Articles 25621 through 25720 of 31829:
- There’S A World Out There (Indian Express, C. Raja Mohan, Aug 09, 2005)
The utterly predictable reaction of the Left parties against the Indo-US defence and nuclear pacts confirms that the CPI(M) and CPI are very clear about what India should not do.
- Cops Busy With Cauliflowers (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Aug 09, 2005)
The Delhi Administration completely failed to deal with the riotous fallout, which set Delhi aflame within hours of the assassination of Indira Gandhi.
- Israeli Pull-Out From Gaza (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 09, 2005)
Israel's Cabinet has finally approved the first evacuation of settlements in the occupied Gaza strip at its meeting in Jerusalem on Sunday.
- Changing Face Of America (Dawn, F.S. Aijazuddin, Aug 09, 2005)
The phrase ‘What sort of American is a Cablinasian?’ was coined by Tiger Woods, the US golf phenomenon, to describe his parentage — born as he was of an African-American father and a Thai mother.
- Benefits Of Coming Clean (Times of India, T.P. Sreenivasan, Aug 08, 2005)
US nuclear deal will improve India's global standing
- No Talks With Centre: Geelani (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 08, 2005)
Addressing Sunday’s rally, Mr Geelani claimed that the Centre was not supportive of tripartite talks and is “engaging” the separatists to weaken militancy.
- 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.
- 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
- Korean Nuclear Talks Adjourned (Hindu, P. S. SURYANARAYANA, Aug 08, 2005)
Sharp differences between the United States and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) on Sunday led to a three-week adjournment of the fourth round of the six-party talks in Beijing on the North Korean nuclear-weapons programme.
- 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.”
- Seeking Local Allegiances In Global Times (Business Line, C. Gopinath , Aug 08, 2005)
The Prime Minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, returned from his recent trip to the US pleased that he had got Washington's commitment to help with the civilian use of nuclear technology, especially in the area of power generation.
- Now A Petro-Cold War (Tribune, S.K. Sharma, Aug 08, 2005)
The world became unipolar with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, and the US emerged as the sole super 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.
- Flood Forecasting: Possibilities And Problems (Hindu, N. Gopal Raj , Aug 08, 2005)
Just knowing the rain intensity in different places in a city and the amount of rain that has already fallen can help the authorities identify the areas most likely to face flooding and take timely action.
- Faith Vacuum Haunts Europe (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Aug 08, 2005)
Britons way of life is not threatened by Muslim extremists as much as their own loss of religious faith
- 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.
- Sweeping And Arbitrary (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 08, 2005)
Finally, Mr Tony Blair has acted, though belatedly, and taken a number of steps that include the banning of two extremist groups
- When Nehru Met Kennedy (Indian Express, GAYATRI RAY , Aug 08, 2005)
It was deja vu on the television screen. Facing the press during the Indo-US summit 2005 were George Bush,
- How Maharashta Bleeds Mumbai (Indian Express, Sucheta Dalal, Aug 08, 2005)
When Pramod Mahajan rose to interrupt the noted constitutional expert Fali Nariman in Parliament and thunder against any thought of a separate administration in Mumbai, his audience in the financial capital sneered in contempt.
- 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.
- Nuclear Row: Iran Rejects Eu’S Offer (Deccan Herald, Reuters, Aug 07, 2005)
The Islamic republic has declared that it would restart work at the Isfahan uranium conversion plant by next Friday, but it would be only under IAEA supervision.
- N Korea Talks Drag On (Deccan Herald, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 07, 2005)
Six-party talks to defuse the North Korean nuclear crisis dragged into 12th day on Saturday,
- Partition’S Hinge (Telegraph, MUKUL KESAVAN, Aug 07, 2005)
How separatist Muslim politics took root between 1937 and 1942
- 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.
- Fateful August 6 (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 07, 2005)
The world community remembered the holocaust brought to Hiroshima on this day in 1945 by the United States of America. Sixty years back,
- Eloquent Images Of Struggle (Hindu, PRAFULLA DAS, Aug 07, 2005)
Rupashree Nanda's "Harvest Of Hunger" establishes the link between food insecurity and distress migration in Orissa
- 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
- 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’’.
- Not Your Regular Sage (Hindu, S. Ramachander, Aug 07, 2005)
The book is refreshingly free of any sentimentality, and its objectivity is welcome.
A paradox of Krishanmurti's life was that, people closest to him were disma
- High-Fad Diets (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 07, 2005)
It all started with the publication of a best-selling diet book. Before long, Americans were gleefully downing T-bones and piling on the eggs and vegetables — and somehow losing weight anyway.
- Worse Than The Disease (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 07, 2005)
In the wake of the bombings that caused death and disruption in London last month, there was a danger that the government would rush out ill-considered measures in response.
- Bhima Level Goes Above 406 Metres (Hindu, T.V. Sivanandan, Aug 07, 2005)
Crops on more than 40,000 hectares lost
- 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,
- Rekindling Iran’S Revolution (Dawn, Tanvir Ahmad Khan, Aug 07, 2005)
It was in March 1989 that I put a fundamental question about the historical status of Iran’s Islamic Revolution to a small but distinguished group of Iranian intellectuals visiting the embassy residence in Tehran:
- Waiting Five Decades To Make A Six-Hour Journey (Hindu, Luv Puri , Aug 07, 2005)
Opening a Kargil-Skardu road will reunite families
- Long View Of The Raj (Telegraph, RAMACHANDRA GUHA, Aug 06, 2005)
Our prime minister is a mild-mannered man; no one, not even his friend, fellow economist and Oxford contemporary, Amartya Sen, would ever call him an “argumentative Indian”.
- Judges Are Mortals Too (Times of India, RONOJOY SEN, Aug 06, 2005)
We know little about the men in black robes
- 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.
- On Track (Deccan Herald, Editorial, The Deccan Herald, Aug 06, 2005)
India should go ahead with the gas pipeline project
- Al-Qaeda Is Now An Idea (Hindu, Jason Burke, Aug 06, 2005)
So another blast and, a month or so later, another tape. This time it is Ayman al-Zawahiri,
- 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,
- Just Acquittal, Unjust Suspicion (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 06, 2005)
In some ways, the Supreme Court's verdict in the December 13, 2001 Parliament attack case is a corroboration of the ruling delivered by the Delhi High Court two years ago.
- Where Are The "Native" Brits? (Hindu, Hasan Suroor, Aug 06, 2005)
The answer to the increasing flight of home-grown talent from British universities lies in better funding of higher education.
- 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....
- 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.
- Don't Trust The Headlines (Hindu, John Allen Paulos, Aug 06, 2005)
Medical research may make great headlines in the media, but new analysis shows too many studies later prove to be less than accurate.
- This Is Press Freedom In Us! (Pakistan Observer, Editorial, Pakistan Observer, Aug 06, 2005)
The Bush administration has imposed curbs on media in its bid to keep facts and figures away from the masses. In view of the surging number of casualties of American troops in Iraq, it has banned print and electronic media from the coverage of arrival....
- 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
- The Price Of Occupation (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 05, 2005)
Twenty-two Americans, one of them a civilian, have lost their lives in Iraq in three days. For eight days, the figure goes up to 37.
- Islam And Democracy (Deccan Herald, M B NAQVI, Aug 05, 2005)
Terror can be defeated only if the American domination of Palestine, Afghanistan and Iraq is ended
- Yuan Revaluation — Implications For China, Us And India (Business Line, Alok Ray, Aug 05, 2005)
China has ended its decade-old fixed peg to the dollar by allowing a mere 2 per cent appreciation of the yuan vis-à-vis the dollar.
- Discovering America (Dawn, Editorial, Dawn, Aug 05, 2005)
It is not often that the views of 19th-century thinkers are discussed in daily newspapers preoccupied with current events,
- 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
- It Is Time For Kumbhakarna To Wake Up (Hindu, Utsa Patnaik, Aug 05, 2005)
Rural India is in acute distress, which is bound to turn to turmoil if its crisis is not addressed. It is not too late. There is a strong case for a universal employment guarantee and a universal Public Distribution System.
- 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. . .
- Wooing West Asia (Business Line, Editorial, Business Line, Aug 05, 2005)
New Delhi Has Consistently looked East to forge free-trade ties — from the latest comprehensive economic partnership framework with Singapore,
- Patka’ Unravelled (Tribune, A.J. Philip, Aug 05, 2005)
Pappa, I don’t want to go to school”, declared the son on his return from the school one day. Why?
- Cashing In On Craze For High-Fad Diets (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Aug 05, 2005)
IT all started with the publication of a bestselling diet book. Before long, Americans were gleefully downing T-bones and piling on the eggs and vegetables — and somehow losing weight anyway.
- Pakistan's Madrassas In Perspective (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Aug 05, 2005)
The attempts of West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharya to set his state on the trajectory of high growth are being scuttled by his own party colleagues. A prestigious deal with the Salem Group from Indonesia to create a township in . . .
- 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.
- Piecing Together The Peace (Indian Express, Saeed Naqvi, Aug 05, 2005)
The buzz in Kashmir is that people and leaders there are tired of conflict and would like to be engaged, the rash of terrorist attacks notwithstanding.
- We Have Lost Our Labour, They Are Gone A Contrary Way (Business Line, D. Murali , Aug 05, 2005)
Labour is one thing that managements labour hard to come to terms with, especially when the riding is rough as in Honda.
- Tcs Pact With Italian Firm (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 05, 2005)
Drug discovery through computer programme
- Infy's China Investment (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 05, 2005)
Projects will include software development, IT services and ITeS
- India Took A Calculated Risk, Says Manmohan Singh (Hindu, Correspondent or Reporter, Aug 05, 2005)
Opening civilian nuclear energy sector to inspections is a risk worth taking: Prime Minister
- Famine An Affliction Of The Poor (Hindu, Jeevan Vasagar, Aug 05, 2005)
Women are served food last and the elderly end up at the bottom of the pile
- 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.
Previous 100 Indo - US Relation Articles | Next 100 Indo - US Relation Articles
Home
Page
|