India in the Mirror of Foreign Diplomatic Archieves [sic]Max Jean Zins, Gilles Boquérat Manohar, 2004 - 138 من الصفحات Published in association with Centre de Sciences Humaines, New Delhi. This book proceeds from the co-existence of Indian secrecy over its diplomatic records that stifles academic inquiry and the release of significant materials from foreign archives which offers the fascinating possibility of understanding India's external policy through the primary sources of others. Words written by the American, British, French and Soviet diplomats does not just chronicle a quarter century of international politics; it helps to understand the driving themes of the bilateral relations, the respective expectations and the way India tried to pursue its national interest during the Cold War. |
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الصفحة 87
... seemed to consider that Tibet was just a diplomatic card for India.30 G.S. Bajpai said that he was ' very sceptical ' about India sending arms to Tibet.31 Worse , in an Indian memorandum sent to the Chinese , he seemed to have confused ...
... seemed to consider that Tibet was just a diplomatic card for India.30 G.S. Bajpai said that he was ' very sceptical ' about India sending arms to Tibet.31 Worse , in an Indian memorandum sent to the Chinese , he seemed to have confused ...
الصفحة 94
... seemed to perceive this when he insisted in his talks with British leaders on ' the reorganization in the Russian economy and the decision of Malenkov to raise the standard of living of the Russian people ' , something that could turn ...
... seemed to perceive this when he insisted in his talks with British leaders on ' the reorganization in the Russian economy and the decision of Malenkov to raise the standard of living of the Russian people ' , something that could turn ...
الصفحة 117
... seemed to compete in trying to convince America that they have to be supported against an eventual communist menace . Bajpai in 1948 said in Washington : ' India can expect no effective assistance from the USSR in its primary objective ...
... seemed to compete in trying to convince America that they have to be supported against an eventual communist menace . Bajpai in 1948 said in Washington : ' India can expect no effective assistance from the USSR in its primary objective ...
المحتوى
Introduction | 7 |
The Soviet Perception of Indias Foreign Policy | 55 |
List of Contributors | 137 |
حقوق النشر | |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
administration Affairs agreement Ambassador American archives Asian assistance attitude August Bangladesh became become Beijing British China Chinese colonial communism Communist concerned Conference Congress considered countries course December Delhi Department diplomacy diplomatic direct discussion Dispatch Dulles East economic Eisenhower Embassy establish external fact favour February forces foreign policy France French FRUS fund Gandhi hope Ibid important independence Indo-China influence interest issue January July Kashmir Kissinger leaders Letter London March meeting Memorandum of conversation military Ministry Moscow National Security Nehru Nixon Note November October official Pakistan Paris Party Planning political position possible President problem question reason refused regarding region relations representative role Russian Secretary Security Council seemed side situation South Asia Soviet Union talks told treaty UKHC in India understand United USSR wanted Washington West Western wrote