Trump, Europe, and India: A Shift That Works in New Delhi’s Favor
By setting in motion a peace process that is likely to see a swift end to the Ukraine war, US president Donald Trump is doing India another favour.
By setting in motion a peace process that is likely to see a swift end to the Ukraine war, US president Donald Trump is doing India another favour.
It is most welcome that external affairs minister S Jaishankar has said that India and Japan are well-positioned to support Africa’s sustainable development, even as the US government has frozen the funds its aid agency, USAID
Assorted state governments have been holding investment summits, where chief ministers declare their unstinted support to new business ventures, assorted businessmen turn up to declare their investment plans for the state, and sign memoranda of understanding, hope for a paradigm shift in the local business-smothering culture floats at the venue of the summit, like an evanescent puff of perfume, the assembled scribes write up positive stories, and then, once the photographs have been taken, and the motorcades carrying visiting dignitaries have wound their way to the airport, everyone departs the site of synthetic euphoria, climbing down to their habitual elevations above the mean sea level, back to the principal occupation of humdrum survival.
Fraying of transatlantic alliance, on display at Munich Security Conference, further reduces chance of bipolar hegemony of world by US and China
Delhi results show the Congress's failure under a narcissistic leadership; if anyone expects AAP’s fall to lead to Congress regeneration, they must think again
Now Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is to meet US president Donald Trump in the US. What could come out of it?