|
|
|
|
|
|
Articles 22421 through 22520 of 27135:
- Revolt Of The 19th Century (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 09, 2005)
Everything has been happening when nothing happens. Good management is not about solving problems;
- Kashmir: Sub-Regional Trade (Dawn, SHAHID JAVED BURKI, Aug 09, 2005)
With this article, I conclude the series on Kashmir that I began several weeks ago.
- Agreements On Cbms (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 09, 2005)
Reports from New Delhi are encouraging, for Pakistan and India have agreed on a number of confidence- building measures in both conventional and non-conventional fields.
- In Refugee Camps, Hunger And Inhuman Conditions (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 09, 2005)
Over 50,000 Sikhs have been displaced since the communal riots broke out in Delhi on Wednesday (October 31).
- When Terror Stalked Trilokpuri (Indian Express, RAHUL BEDI, Aug 09, 2005)
Reports and photos from The Indian Express that capture the November madness in India’s capital after the Indira assassination
When terror stalked Trilokpuri
- Gavai Blames Narasimha Rao (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 09, 2005)
The former Lt. Governor of Delhi, P.G. Gavai, who has been criticised by the Nanavati Inquiry Commission, on Monday accused the then Union Home Minister, P.V. Narasimha Rao, and the Army chief, A. Vaidya, of "failure" in controlling the riots.
- India, Pakistan Vow To Keep Kashmir Truce (Washington Post, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 08, 2005)
India and Pakistan agreed Monday to extend a two-year-old cease-fire in disputed Kashmir, but did not discuss the question of reducing their military presence there, an Indian official said.
- Benefits Of Coming Clean (Times of India, T.P. Sreenivasan, Aug 08, 2005)
US nuclear deal will improve India's global standing
- Natwar To Help B'desh Preserve War Memories (Deccan Herald, Hassan Shahriar, Aug 08, 2005)
The External Affairs Minister, Mr Natwar Singh, on Sunday offered assistance to the Bangladeshi freedom fighters in preserving memories of the 1971 liberation war.
- Inviting India To Join The Club (Red Nova, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 08, 2005)
Aug. 6--India became the world's sixth nuclear power when it exploded a bomb in 1974.
- Four Killed In Assam Blasts (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 08, 2005)
Stepping up violence in Assam in the run-up to the Independence Day, ULFA militants on Sunday exploded a bomb at Boko near here killing four persons, besides blasting oil pipelines in three other districts.
- India Will Go Ahead With Fencing, Says Natwar (Hindu, HAROON HABIB, Aug 08, 2005)
External Affairs Minister K. Natwar Singh on Sunday made it clear that India would go ahead with the fencing of the border with Bangladesh.
- 500 Trucks Moving Towards Manipur (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 08, 2005)
The Army said on Sunday that 500 trucks were moving towards Manipur after the securing of Highway 53, which links the State with the rest of the country.
- Dark Clouds Hover Over The World (Deccan Herald, L K Sharma , Aug 08, 2005)
The message from Hiroshima was feeble while the US Nuclear Posture Review appeared strong
- No Age Limit (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 08, 2005)
The most dangerous thing about a joke is when it isn’t funny anymore. That’s the case with one I’ve been telling one in my talks about Social Security.
- Questions Raised On India’S Nuclear Deal With Us (Tribune, Ashish Kumar Sen, Aug 08, 2005)
In a sign of the hurdles that await the realisation of U.S.-India civilian nuclear cooperation, a new report indicates some observers believe the steps India has promised to take to separate its civilian and military facilities are “insufficient.”
- Nuclear Assets Or Liability? (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 08, 2005)
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was rightly expressed his fear of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons falling into the hands of jehadis in case President Musharraf losses power.
- Team Manmohan At Work, At Last (Hindu, Harish Khare , Aug 08, 2005)
For the first time, a new party-government synergy seems to be at work.
- Under The Sign Of Six (Telegraph, Jyoti Malhotra, Aug 08, 2005)
In the newly restructured world order, New Delhi may be able to exert more influence over its part of the world, writes Jyoti Malhotra
- A Lifetime Passion For Politics (Hindu, Ned Temko, Aug 08, 2005)
It is somehow fitting that Robin Cook's most memorable parliamentary performance in a political career that spanned three-and-a-half decades should have come in a resignation speech.
- Keeping Effective Check On Proliferation (Dawn, Dr Moonis Ahmar & Ishtiaq Ali Mehkri, Aug 08, 2005)
The recent U.S-India defence pact signed in Washington, apart from other things, would allow New Delhi to join the multilateral Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI).
- Not A Clash Of Civilizations (Dawn, Naeem ul Haque, Aug 08, 2005)
Whether we like it or not, the clash of civilizations has begun.
- A Bad Deal With India (Dawn, Lawrence J. Korb and Peter Ogden, Aug 08, 2005)
Many of the people who are made uncomfortable by President Bush’s ideologically driven foreign policy have been pleasantly surprised by his recent decision to supply India with nuclear energy technology.
- Pak-India Nuclear Hotline (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 08, 2005)
Pakistan and India have agreed to set up a telephone hotline to reduce the risk of a nuclear accident and also notify each other before testing ballistic missiles.
- India-Pak Agree On Ballistic Missiles (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 07, 2005)
India and Pakistan on Saturday night reached an understanding on the proposed Agreement on Pre-Notification of Flight Testing of Ballistic Missiles.
- A Congressman From India (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 07, 2005)
From a humble Punjab village, Dalip Singh Saund went on to become the first Asian to be elected to the US Congress. M.S.S. Murthy traces the extraordinary journey of a remarkable man.
- Making Excuses (Hindu, Mike Marqusee, Aug 07, 2005)
In the pubs as well as in the leader columns, there has been a depressing tendency to treat the De Menezes killing as an abstract ethical conundrum
- Us-Uk Air Exercises In Ihk (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 07, 2005)
Indian Air Force will conduct joint exercises with its US and British counterparts in November and early next year in occupied Kashmir. Indian Air Force chief Air Chief Marshal SP Tyagi said in Srinagar on Friday that exercises with US Air Force . . . .
- Britons Link Terror With Iraq War (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 07, 2005)
British Prime Minister Tony Blair has announced ban on two radical groups Hizut Tahrir and Al-Muhajiroun as part of his anti-terror measures.
- Facing Terrorism, British Style (Tribune, Col (retd.) P.K. Vasudeva, Aug 07, 2005)
The efficiency with which the police and other emergency services swung into action soon after the London attacks of July 7 is indeed commendable.
- The Second Prime Ministerial Embrace For August 15 (Indian Express, N K Singh, Aug 07, 2005)
Time passes quickly. It was exactly one year ago that I wrote my first column, ‘‘A prime ministerial embrace for August 15’’.
- Mauritania At The Crossroads (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 07, 2005)
Although they have promised to establish democratic conditions in the country within two years,
- Singh’S Us Visit And After (Dawn, A.B. Shahid, Aug 07, 2005)
The variety of negative reactions to the statements he made during his visit to the US must have shocked Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. He is an economist par excellence but, may be, not nearly as good a politician.
- Challenges Before New Saudi Ruler (Dawn, Maqbool Ahmad Bhatty, Aug 07, 2005)
The reign of King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz may have technically started when King Fahd breathed his last on August 1 but new king has exercised most of the executive authority in the kingdom since 1995,
- Security And Foreign Policy Imperatives (Tribune, Maj Gen Rajendra Nath (retd), Aug 07, 2005)
The lack of effective coordination between the Ministry of External Affairs and the Defence Ministry has led to the neglect of the security aspect. In the initial years,
- Military Action Alone Cannot Contain Terrorism, Says Alva (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 07, 2005)
Solution lies in dialogue and undoing the injustices of the past
- Taking Wing (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Aug 06, 2005)
Air force pilots leave to join civil aviation
- Wot Was That? (Times of India, Editorial, The Times of India, Aug 06, 2005)
Bush won't budge on semantics of terror
- Remembering Hiroshima (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 06, 2005)
Sixty years after America dropped the first atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima, the lessons of nuclear devastation remain largely unlearnt.
- The Bombing Of Hiroshima Was Policy (Hindu, Geoffrey Wheatcroft, Aug 06, 2005)
It was not uniquely wicked. It was part of a policy for the mass killing of civilians.
- Lessons Of Hiroshima And Nagasaki (Hindu, M. S. Swaminathan , Aug 06, 2005)
The voice of sanity of the survivors of the 1945 nuclear annihilation in Hiroshima and Nagasaki is yet to be heard. States that possess nuclear weapons should not lose even a day in working towards eliminating them.
- Sidelining The Disarmament Agenda (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 06, 2005)
The deadlocked negotiations at the seventh Review Conference of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) bring into sharp focus the lack of progress in global nuclear disarmament,
- State Of Relations With The Us (Dawn, Javid Husain, Aug 06, 2005)
Now NOW that the initial government-encouraged euphoria over the recent offer by Washington to sell F-16 aircraft to Islamabad....
- Commercialization Of The Press (Dawn, Kuldip Nayar, Aug 06, 2005)
Many years ago, Krishna Menon, who later became defence minister, said that it was the jute press that India had.
- Let’S Talk About Hiroshima (Indian Express, C. Uday Bhaskar, Aug 06, 2005)
A few years ago I attended a Pugwash Conference on nuclear disarmament in Europe and part of the interaction was with a group of school children.
- Same Old Fiddling (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 06, 2005)
The blockade of Manipur defies the idea of an integrated India
- Myth Or Reality? (Deccan Herald, Arvind Kumar, Aug 06, 2005)
From experience India should know that the United States will not do anything unless it is in its own interest
- Men Who Tamed The Ira (Dawn, Niall O’Dowd, Aug 05, 2005)
IF history is a nightmare from which we are trying to awaken, as James Joyce said, then the people of Ireland finally woke up from troubled slumber last week.
- Judges Need To Exercise Restraint (Hindu, Markandey Katju, Aug 05, 2005)
Why a judiciary at all? How should justice be administered? How should judges respond when people take them to task? How should they respond to public criticism? What about the law's delays? The Chief Justice of the Madras High Court provides some
- The Perennial Outsider (Hindu, Harish Khare , Aug 05, 2005)
On Thursday Mamata Banerjee, the Trinamool Congress leader, put on display somewhat unorthodox behaviour in the Lok Sabha after the Chair had rejected her adjournment motion on the subject of alleged infiltration into West Bengal from Bangladesh.
- Blair’S Flawed Logic (Dawn, Omar R. Quraishi, Aug 05, 2005)
British citizens of South Asian origin, Muslims and those from Pakistan in particular, are justified in feeling extremely vulnerable these days, especially after the London Metropolitan police pumped five bullets and killed a completely innocent man
- Clash Of Civilisations (Tribune, Sushant Sareen, Aug 05, 2005)
Most of the reactions from across the Islamic world to the London bombings have been remarkably similar.
- Musharraf Scolds Blame Game (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 05, 2005)
AS many as 14 marines were killed in a rebel attack in Western Iraq and a US freelance journalist was also gunned down in a relatively calm part of the country on Wednesday. The attacks came as the Iraqi politicians debated thorny issues in the draft. . .
- Get A Move On (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 05, 2005)
India must now focus on expanding the regime of nuclear CBMs with Pakistan
- Deadliest Attack On Us Forces (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 05, 2005)
As many as 14 marines were killed in a rebel attack in Western Iraq and a US freelance journalist was also gunned down in a relatively calm part of the country on Wednesday.
- Geelani Opposes Sentence To Afzal (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 05, 2005)
``An innocent man was framed and sentenced to death without evidence''
- Police Officer Killed In Jaffna (Hindu, V. S. Sambandan, Aug 05, 2005)
A mob in Sri Lanka's northern Jaffna peninsula abducted and killed a senior police officer on Thursday evening as he was attempting to defuse the situation in a tense suburb after a civilian was shot dead.
- Us Shift On India Nuclear Policy Tilts Regional Balance (Christian Science Monitor, editorial, Christian Science Monitor, Aug 04, 2005)
Perhaps nowhere else do American foreign policymakers face more contradictions than in the area stretching from Israel to Korea.
- Who Is Thy Neighbour? (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 04, 2005)
Phlegm and moderation prevail over fear and anger in Britain
WESTMINSTER GLEANINGS ANABEL LOYD
- Killing Hope (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 04, 2005)
After the tempered optimism of last month’s Gleneagles summit come tragic reminders that Africa’s wounds are too deep to be easily balmed.
- No Alternative To Democracy (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 04, 2005)
It would be wrong, perhaps, to see too much in Christina Rocca’s views about the relationship between the war on terror and the safety of nuclear weapons on the one hand and President Pervez Musharraf retaining his uniform on the other.
- The Shift In Us Policy (Dawn, Tanvir Ahmad Khan, Aug 04, 2005)
There has already been considerable comment in these columns on the recently announced Indo-US defence pact and the new US policy on nuclear collaboration with India.
- Enter, The New Kashmiris (Indian Express, Ananya Vajpeyi, Aug 04, 2005)
On June 16, at Kaman Post in Baramulla District, the river Jhelum thundered through a gorge between two steep mountain walls.
- The Congress And Image Building (Hindu, K. V. PRASAD, Aug 04, 2005)
Is there a case for a media policy that is party-centric and not personality driven?
- Isi Network Busted (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 04, 2005)
The Intelligence Bureau and the Assam Police say they have busted a network of ISI operatives, who were allegedly passing on highly classified defence documents to officials of the Pakistan Embassy in Delhi.
- No Secret Agreement With U.S.: Manmohan (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 04, 2005)
Nuclear arms programme not compromised
Not ganging up with U.S. against China
U.N. seat: When the time comes, I have reason to believe that we will not be ignored
Negotiations were held up for 14 hours because I wanted final draft approved by AEC Ch
- Vsnl Refutes Ustr's Charges On Pricing Of Bandwidth (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 04, 2005)
Vague claims of anonymous U.S. operators passed on, says company
- Manipur A Fit Case For President's Rule, Says Bjp (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 04, 2005)
Economic blockade has put people to unimaginable sufferings, says MPs team
- `India Made A Junior Partner Of The U.S.' (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 04, 2005)
Can we separate nuclear facilities, asks Vajpayee
- Rogue Nations And Nukes (Deccan Herald, PRASENJIT CHOWDHURY, Aug 04, 2005)
Pakistan has been a ‘rogue state’ in every sense of the term and yet the US turns a blind eye towards it
- Walking History (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 04, 2005)
Modelled on the famous London Walks, a Bangalorean takes you through what he calls Bangalore Walks. ANAND SANKAR falls in step with him
History is not staring at you in Bangalore. Please be patient and sink into the past ARUN PAI
- Mutual Funds Must Invest In Transparency (Business Line, A. Vasudevan, Aug 04, 2005)
A large body of investors may want to take advantage of a high equity market via the mutual fund route.
- In The Name Of Justice (Telegraph, Beena Sarwar, Aug 04, 2005)
Three frozen moments of grief, captured by wire photographs last week, stand out — anguished families in Brazil, Kashmir, and Iraq.
- As Insecure As Before (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Aug 04, 2005)
On the eve of another Hiroshima Day, Achin Vanaik exposes the hypocrisy of “responsible” nuclear powers like the US The author is professor of international relations and global politics, Delhi University.
- A Bad Deal With India (Washington Post, Lawrence J. Korb and Peter Ogden, Aug 03, 2005)
Many of the people who are made uncomfortable by President Bush's ideologically driven foreign policy have been pleasantly surprised by his recent decision to supply India with nuclear energy technology.
- Setback To Sudanese Peace (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 03, 2005)
The death of Sudanese Vice-President John Garang in a helicopter crash over the weekend has come at a time when peace between Muslims in Sudan’s north and Christians and animists in the south is still at a nascent stage.
- Sweeping India Off Its Feet (Indian Express, Kuldip Nayar, Aug 03, 2005)
Whether we make the nuclear club status or not depends on India’s Parliament and the US Congress.
- War Room Breach (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 03, 2005)
A security breach in the heart of the Naval Headquarters in South Block, in the briefing room traditionally known to officers as the War Room, is a serious matter.
- Lca And Project Management (Deccan Herald, S R Valluri, Aug 03, 2005)
The Indian LCA programme should have a full time DG-ADA who is professionally knowledgeable
- Extension Of Continental Shelf (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 03, 2005)
Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Shahid Karimullah has said that the Pakistan Navy has been vigorously pursuing the case with the Government for extension of continental shelf from 200 to 350 nautical miles.
Previous 100 Defense Issues Articles | Next 100 Defense Issues Articles
Home
Page
|
|