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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Apr 13, 2012 AT 23:43 IST
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Edited At: Apr 13, 2012 23:43 IST
India has apparently "reacted strongly" to the detention of filmstar Shahrukh Khan at a New York airport, and summoned a top American diplomat after External Affairs Minister S M Krishna said "detention and apology" have become a habit with the US, which cannot continue. This is what the Daily Show had to say something like this happened the last time around
Meanwhile, this is what Mr Khan himself had to say about the incident:
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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Apr 13, 2012 AT 23:43 IST, Edited At: Apr 13, 2012 23:43 IST
POSTED BY Buzz
ON Jan 23, 2012 AT 23:37 IST
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Edited At: Jan 23, 2012 23:37 IST
That elections in Punjab are fast-approaching is getting manifested even in our foreign policy, it would seem:
India has strongly "objected" to the remark on the Golden Temple by popular US television host Jay Leno, terming it "quite unfortunate".
Leno, the host of the popular "The Tonight Show" on NBC channel, flashed a picture of the Golden Temple, the holiest Sikh shrine, in Amritsar on his programme and termed it as a possible summer home of Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney.
The visiting NRI Affairs Minister Vayalar Ravi yesterday "objected" to the remark and said he has directed Indian Ambassador to the US Nirupama Rao to take up the matter with the State Department.
"It is quite unfortunate and quite objectionable that such a comment has been made after showing the...Golden temple," Ravi told a group of Indian reporters.
"Golden temple is Sikh community's most sacred place. Even our Prime Minister went there for praying in the New Year. I believe that the person who has shown is not that ignorant. The American Government should also look at this kind of thing," the NRI Affairs Minister said.
"I wish this kind of thing is not shown by any media in the US," Ravi said, adding that he has not seen the show personally and has heard about it from the Sikh community.
"Freedom does not mean hurt the sentiments of others... This is not acceptable to us and we take a very strong objection for such a display of an important place like Golden temple," Ravi said.
Read on: India Objects to Jay Leno's Remark on Golden Temple
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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Jan 23, 2012 AT 23:37 IST, Edited At: Jan 23, 2012 23:37 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Mar 17, 2011 AT 23:54 IST
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Edited At: Mar 17, 2011 23:54 IST
Mr Pranab Mukherjee offered three broad technicalities in response to the cash for votes scam:
- The correspondence between a sovereign Government and its missions abroad enjoy diplomatic immunity. Therefore, it is not possible for the Government to either confirm it or deny it
- What happened in the 14th Lok Sabha cannot be judged during the tenure of the 15th Lok Sabha.
- It is not admissible evidence in any court of law
Clearly, the court of public opinion will find no reason to doubt why an American diplomat, while writing to his State Department, would be making up stories about Mr Satish Sharma and Mr Nachiketa Kapur, particularly when the cable was never meant to be made public.
To most, the latest revelations only corroborate what was already well-documented. [See full coverage: Cash for Votes]
That some Congressmen were discussing corruption at such a scale with the Americans only shows the cosiness between them (and it seems to be a trait that cuts across party lines).
Also, that the name of Mr Atal Behari Vajpayee's foster son-in-law, Mr Ranjan Bhattacharya -- an eminence who figured also on the Radia tapes -- should be brought up so casually by somebody known to be close to Mrs Sonia Gandhi only highlights once again what has been conjectured about a number of times before. As has been the name of a controversial Padma awardee.
And so far, no American official has questioned the veracity of the cables, though perhaps they would be happy to as it portrays them at least as being privy to information about, if not directly complicit in, large-scale corruption.
If anything, these cables, apart from corroborating what has already been in the realm of speculation and even some documentation, also tell us what the American bureaucracy thinks of the UPA and our netas in general: that politiicans happily admitted to subverting democracy by buying votes, thus perhaps clearly conveying that money could also buy MPs, that MPs were on sale, that the PM was isolated and not able to pursue his Pakistan policy, that his PMO was run by a 'Keralite Mafia' which, and not the MEA, actually ran the foreign policy, and that even ministers seen to be pursuing a policy that could be seen as anti-American could be replaced with more amenable ones.
Predictably, all the Indians named have offered strong denials. But the Congress party is demanding certificates from the Americans about the veracity of the cable.
Perhaps one plausible defence could have been for Mr Satish Sharma and Mr Nachiketa Kapur to say that they were "stringing the Americans along"?
Instead, all we had was the old Shiv Sainik Sanjay Nirupam, now an esteemed Congressman, demanding that the links between Wikileaks and BJP be probed!
On Twitter, @sruthijith offered:
Govt's best defence: assange is a sexual offender and hence admitting wiki leaks in prlmnt would be against our culture.
All other suggestions are welcome.
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Mar 17, 2011 AT 23:54 IST, Edited At: Mar 17, 2011 23:54 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Mar 15, 2011 AT 23:59 IST
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Edited At: Mar 15, 2011 23:59 IST

The Hindu has a massive six million words scoop today in the form of 5,100 cables offering its readers:
"a series of unprecedented insights into India's foreign policy and domestic affairs, diplomatic, political, economic, social, cultural, and intellectual – encountered, observed, tracked, interpreted, commented upon, appreciated, and pilloried by U.S. diplomats cabling the State Department in Washington D.C."
The Hindu editor in chief, Mr N. Ram describes and details how it got hold of the cables and how it went about putting them out:
Our contacts with WikiLeaks were initiated in the second week of December 2010. It was a period when Cablegate had captured the attention and imagination of a news-hungry world...
Hopes of getting our hands on the entire India Cache rose in the second half of December when Julian Assange spoke, in a newspaper interview, of “the incredible potential of the Indian media” in a context of “a lot of corruption” (waiting to be exposed), a rising middle class, and growing access to the internet – and specifically mentioned and praised The Hindu.
To cut the story short, our active contacts with WikiLeaks resumed in mid-February 2011. A breakthrough was achieved without any fuss, resulting in a detailed understanding on the terms and modus of publication, including redacting (where, and only where, necessary) and compliance with a security protocol for protecting and handling the sensitive material – and we had the whole cache of the India Cables in our hands in early March....
Already, there has been a furore in Parliament on what the American diplomats were saying about the cabinet reshuffle of 2006. As the cables begin to be read, absorbed and debated, among other things, there is bound to be at least a better understanding of which of the Indian politicians and journalists the American diplomats considered pro and anti American.
Much has already been said about the cabinet formation in 2009 after the shocking disclosures of the Radia tapes. Now take the cabinet reshuffle of 2006, on which Outlook reported as follows:
But Deora's appointment does not simply send out a pro-reforms, pro-US message that suits the PM at this moment. It also says that this is collection time, given his legendary fund-raising skills and his closeness to two powerful corporate houses, one of which has a clear interest in his ministry. Especially when read with the power portfolio being given to former Andhra Pradesh governor Sushilkumar Shinde, believed to be close to another corporate leader with interests in his ministry.
On Mr Aiyar being deprived of the Oil ministry, Mr Prem Shankar Jha wrote as follows:
Aiyar may have been moved because a side-effect of the long-term energy security plans he was beginning to implement would have been to change the global balance of power away from the US. Aiyar was not only determined to push ahead with the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline, to which the US had voiced strong objection on the ground that it would impede its efforts to isolate Iran, but he was actively putting in place an Asian gas grid that would link India with Iran, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, China and Myanmar. In addition, Aiyar had infused new vigour into India's efforts to acquire shares in oil fields abroad and, most troubling to the US, had signed an agreement with China that would enable the state-owned oil companies of the two countries to bid jointly for companies, concessions and oil fields in other countries in the future.
...This was our overpowering desire to fall in line with the American policies—a desire that turned into hunger after the July 18 agreement and is turning into an obsession as the Bush visit draws near. My suspicions hardened when Deora's first observation after being sworn in was that there were many difficulties with the Iran-India gas pipeline project.
And now let's take what Cable #51088, titled, "UPA cabinet shuffle good for America" by then Ambassador Mulford goes on to offer in its summary:
Removing contentious and outspoken Iran pipeline advocate Mani Shankar Aiyar from the Petroleum portfolio, the UPA replaced him with the pro-US Murli Deora, who was one of several figures inducted with long-standing ties to the Indo/US Parliamentary Forum (IUPF) and the Embassy. The UPA also inducted a large number of serving MPs, including seven from the IUPF who have publicly associated themselves with our strategic partnership. To ensure that there are no foreign policy ripples before the President's visit, PM Singh retained the critical MEA portfolio and is likely to hold on to it until after the next session of Parliament concludes and Congress has weathered crucial Assembly elections in Kerala and West Bengal in May. Viewing the shuffle as a shift towards the US, the left has become more alienated from Congress and more determined to obstruct UPA economic liberalization and foreign policy initiatives, all but ensuring political fireworks in the months ahead. The net effect of the reshuffle, however, is a Cabinet that is likely to be excellent for US goals in India (and Iran).
The cable then goes on to talk at length about what it terms the Aiyar controversy:
4. (C) Our Foreign Ministry contacts welcomed Aiyar's departure, commenting that his energy diplomacy had encroached on MEA turf too many times, leading to MEA appeals to the Prime Minister's Office to intercede. Despite the PMO warning to back off, Aiyar's Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas (MPNG) continued to interfere with MEA attempts to craft policy, our contacts said, citing Pakistan, China, Burma, Bangladesh, Iran and Sudan as areas of intergovernmental conflict. Aiyar's unwillingness to step back reportedly led to the PM's decision to remove him from this high-profile portfolio, and cements MEA's position as the lead bureaucracy on strategic policy making.
5. (C) Aiyar's dismissal as Petroleum Minister will leave MEA officials breathing easier, and put MEA back in charge of policy toward these energy suppliers, including the ""problem children"" of Sudan, Burma and Iran. Unlike Aiyar, who cultivated a reputation for anti-Americanism, Murli Deora has been associated with the US/India relationship for years. Lacking Aiyar's ambitions (or entrepreneurial zeal), he will be a more cautious Minister. Clearing these lines of authority should make the PM's job of coordinating India's often-conflicting interests in energy security, trade, investment, anti-terrorism and stronger ties with the West a bit less muddled. His departure also weakens the holdouts fighting a rear-guard action against stronger engagement with the US, who would prefer that India hold true to its non-aligned traditions. Local journalists speculate that Aiyar's parting shot was the leak on January 28 of the USG demarche (ref A) protesting Indian investment in Syrian oil projects, spun by opponents of US-India engagement as another attempt by the US to dictate policy to India...
7. (C) Aiyar's replacement as Petroleum Minister, Murli Deora, is a stalwart supporter of stronger US-India ties, and one of the few high-profile Congress leaders who embraces the PM's vision of the bilateral relationship. He is currently the Chairman of the India-US Forum of Parliamentarians, a non-partisan, industry-sponsored counterpart to the US Congress's India Caucus that advocates closer political and economic ties to the United States. Deora is a Gandhi family loyalist and a wealthy Mumbai-based industrialist, and is currently serving his fourth term as a member of the Lok Sabha. Deora's only vulnerability, as a Mumbai politician, is his long-standing connection to the Reliance industrial group, which includes significant energy equities.
8. (C) One analyst at Petrowatch, an industry publication in Mumbai, noted that Aiyar,s dismissal removes a powerful supporter of the Iran Pipeline project and speculated that it could signal a shift in the GOI's energy-related foreign policy.... 15 (C) ...The new entrants with strong pro-US credentials include Saifuddin Soz, Anand Sharma, Ashwani Kumar, Kapil Sibal and Aiyar's replacement Murli Deora. Seven of the new faces are also members of the pro-American Indo/US Parliamentary Forum, while the induction of so many entrants from the Rajya Sabha reflects the declining importance of a mass political base. The timing of the shuffle and the PM's retention of the MEA portfolio were dictated by the impending POTUS visit, and reflects the PM's commitment to ensure that there is no foreign policy surprises before the visit.
Incidentally, there had been some speculation among those who didn't bother to look up the archives about the identity of the journalist mentioned in the following paragraph in an article by Mr Siddharth Varadarajan, while analysing the cables on Iran’s nuclear programme:
“The challenge for Washington was to get India off the fence, especially when this would be seen in India as siding with the U.S. “An op-ed by a reliably anti-American reporter for The Hindu on September 1 encouraged the GOI to stand by Iran as the ‘litmus test’ of India’s willingness to pursue an ‘ independent’ foreign policy,” the cable noted.
Mr Varadarajan had to clarify on Twitter that the said “reliably anti-American repoter for The Hindu” was indeed Amit Baruah, former Islamabad and Colombo correspondent of the paper who joined BBC Hindi as its head.
Clearly, we are in for a treat of "unprecedented insights" that these cables promise.
Watch this space.
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Mar 15, 2011 AT 23:59 IST, Edited At: Mar 15, 2011 23:59 IST
POSTED BY NewsEd
ON Nov 06, 2010 AT 23:59 IST
,
Edited At: Nov 08, 2010 00:43 IST
POSTED BY NewsEd
ON Nov 06, 2010 AT 23:59 IST, Edited At: Nov 08, 2010 00:43 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Jun 17, 2010 AT 22:40 IST
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Edited At: Jun 18, 2010 00:40 IST
For those who care for such things, the 22-nation Pew Global Attitudes Survey is out for 2010 and has some interesting findings and very, very hurried comments --

Kenyans think more highly of the USA than Americans themselves, but there are very few other countries who have that good an opinion of the USA - and this when we are down by as much as 10%, which could be attributed to the Obama/Afghanistan effect. If the poll had been done after June 7 Bhopal judgement, it is anybody's guess what the figures would have been like.

And here, again, is a whopping 17% decline in US ratings -- blame it largely on the David Headley and the US Af-Pak policy.

We are down, and gloomier, but this is still #4 optimistic reading in the world, after China 87%, Brazil 50% and Poland 47%. Pakistanis rate thier country at 14%, which is up from 9% last year. But, then, that might well be because the poll this time excludes FATA, erstwhile NWFP, AJK and Balochistan.

This is actually the third best optimistic reading of one's country's economic situation, after China 91% and Brazil 62%. Only 18% of Pakistanis, for example, think similarly about their economy, as compared to 24% last year.

Only Germany (30%), Japan 26% and Turkey (20%) have a more unfavourable opinion of China. 85% in Pakistan have a favourable opinion.
More interactive stuff here
- Another interesting sidelight is people's image of their country in the world: After Indonesians, 92% of whom say Indonesia is generally liked by people in other nations, there are as many as 87% Indians who think that about India, followed by Jordan (85%), China (80%) and Brazil (80%). Only 40% Pakistanis and 35 Americans have that view of their countries
- Another interesting finding is the use of military force: In Asia, majorities consistently agree that military force can sometimes be necessary. Gandhi would perhaps not be happy to learn that India leads the pack at a surprising 92%, although most in Pakistan (73%), Indonesia (72%), China (60%) and Japan (57%) also agree with this position. In South Korea, more now (56%) hold this view than did so in 2007 (43%).
- And, of course, 19% Indians also believe that Brazil will win the FIFA World Cup, with Australia a close second at 14%
- Read the full report
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Jun 17, 2010 AT 22:40 IST, Edited At: Jun 18, 2010 00:40 IST
POSTED BY Buzz
ON Mar 22, 2010 AT 20:59 IST
,
Edited At: Mar 22, 2010 20:59 IST
Read the transcript here
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POSTED BY Buzz
ON Mar 22, 2010 AT 20:59 IST, Edited At: Mar 22, 2010 20:59 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Nov 11, 2009 AT 03:51 IST
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Edited At: Nov 11, 2009 04:51 IST

K.P. Nayar spells it out as the prime minister, Manmohan Singh prepares to visit Washington:
Notwithstanding New Delhi’s known opposition to bracketing India along with Pakistan and Afghanistan, there are many policy-makers in the Obama administration who believe that the US cannot win the war in Afghanistan unless they also push for a solution to Kashmir and that the problem of a failing state in Pakistan cannot be adequately addressed unless New Delhi and Islamabad are nudged towards a reconciliation...
...there is lack of comprehension now in New Delhi that the Obama administration intends to eventually legitimize the Taliban: what Washington is looking for is a way to put the best front on that eventuality and justify such an about-turn...
Read the full piece at the Telegraph
C. Raja Mohan adds:
...the cynical view of the prime minister’s visit to Washington is that it will be long on rhetoric but short on substance. But the unfolding developments in Afghanistan and Pakistan are too consequential for the national security of both India and the United States for their leaders to waste the opportunity for thinking at the highest levels about political cooperation on stabilising the north-western parts of the Subcontinent.
Read on at the Indian Express
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Nov 11, 2009 AT 03:51 IST, Edited At: Nov 11, 2009 04:51 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Oct 13, 2009 AT 04:16 IST
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Edited At: Oct 13, 2009 04:18 IST
Pratap Bhanu Mehta, in the Indian Express, is characteristically polite, but no less pointed, as he examines the hypocrisy of those whom we could loosely call American liberals, and how their "construction of India as obstructionist is in stark contrast to the contemporary representation of China" and how "a free culture of self-criticism of India is made to feed easily into a discourse of putting India on the defensive":
India is by no means perfect. But there is still something disquieting about the degree to which it is being put on the defensive on a number of issues, from climate change to proliferation — and now even potentially on Arunachal. Foreign policy, we know, is not just governed by the cold calculus of interests. It is governed by an amalgam of prejudgments, cultural representations, and ideological constructions. India needs to watch out for the fact that the “liberal” construction is likely to gain ascendancy, posing challenges for how we carve a place for ourselves in the world.
Read the full piece at the Indian Express: The Liberal Paradox
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Oct 13, 2009 AT 04:16 IST, Edited At: Oct 13, 2009 04:18 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Sep 16, 2009 AT 03:37 IST
,
Edited At: Sep 16, 2009 04:46 IST
K.P. Nayar in the Telegraph is pleased with P.Chidambaram's visit to the USA:
As part of his thorough preparations for the visit, Chidambaram read Securing the City: Inside America’s Best Counterterror Force — the NYPD (acronym for the New York Police Department). It is a new book written by Christopher Dickey, the Paris bureau chief of Newsweek, who wanted to investigate how the NYPD had kept New Yorkers safe since September 11, 2001. After reading the book, Chidambaram decided to craft his own programme in New York, unlike most Indian ministers. He asked for meetings with the FBI-led Joint Terror Task Force, the NYPD and the agencies involved in protecting New York’s mass transport system. In Washington, he similarly insisted on a personal tour of the National Counter-Terrorism Centre: his idea is to create a centre in New Delhi that mirrors the talent and capacity of the one in Washington in being able to deal with threats to India.
But, as he also notes, Chidambaram -- who was not obsessed, even for a minute, with being photographed with Barack Obama -- "is not Anand Sharma, Ghulam Nabi Azad or Jaipal Reddy, and it may be too much to assume that the way the home minister conducted himself last week was synonymous with the Indian political class having acquired maturity in its dealings with Washington."
More here
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POSTED BY Sundeep
ON Sep 16, 2009 AT 03:37 IST, Edited At: Sep 16, 2009 04:46 IST
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