'spirit of mumbai' of resilience, the spirit of cricket shall keeping breathing in every Indian, and the IPL shall fight back, and fight back with full force, with or without the extra baggage.

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Sidharth Mehta
Dubai, UAE

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Key Words - Unofficial Blog of DLF IPL, Un-official Blog of IPL, Political Crap, DLF IPL - The Great Indian tamasha, Incredible India, Lalit Modi, Shashi Tharoor, Sundanda Pushkar, Controvery, Cricket Controversies, The Great Indian Nightmare, Sidharth Mehta, Identity Crysys

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Political Crap - Mayawati's Maya Jaal


Times of the World
18/03/2010 - Reporter: Mr. Aam Aadmi



In what is being seen as a serious threat to the nation, the enemies of our nation, have come up with new forms of terrorising our citizens. Latest being - attacking rally's of popular politicians like the foremost and much loved leader of our nation - Mayawati with bee's. Yes, you read that right, with bees.

Security Experts after analysing the situation deeply, have stated that this is the new form of biological warfare. "Our enemies want our leaders to be bitten by bees, which would fall under biological warfare" said one expert. Mr. Non Sense, one of the leading party members of Mayawati's party, saw a big conspiracy behind the bee attack, and held responsible one of our neighbouring countries. When asked, why is the party putting the blame on our neighbouring country, he said, Mayawati Ji, is our future Prime Minister, and our neighbouring country see's a threat in her, as she is one lady with great power and wisdom.

Innocent citizens all around the country are in a deep state of shock after this bee-attack on Mayawati. As one disturbed citizen in Bombay says "If the security agencies can't protect our leaders, how will they protect the common man?". He went on to say "I am thinking to use Odomos - the best mosquito repellent cream in the market when I am out in public".

The brave Mayawati, after the bee attack said to the citizens of the country:
'Hum Ek Dum Theek Hain.. Hamari Party aur Desh Ke Dushmano Ko Mein Bata Deti Hoon, Ki Maya Ke Maya Jaal Mein Yeh Saaari Bee's Phas Jaaegi.... Jis Tarah Hamaari Junta Phasi Hui Hain, Usi Tarah Yeh Bee's Bhi Phas Jaaegi'..

When the police was contacted, they mentioned, Mayawati was saved by the multi-crore garland specially made for her, which is made of a special leaf called 'hari patti'. The police are now trying to trace the bee's. At the moment, no one know's about their whereabouts.

One eyewitness added, he saw the group of bee's going and sitting on the statues of Mayawati. Also seen were pigeons accompanying the bee's on the statues. A probe has been issued on the link between the pigeons and the bee's and why were they sitting on Mayawati's statues. (anyone's guess!!!). Mayawati said " My statues have been made after an investment of Rs 500 Crores.. this is public's money, and I would not let our enemies spoil public property"

The pigeons could not be reached for their point of view.
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Sidharth Mehta
In hope of enlightenment of minds..
Dubai, UAE
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Keywords - Mayawati, Mayawati Statues, Mayawati - Bee Attack, The Great Indian Nightmare, Incredible India, Political Crap, Sidharth Mehta, Identity Crysys


Saturday, January 30, 2010

Pathetic Journalism - India playing dangerous games


Found this interesting on the web, worth a read here - http://ad-noentry.blogspot.com/2011/01/pathetic-journalism-india-playing.html
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India playing dangerous games, pathetic journalism, gulf news, india pakistan relations, irresponsible journalism, UAE, UAE India relations, Journalistic freedom,

Thursday, January 28, 2010

India Wants to Join the Non-Proliferation Treaty as a Weapon State


Read this on the Global Arab Network, and thought was really insightful and must be shared.

Sid
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Continued disturbing revelations about Iran's nuclear programs escalate the dangers the world faces from nuclear proliferation. The mounting peril threatens to overwhelm President Obama’s quest for a world free of nuclear weapons, a quest he will pursue at a summit on nuclear security in April and at a meeting in May to review the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). While NPT membership is nearly universal, the refusal of India, Pakistan, and Israel to join, North Korea’s proliferation and withdrawal from, and Iran’s violations of, the treaty have placed severe stress on the non-proliferation regime. Can the NPT, which is the centerpiece of the global non-proliferation effort, be righted such that the world can take steps towards Obama’s vision of a nuclear-free world?

Into this environment comes an unexpected development. On November 29, 2009, Manmohan Singh, India’s Prime Minister, stated on Fareed Zakaria’s GPS show that India wants to join the NPT as a nuclear-weapons state (NWS) and become the sixth NPT-recognized nuclear power. Although Indian diplomats have raised this idea in private in years past, Singh’s statement represents the first public announcement by a high-ranking official that India wants to be a NWS within the NPT. Indian press reports indicate that Singh is serious about this proposal, despite opposition within India.

Not only does this statement depart from India’s historic NPT opposition, but it also could agitate nuclear diplomacy in 2010. India’s willingness to join the NPT contains the potential to strengthen the NPT, which places a premium on how existing NPT members respond to India’s policy shift. Bringing India within the NPT as a NWS would be controversial, but to exclude a nuclear-armed but non-proliferating India when it is now willing to join would not strengthen efforts against nuclear proliferation.

India has long criticized the treaty and maintained it would not join because the NPT discriminated against states not possessing nuclear weapons on January 1, 1967; it increased the difficulties for states wishing to develop nuclear energy; and it did not contain serious disarmament obligations for existing nuclear powers. India presented its position as one of principle, but it had security interests in having nuclear weapons to deter perceived threats from China. India again caused consternation in 2008 when it concluded an accord with the US under which India could access nuclear technologies and materials in return for placing its civilian nuclear facilities under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards. Critics complained that the accord rewarded India’s NPT defiance and weakened efforts to strengthen non-proliferation.

By switching course, India forces the non-proliferation community to confront India’s criticisms of the treaty, which overlap with worries about the NPT’s weaknesses. By all accounts, India has been a responsible nuclear power. Its exclusion from the NPT would be a function of an arbitrary date rather than its behavior. India has not fostered proliferation, unlike China and Pakistan. It has a small nuclear arsenal for deterrence, unlike some recognized NWS that have massive stockpiles despite NPT obligations to engage in disarmament. Through the US-Indian nuclear accord, India has accepted IAEA oversight of its civilian nuclear facilities, and India has performed better in this regard than Libya, Iran, Iraq, North Korea, and Syria, which joined the treaty as non-nuclear weapon states but violated, or are suspected of violating, the NPT.

In short, India is not undermining the non-proliferation system, rather, the NPT system has been undermined by its own flaws and the countries that agreed to abide by, but flouted, its rules. India is now willing to join the NPT and bring its legitimacy as a democratic nuclear power and its growing influence to bear on shoring up the NPT’s objectives. All that is required is an amendment to the treaty’s cutoff date for recognition as a NWS. Existing NPT members can accept India’s desire to help strengthen the NPT, or they can reject India’s interest, which does not improve the NPT’s prospects. Which way will NPT members go?

If NPT members follow the UN Security Council, they will reject India’s overture. As part of President Obama’s effort to advance the cause of a nuclear-free world, the Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 1887 on September 24, 2009, which “[c]alls upon all States that are not Parties to the NPT to accede...as non-nuclear-weapon States....” NPT members could hide behind this resolution and avoid addressing India’s new position. However, such a response simply avoids a policy question that deserves attention on its merits.

The key states will be the NPT’s existing NWS, especially China, Russia, and the US because all NWS must approve the amendment needed to permit India to join as a NWS. Neither China nor Russia faces additional strategic risks from allowing India to join the NPT because India is already a nuclear-armed power, and supporting Indian accession could be a way to improve relations with the country as its regional and global influence grows.

The US is caught between recognizing India as a democratic, responsible nuclear power (e.g., the US-India nuclear accord) and the policy of the Obama administration that non-parties to the NPT should join only as non-nuclear-weapons states (e.g., Resolution 1887). Given India’s NPT shift, the US cannot reconcile these positions, meaning it must make a choice that contains no room for dissembling. The US choice will likely determine how European nations and Japan respond, as happened with the US-India nuclear accord.

Importantly, opposing India’s desire to join the NPT as a NWS on the basis of Resolution 1887 or narrow national interests will do nothing to strengthen the NPT. If a more robust NPT is vital for making progress towards a nuclear-free world, then bringing India into the treaty, especially when it is emerging as a great power, makes more sense than believing that India will disarm unilaterally simply to join the NPT. Indian participation in the NPT will not, by itself, eliminate the problems the NPT now confronts, especially those caused by North Korea, Iran, and the potential of nuclear terrorism. But, with India supporting the regime, the world would finally have all nuclear-armed great powers committed to the same rules – an unprecedented convergence that could reinvigorate non-proliferation politics in a manner more meaningful than the distant vision of a world without nuclear weapons.

India’s NPT move adds complexity to the nuclear diplomacy that will unfold in 2010, and, shrewdly, it elevates Indian interests, influence, and ideas. Whether India succeeds or fails, its maneuver highlights problems with the NPT, creates challenges for India’s allies and rivals, and forces non-proliferation advocates to re-think how to strengthen their efforts.


David P. Fidler is the James Louis Calamaras Professor of Law and Director of the Center on American and Global Security (CAGS), and Sumit Ganguly is the Rabindranath Tagore Chair in Indian Cultures and Civilizations, Professor of Political Science, Director of the India Studies Program, and Director of Research for CAGS at Indiana University, Bloomington. Reprinted with permission from YaleGlobal Online (www.yaleglobal.yale.edu). Copyright © 2010, Yale Center for the Study of Globalization, Yale University

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Key Tags : Incredible India, The Great Indian Dream, Nuclear Proliferation Treaty, Nuclear Weapons State, India Nuclear Power, India and Nuclear Weapons, India- A responsible nuclear power, NPT - India, David P. Fidler, Sumit Ganguly,Yale Center for the Study of Globalization, Yale University, YaleGlobal Online (www.yaleglobal.yale.edu)
Blog Tags - Full Start., Identity Crysys, Sidharth Mehta, Sid Mehta

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Political Crap - Mumbai - Taxi No. 9211





Disclaimer: This post has nothing to do with the John Abraham & Nana Patekar starrer movie Taxi No. 9211. If that makes you feel good, continue reading below. If it does not, still continue reading, might just help you increase your current affairs knowledge!
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It is so amazing, how our political leaders come out with such fantastic rules and policies which makes you feel as if you are not living in/a part of the biggest functioning democracy in the world, but rather part of a country which has the most ridiculous form of governance.

Ruling government of the state of Maharashtra, the Congress-NCP led government has come up with an insane ruling, that new taxi licenses in Mumbai, would be given to individuals who are well versed in Marathi (read, write, and speak) and who have also resided in the city for atleast 15 years. This decision was taken under the leadership of CM Ashok Chavan in a meeting, which did not have a single representative, from the Bombay Taximen Association, the oldest in the city, looking at the interests of the taxi drivers. Imagine, you take an important decision about cricketers, and having not a single cricketer in that meeting, to give his point of view. Strange enough, but true.

Obviously, this ruling would almost put an end to the migration of individuals from the rest of the country whom used to come Mumbai to become a taxi driver, especially from the states of UP and Bihar. This dirty politics just to garner votes of the Marathi people was earlier brought to light by the self proclaimed youth icon, and sole benefactor of the Marathi population, Raj Thackeray. The Congress-NCP, has done nothing, but just followed the steps of Raj, just in a non-violent way.

One will not be surprised, if in the near future, professionals from all around the country would also be stopped to work in private organisations in the city of dreams, Mumbai. However impossible that may sound, but this ideology of these shallow thinking political leaders could make that true as well. And why just private companies, students from the rest of the country and world shall be stopped to get admission into Mumbai University, and so on...

It is annoying to see that the same tactics which were earlier used by the Britishers to rule over India, Divide and Rule, is being used by our modern day political leaders to only garner votes, and to further divide the civil society of the already divided junta of our motherland.

Shiv Sena, recently made statement against Australian Cricketers, that they would not be allowed to play in India, since Australians were ill-treating Indians living down under. The irony is, the same party and their likes such as Raj Thackeray, would forget their preachings to the Australians when they beat and kill non-marathi Indians for living in Mumbai, and taking up jobs in Mumbai.

Sadly, the message from the leadership of the City Of Dreams is loud and clear,either be Marathi, otherwise Nau Dou Gyaara (9211) Hojaaao. (Be Marathi, or simply go away)

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Sidharth Mehta,
Dubai, UAE
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Key Tags - Mumbai, Mumbai Taxi Permit, Mumbai Taxi Drivers Controversy, Marathi Manoos, CM Ashok Chavan, Raj Thackeray, Shiv Sena, Moral Policing, Divide & Rule, Political Crap, Maharashtra Crisis, The Great Indian Nightmare, Incredible India, Incredible Maharashtra, Identity Crysys, Full Start., Sidharth Mehta

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