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Articles 12021 through 12120 of 12768:
- Why Vajpayee, Musharraf Should Bite Into Afghan Pie (Indian Express, Rajinder Puri, Nov 16, 2001)
MY reaction to President Bush’s declaration of war against terrorism was that America could win battles but lose the war if it fights only terrorists.
- Beware, ‘Reformist Taliban’ Will Continue To Export Terrorism To India (Tribune, Ashok Kapur, Nov 16, 2001)
THE Afghan military campaign is reaching a point of decision or what Clausewitz called the culminating point. To him, success came from strength — both physical and moral.
- The Image Of God (Indian Express, Swami Chaitanya Keerti, Nov 15, 2001)
Some people believe God created man in his own image. I sincerely doubt it.
- Shotgun’s Double Play (Indian Express, Arati R. Jerath, Nov 15, 2001)
WHAT’s common between L.K. Advani and Sonia Gandhi? Shatrughan Sinha, it seems. On Monday, the filmstar politician went straight from the Home Minister’s pre-Diwali tea party and warm embrace into an evening of wooing the Congress president.
- Pak Needs To Address World’s Fears (Indian Express, Husain Haqqani, Nov 15, 2001)
IN THE aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks in the United States, Pakistan has come out of international isolation with a vengeance.
- The Difference Between A Militant And A Terrorist (The Financial Express, G. V. Ramakrishnan , Nov 15, 2001)
We frequently hear the terms militant and terrorist in newspapers and on television.
- When Putin Met Vajpayee (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 15, 2001)
Bilateral relations with Russia are coming back on track.
- South Via Kabul? (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 15, 2001)
It took more than five years for the Northern Alliance to return to Kabul, and under circumstances that are completely different from those that prevailed in the past.
- Trap The Chameleon As It Changes 'Color' (Pioneer, Wilson John, Nov 15, 2001)
Finally we are saying what we should be saying. It is such a relief to hear Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, for a change shedding all diplomatic niceties in New York.
- Crisis Of Hindu Bengalis (Pioneer, Abhijit Bhattacharyya , Nov 15, 2001)
The ruling Bangladesh Nationalist Party's call for imposition of Jaziya on the Hindu Bengalis (as reported in the Bangla daily, Sangbad) typifies the phrase:
- A Better Way To Fight Terrorism (Indian Express, Abhik Siddiqui, Nov 15, 2001)
We are often told that terrorism has no address. A terrorist is a terrorist no matter where ever he exists, whatever form he takes.
- Kabul Changes Hands (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 14, 2001)
KABUL has new masters and it is bad news for the USA, Pakistan and the ongoing Operation Enduring Freedom.
- Crisis Of Hindu Bengalis (Pioneer, Abhijit Bhattacharyya , Nov 14, 2001)
The ruling Bangladesh Nationalist Party's call for imposition of Jaziya on the Hindu Bengalis (as reported in the Bangla daily, Sangbad) typifies the phrase:
- Trap The Chameleon As It Changes 'Color' (Pioneer, Wilson John, Nov 14, 2001)
Finally we are saying what we should be saying. It is such a relief to hear Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, for a change shedding all diplomatic niceties in New York, telling Pakistan to forget about Kashmir.
- Shotgun’s Double Play (Indian Express, Arati R. Jerath, Nov 14, 2001)
WHAT’s common between L.K. Advani and Sonia Gandhi? Shatrughan Sinha, it seems.
- South Via Kabul? (Pioneer, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 14, 2001)
It took more than five years for the Northern Alliance to return to Kabul, and under circumstances that are completely different from those that prevailed in the past.
- Reject The Poto Cunning, Not The Law (Hindu, Harish Khare , Nov 14, 2001)
THESE DAYS Mr. Lal Kishen Advani has that satisfied grin of an alley cat that has just managed to get into a jar full of POTO- fied cream.
- Rout Of The Taliban (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 14, 2001)
A RAGTAG ARMY of radical Islamic students, who seized control of most of Afghanistan five years ago and set in motion an immensely harmful chain reaction in the volatile regions of Central and South Asia, is on the run.
- The Tragedy Of A Battered Afghanistan (The Financial Express, Kuldip Nayar, Nov 14, 2001)
The Taliban have confined Afghan ambassador Masood Khalili to a wheelchair at his house in New Delhi.
- Pak Needs To Address World’s Fears (Indian Express, Husain Haqqani, Nov 14, 2001)
IN THE aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks in the United States, Pakistan has come out of international isolation with a vengeance.
- Did I Pass Or Fail? (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 14, 2001)
Edward said points out how, in the global panorama of cultures, not all peoples are endowed with the equal right to narration and representation.
- How Prepared Is India To Tackle Bio-Chemical Terror? (The Financial Express, Ashok B Sharma, Nov 14, 2001)
“Though so far there has been no confirmed case of the spread of anthrax virus in the country, the threat of bio-chemical terrorism and radiological and nuclear warfare is real, not imaginary.
- The Indian Muslims Trial By Fire (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Nov 14, 2001)
SOON after the bombing of Afghanistan began, one of the favourite topics for the Indian media was splitting the Indian Muslim population into what hacks loved to call fundamentalists and moderates.
- Bin Laden’s Bluster (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 13, 2001)
BIN Laden is a maverick terrorist leader. Others of his ilk love to remain shadowy figures. He loves to talk and he has been doing a lot of boasting during the past few days.
- Facto Non Verba (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 13, 2001)
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's statement that Pakistan will never get Kashmir is a strong rebuff to Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf's obession with Kashmir.
- In The Grip Of 'Islamophobia' (Pioneer, Sidharth Bhatia, Nov 13, 2001)
The Germans have an apt word for it-schadenfruede-which means a sense of gloating over someone else's misery and misfortune.
- Century Of Resistance (Pioneer, A. Surya Prakash, Nov 13, 2001)
Past experience shows that they (religious beliefs and social attitudes of Hindus and Muslims) are too irreconcilable and too incompatible to permit Hindus and Muslims ever forming a single nation.
- Can’t Skirt The Ground (Indian Express, General (Retd) V. P. Malik, Nov 13, 2001)
I Was sitting in a Connecticut restaurant when breaking news on CNN and other TV channels began showing President George W. Bush informing his nation that he had ordered his armed forces to destroy the Al-Qaeda, and its supporter, the Taliban.
- Peace, Trust And Impartiality (Hindu, Manabi Majumdar, Nov 13, 2001)
THOSE OF us who condemn at once the recent terrorist attack on innocent lives in the United States as well as the American war hysteria in Afghanistan.
- Dismal Dividends (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 13, 2001)
INDIA'S REFUSAL TO jettison an ill-advised and ill-timed hardline stance and its continuing disinclination to engage Pakistan bilaterally has once again handed the propaganda advantage to Gen. Pervez Musharraf.
- What Is The French For `Phase Out?' (Hindu, C. Rammanohar Reddy, Nov 13, 2001)
The word in French for `phase out' is `elimination.' But is there another word that is a more innocuous translation of `phase out'?
- Jyoti Malhotra (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 13, 2001)
THE corridors of the UN General Assembly in New York are a great place to network in, especially in session, when the building is crawling with leaders of all shapes, sizes and colours.
- The Fight Against Terrorism (Tribune, Satyabrata Rai Chowdhuri, Nov 13, 2001)
AGAINST the background of the US-led international coalition’s war against terrorism, to many people the most frightening prospect is that Osama bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda network might use weapons of mass destruction.
- Defining Terrorism (Business Line, K. Ramesh, Nov 13, 2001)
THE human ingenuity in drafting will be soon put to test when the global coalition gets to defining what constitutes 'terrorism'?
- K-Word, Again And Again (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 13, 2001)
Little tangible gains for Musharraf from his US visit.
- Afghan Crisis: The Unresolved Dilemmas (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Nov 12, 2001)
Why is the current crisis, arising out of the anti-terrorism operation in Afghanistan, getting deepened?
- The Monster Network Beyond (Pioneer, Shubha Singh, Nov 12, 2001)
Pakistan's President, General Prervez Musharraf, has been on a high profile tour through Teheran, Istanbul, Paris, London and New York.
- India’s Major Gains (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 12, 2001)
UNDERSTATED, if not unstated, is the knitting of a close strategic relationship between India and the USA.
- No, Mr Rushdie, It Is Not About Islam (Tribune, Davinder P. S. Sandhu, Nov 12, 2001)
SALMAN Rushdie has written that the terror trauma the world is facing is about Islam.
- Missing In Action (Indian Express, Shailaja Bajpai, Nov 12, 2001)
You require a perspective longer than a telescope and extraordinary reservoirs of patience to sit through this. Otherwise, you’re likely to feel enraged, frustrated, even humiliated.
- The `K' Word All Over Again (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Nov 12, 2001)
NEW DELHI, NOV. 11. Must India be worried that the U.S. President, Mr. George W. Bush, has promised the Pakistan President, Gen. Pervez Musharraf.
- Pakistan On Fire: Scenario I (Pioneer, Bobby Sharma, Nov 12, 2001)
In the 'Second Opinion' 'Is Pakistan Burning' (November 5, 2001) three scenarios under which Pakistan's President General Musharraf may be ousted were outlined.
- Will Pervez Deliver? (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 12, 2001)
Finally, we are making our point loud and clear and it is being heard.
- A Bird In The Bush (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 12, 2001)
It may not be in hand as yet, but it’s worth cultivating.
- ``We May Stay, But We'll Never Be Indians'' (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Nov 12, 2001)
THE alienation felt by the people in Kashmir Valley is well-known. However, when an angry and anguished 24-year-old postgraduate student at Kashmir University is prepared to die for ``the cause'', it strikes a chord.
- Issue Of Indo-Pak Dialogue (Tribune, T. V. Rajeswar, Nov 12, 2001)
THE course the Indian leadership has adopted on General Musharraf’s repeated request for a meeting in the New York is unfortunate.
- Agriculture Needs A Fair Deal (Hindu, Bhanu Pratap Singh , Nov 12, 2001)
IT IS very unfortunate that most intellectuals and mediapersons live in cities, cut off from the realities of rural India.
- India's Concerns Half-Met (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 12, 2001)
ON THE DAY the Northern Alliance, a friend of India and present ally of the U.S., scored a breakthrough victory in Mazar-i-Sharif in northern Afghanistan.
- Security Of Pakistan's Nuclear Arsenal (Hindu, K. Santhanam, Nov 12, 2001)
AS THE war in Afghanistan enters the fifth week, concerns have emerged about the safety and security of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal.
- House Of Shadows (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 11, 2001)
Finally it took four weeks and a foreign television channel to broadcast the truth that the George Bush administration would rather keep buried deep.
- Subdued, For Now (Hindu, ARUNKUMAR BHATT, Nov 11, 2001)
ABU SALEM'S escape from the law has not resulted in his gang exploding with joy.
- Subdued, For Now (Hindu, ARUNKUMAR BHATT, Nov 11, 2001)
ABU SALEM'S escape from the law has not resulted in his gang exploding with joy.
- Myanmar: The Core Of India’s ‘Look East’ Policy (Tribune, Ashok Kapur, Nov 11, 2001)
FOLLOWING its independence in 1948, Myanmar had a policy of neutralism and isolationism up to the 1980s but when the Myanmar military disallowed Sui Kyi to assume power following the 1990 elections, the country’s external stance changed.
- Blanking Out Of Afghanistan (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 11, 2001)
Professor Noam Chomsky teaches Linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with which he has been associated for four and a half decades.
- History Of Conflict (Pioneer, Priyadarsi Dutta, Nov 11, 2001)
Hagia Sophia was built as a Christian Cathedral between AD 532 and 537 by the orders of the Byzantine Emperor Justin I at Constantinople, now Istanbul (Turkey).
- Russia’s Putin: Playing A Bad Hand Well (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 10, 2001)
"The Cold War is over," Russian President Vladimir Putin (speaking in German he learned as a KGB officer in Dresden) told the parliament in Berlin in late September.
- House Of Shadows (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 10, 2001)
Finally it took four weeks and a foreign television channel to broadcast the truth that the George Bush administration would rather keep buried deep.
- Here A General, There A General (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 10, 2001)
Everywhere, it’s Musharraf but Vajpayee doesn’t have to feel left out.
- Blanking Out Of Afghanistan (Pioneer, Editorial, The Pioneer, Nov 10, 2001)
Professor Noam Chomsky teaches Linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with which he has been associated for four and a half decades.
- Pakistan And Taliban (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 10, 2001)
THE USA seems to be finally turning the heat on Pakistan as well. Some of the recent decisions of the Musharraf government are indicators enough that it is being pressurised like never before to sever the umbilical cord with its creation.
- India And Us Should Align Interests In Future Afghan Policy (The Financial Express, Arvind Virmani, Nov 10, 2001)
The art of foreign policy lies in making other countries (in the current case the US) believe that certain policies and actions that are in our (India’s) interest are also in its own (US’s) interest (and vice-versa).
- History Of Conflict (Pioneer, Priyadarsi Dutta, Nov 10, 2001)
Hagia Sophia was built as a Christian Cathedral between AD 532 and 537 by the orders of the Byzantine Emperor Justin I at Constantinople, now Istanbul (Turkey).
- Maneka’s Salvo At Sonia, Congress! (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 10, 2001)
Maneka wins a libel case and fires a salvo at Sonia and a captive Congress party reacts.
- From Darkness To A Mess (The Kashmir Times, Editorial, Kashmir Times, Nov 09, 2001)
The sudden near-collapse of the Taliban regime -- both the Pentagon and Gen. Tommy Frank, the head of the U.S operation against Afghanistan.
- Indo-Russian Security Relations (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 09, 2001)
QUITE CLEARLY, THE Prime Minister's visit to Russia went far beyond the generalities of the Moscow Declaration on international terrorism and the joint statement on globally relevant strategic issues.
- The First Month Of The War (Hindu, T. Sreedhar, Nov 09, 2001)
ANY ASSESSMENT of the U.S.-led grand alliance's month-long military operations in Afghanistan must take cognisance of three factors.
- The Long Cave (Business Line, Timeri N. Murari , Nov 09, 2001)
LIKE everyone else, I have been brooding over Osama bin Laden (ObL, for short).
- Standard Of Political Debate (Tribune, S. Nihal Singh, Nov 09, 2001)
NOBODY expects India’s present rulers to play by the Queensberry Rules but the recent exchanges with Pakistan indulged in by Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee.
- Revival Of Old Ties (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Nov 09, 2001)
BOMBING of Afghanistan has pushed all other developments to the back of newspaper headlines.
- Vajpayee On Crucial Foreign Visits (The Kashmir Times, O. N. Mehrotra, Nov 09, 2001)
Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee began on November 4, his ten-day crucial visit to three major world capitals--Moscow, Washington and London--and New York.
- It’s Our War Too (Indian Express, R. P. Subramanian, Nov 09, 2001)
IN discussing the recent visit by US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, your editorial ‘B-52 Diplomacy’ (November 6) talks about “their war”.
- Triumphant Return Of Khaleda Zia (Tribune, G Parthasarathy, Nov 08, 2001)
JUST over a week ago, National Security Adviser Brajesh Misra paid a brief and low-key visit to Bangladesh carrying a message of greetings from Prime Minister Vajpayee to his newly elected Bangladesh counterpart Begum Khaleda Zia.
- Relocating Indo-Russian Ties (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Nov 08, 2001)
AS THE PRIME Minister concluded the Moscow leg of a marathon mission abroad and headed for Washington, it was clear that a treaty partner of Cold War vintage was in the process of readjusting and retuning its own world vision.
- India And The U.S.-Russian Alliance (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Nov 08, 2001)
THE PRIME Minister, Mr. Atal Behari Vajpayee, begins his engagements in Washington today on the eve of a historic breakthrough in U.S.-Russian relations.
- Avoid The 'Great Game' (Hindu, Achin Vanaik , Nov 08, 2001)
THE CENTRAL dividing line in India today is not between Left and Right, or pro and anti-American, between Islam-baiters and those who are not.
- Travel Advisory For Pervez (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 08, 2001)
Lock up the house with care before taking that flight.
- Friends: A Rerun (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 08, 2001)
Putin’ in place the pieces of the Afghan puzzle.
- It’s Our War Too (Indian Express, R. P. Subramanian, Nov 08, 2001)
India too stands to gain from the current global war against terrorism.
- Bush Is No Honest Broker (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Nov 08, 2001)
Talk to Musharraf, but not because US says so
- Return Of Khaleda Zia -- Prospects For India-Bangladesh Relations (Business Line, G Parthasarathy, Nov 08, 2001)
JUST over a week ago, the National Security Adviser, Mr Brajesh Misra, paid a brief and low-key visit to Bangladesh carrying a message of greetings from the Prime Minister, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee, to his newly elected Bangladeshi counterpart.
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