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Articles 12321 through 12420 of 12768:
- Loss Of Leverage For India (Hindu, K. K. Katyal , Oct 18, 2001)
It was a painful experience - during a recent visit abroad, especially the four weeks in the U.K. after September 11 - to find India almost completely missing in the media focus on terrorism or the debates on diverse issues arising out of it.
- How Free Will The Competition Commission Be? (The Financial Express, Pradeep S. Mehta, Oct 18, 2001)
In late 1998, when firms of Pakistan increased the price of cement bags by about 75 per cent overnight, the Monopoly Control Authority (MCA) of Pakistan investigated and discovered a cartel.
- Tea Industry In Crisis: Has Corporate Farming Failed? (The Financial Express, Ashok B Sharma, Oct 18, 2001)
The domestic tea industry is in the midst of a crisis with exports falling in the face of increasing global demand, decline in profit levels and large accumulation of stocks.
- Does Us Have The Medicine? (Business Line, Menka Shivdasani , Oct 18, 2001)
STAND down, India and Pakistan, especially India because you are no use to us, while Pakistan is, even if it is aiding and abetting what you ill-informed people call terrorists in Kashmir.
- Powell Comes And Goes (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 18, 2001)
India can’t expect others to fight its battles.
- Pervez Musharraf’s Next Year (Tribune, Inder Malhotra, Oct 18, 2001)
ON October 12, when the ongoing U.S.-led bombing of the Taliban in Afghanistan was in its fifth day, Pakistan’s military ruler and self-appointed President, General Pervez Musharraf, celebrated the second anniversary of his coup.
- Snags And Contradictions (Telegraph, SHAM LAL , Oct 18, 2001)
Never before has America been in the grip of such fear and panic.
- Strategic Partner (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 18, 2001)
The secretary of state of the United States of America, Mr Colin Powell has performed a balancing act during his visits to India and Pakistan.
- Global Defence Spending Set To Increase (The Financial Express, Ranjit B Rai and P K Jain, Oct 17, 2001)
The dastardly unconventional attacks of September 11 in the United States killed over 6,000 innocents in New York and caused losses of billions of dollars the world over.
- India And Pakistan Should Stop Playing Politics On The Hoof (The Financial Express, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 17, 2001)
This is the worst of times. This is also the best of times. Both New Delhi and Islamabad should utilise the opportunity to come closer.
- India’s Strained Foreign Policy (Tribune, S. Nihal Singh, Oct 17, 2001)
JAWAHARLAL Nehru, the architect of India’s foreign policy, based it on the three pillars of socialism, nonalignment and secularism. Socialism, in particular the communist variant of it, is now in almost universal disrepute.
- Need For Restraint (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 17, 2001)
THE INTENSIVE SHELLING of some Pakistani military positions by the Indian Army on Monday night has exposed the fragility of the Vajpayee administration's strategic thinking on the Kashmir issue in the present volatile international situation.
- Look Beyond Wagah And Up (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 17, 2001)
We have more Muslims than Pakistan, sell this to Powell.
- Global Coalition Later, Home Front Now (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Oct 17, 2001)
THE latest statement from the Osama bin Laden network, the al Qaeda which has not been refuted puts on record what the rest of Indians had suspected and Kashmiris had always known.
- A New Wto Round Now Almost Certain (Hindu, C. Rammanohar Reddy, Oct 17, 2001)
CHENNAI, OCT. 16. The message from last weekend's `informal ministerial' meeting of the World Trade Organisation in Singapore is that the launch of a new round of negotiations is now almost a certainty.
- Clueless Despite The Clues (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 17, 2001)
Had the CIA and FBI looked more closely, they would have found clues to prevent September 11 in the rubble of the recent bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and the USS Cole
- Emerging Dilemmas In Afghanistan (Hindu, V. R. Raghavan , Oct 16, 2001)
THE MILITARY campaign in Afghanistan has commenced on expected lines and is proceeding rapidly towards dilemmas instead of victory.
- Fighting Taliban: Why India Should Stay The Course With Us (The Financial Express, Chanakya , Oct 16, 2001)
Colin Powell is to visit Pakistan and India, and many in India are anxious to impress upon the United States that it should expand its war on terrorism to cover the cross-border terrorists operating in Kashmir.
- Al-Qaida's Threat (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 16, 2001)
THE warning issued by Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaida outfit to America not to back "Hindus against Muslims" in Kashmir needs careful scrutiny. It is actually meant to raise the communal temperature in India.
- New Priorities (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 16, 2001)
One perceptible fallout of the events of September 11 and the the subsequent retaliatory action by the United States of America is the increased involvement of the latter in the affairs of the south Asian region.
- Protecting National Interest Not Disruptive: Maran (The Financial Express, Editorial, Financial Express, Oct 16, 2001)
Singapore: The press here described him as “difficult” , “contrariant”, and “a bit of an odd ball”.
- War Will Revive Economy (Indian Express, Bibek Debroy, Oct 15, 2001)
WHAT impact does the Afghanistan factor have on the Indian economy?
- A Tainted Pak Trust (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 15, 2001)
THESE are difficult days for Pakistan and President Pervez Musharraf.
- Exposing Blair And Engaging America (Tribune, Ashok Kapur, Oct 15, 2001)
THE central issues before Indian diplomacy now flow from the statement of British Prime Minister Tony Blair that Pakistan had a valid interest in Afghanistan. This statement has far-reaching consequences for the future of Afghanistan and Pakistan.
- The Task Ahead (Hindu, Mushirul Hasan, Oct 15, 2001)
A GRIEVOUS error of judgment on September 11 led to a colossal human tragedy - the death of innocent civilians in the U.S., followed by the massive air strikes in Afghanistan.
- When To Let Kabul Fall (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Oct 15, 2001)
WASHINGTON, OCT. 14. As Afghanistan braces for the second week of American attacks, the big questions remain.
- An Unequal War (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 15, 2001)
A WEEK after the start of the bombing of Al-Qaeda and Taliban targets, the coalition behind the US campaign against terrorism is already fraying at the edges.
- Suicide Squads Get Their Targets, But Duck Battle (Indian Express, MAJ GENERAL S. C. N. Jatar (Rtd), Oct 15, 2001)
In his two-part article on the reasons behind suicide missions (The Indian Express, October 5-6), Muzamil Jaleel has missed out some important military and psychological attributes of such missions.
- Wages Of A Subaltern Policy (Tribune, Sumer Kaul, Oct 15, 2001)
IT is just a matter of time before the awesome lethality of America’s war machine turns much of Afghanistan into rubble, many of its people into dust and most of Taliban into history.
- Now Target Western Consciousness (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 15, 2001)
WHILE India has scored a victory with the US-British freeze of the assets of Jaish-e-Mohammad, it has also come as a signal that the US will step up pressure on India to resume talks with Pakistan on Kashmir.
- Pakistan Does About-Turn, Then Goes Round In Circles (Indian Express, Ayaz Amir, Oct 15, 2001)
WE are caught in the whirl of events over which we have no control. We are not calling the shots in the war raging in Afghanistan.
- The Battle Has Just Begun (Hindu, Sridhar Krishnaswami, Oct 14, 2001)
THE BUSH administration is giving indications of getting into a different phase of the military operations in Afghanistan.
- Sitting On A Powder Keg (Hindu, Muralidhar Reddy, Oct 14, 2001)
AS THE U.S.-led military campaign in Afghanistan takes an ugly turn, with claims of growing civilian causalties, the military Government in Pakistan is faced with a sensitive situation.
- New Turn In Bangladesh (Tribune, Rakshat Puri, Oct 14, 2001)
THE bombing of Taliban positions in Afghanistan should have had an expected response from Begum Khaleda Zia’s new administration in Dhaka.
- Combating Proxy War: India Can Do It (Tribune, I. D. Swami, Oct 14, 2001)
WHEN terror unleashed by an individual who entertains fanciful ambition struck America, world leaders’ attitude towards terrorism has suddenly taken a dramatic change.
- Towards An Enduring Victory Of ‘Freedom Over Fear’ (Tribune, Ashwani Kumar, Oct 14, 2001)
FOR the first time, the United Nations Security Council has adopted a unanimous resolution under Chapter VII of the UN Charter spelling out a comprehensive anti-terrorism framework enforceable qua member states.
- Where Are All The Maulanas? (Indian Express, Tarun Vijay, Oct 14, 2001)
The psyche war began the day President Bush addressed the senate.
- Back To The Future: Reviving Grand Council (Indian Express, Steven Mufson, Oct 14, 2001)
After the 21st century satellites and fighter jets are done in Afghanistan, Bush administration officials are planning to turn to a 2,000-year-old political model that was used by Genghis Khan in the 13th century.
- The Battle Has Just Begun (Hindu, Sridhar Krishnaswami, Oct 14, 2001)
THE BUSH administration is giving indications of getting into a different phase of the military operations in Afghanistan.
- Us Apparel Firms Weigh Risks Of Pakistan Operations (The Financial Express, Teri Agins, Oct 13, 2001)
US apparel companies with business in Pakistan are weighing the risks and benefits of keeping manufacturing so close to military hot spots and are seeking special treatment and assurances from the governments in both Washington and Islamabad.
- Neck Deep, 40,000ft High (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 13, 2001)
WHAT does your average district magistrate do when trouble breaks out and he doesn’t particularly know who is behind it, where he is hiding and how to restore order?
- Beyond Challenge (Telegraph, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Oct 13, 2001)
No tears will be shed for either a murderous Osama bin Laden or a fanatical taliban, and only a legalistic few might quibble that the law of nations casts its protection over even rogue states and repugnant governments.
- Leaping On To Anti-Us Bandwagon (Tribune, Tavleen Singh, Oct 13, 2001)
IT is, said the Taliban’s Ambassador to Ismalabad, an illegal action by the tyrant America.
- Musharraf Finds English Press Helpful (Tribune, Gobind Thukral, Oct 13, 2001)
OBVIOUSLY it is the US bombing of Afghanistan and the consequent protests in several cities that continues to dominate the mainline newspapers in Pakistan.
- Right Place, Right Time (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 13, 2001)
Wordsmith Laloo Prasad Yadav recognises a member of his word-weavers’ ilk when he spots one.
- After The Taliban (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 13, 2001)
INDIA has good reason to be concerned about what shape a new post-Taliban regime will take.
- America, Oil And Afghanistan (Hindu, Sitaram Yechury, Oct 13, 2001)
IT HAS finally happened. American imperialism has begun its unilateral war against Afghanistan.
- Their War, Not Ours (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 12, 2001)
SINCE the yardstick of the success or failure of India’s foreign policy is linked to Pakistan’s standing in the international community.
- Policy Of National Interest (Business Line, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 12, 2001)
NATIONAL interest can change a countrys policy. This is how the Pakistani President, Gen Pervez Musharraf, has defended his decision to support America.
- Address Kashmir's Alienation (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 12, 2001)
EVER SINCE THE United States proclaimed its intention to mount a global `war' on terrorism in ``all its forms'', as a response to the September 11 carnage, India has been investing considerable energy in getting the Governments worldwide.
- Afghanistan After The Taliban (Hindu, T. Sreedhar, Oct 12, 2001)
SINCE THE last week of September, the media has been debating the post-Taliban scenarios for Afghanistan.
- The Opiate (Business Line, Timeri N. Murari , Oct 12, 2001)
DO TERRORISTS make good rulers?
- Regional War With Global Reach (Business Line, S. Sethuraman, Oct 12, 2001)
THE air and missile attacks the US has launched on Afghanistan will have far-reaching implications for regional and global security.
- New Politico-Strategic Equations (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Oct 12, 2001)
WHAT will be the fallout of Afghan developments in the light of the changing politico-strategic setting in India's neighbourhood? What will be the nature of new alignments in the region?
- Afghanistan: Looking Beyond The Taliban (Tribune, M.S.N. Menon, Oct 12, 2001)
AT last, America has struck back. It is the first phase to take on Bin Laden and the Taliban.
- Deadly War Dust And Environment (Tribune, M. Rajivlochan, Oct 12, 2001)
CONSIDER the effect of America’s unrelenting bombing on the environment of Afghanistan. Over 50 missiles and many hundred bombs are being showered on that country each day.
- The Label Of ‘Rogue Army’ (Tribune, G Parthasarathy, Oct 11, 2001)
A number of Western newspapers like the New York Times carried announcements labelling the Pakistan army a “Rogue Army” during the Kargil conflict.
- Generals And Foragers (Telegraph, Bhaskar Ghose, Oct 11, 2001)
The world watches, almost as if it were mesmerized, as the taliban is punished for the carnage of September 11.
- Caught On The Blind Side (Telegraph, Sumantra Banerjee, Oct 11, 2001)
Pakistan just can’t believe its luck. If it isn’t a multi-million dollar gift cheque, then it’s the rescheduling of even larger amounts of debt.
- Reporting From Trenches (Business Line, Menka Shivdasani , Oct 11, 2001)
WAR and television have always had a very strange and intimate relationship.
- Links In The Terror Chain (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 11, 2001)
The sooner Jaish-e-Mohammed is termed terrorist, the better.
- Re-Engaging Pakistan (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Oct 11, 2001)
ABOUT THREE weeks ago the Pakistan President, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, in defending his decision to support American military action against Afghanistan, called on India to lay off Pakistan.
- Reality Check On Afghan Front (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Oct 11, 2001)
THE US Defence Secretary, Mr Donald H. Rumsfeld, and the Chairman, US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen Richard B. Myers, could scarce forbear gloating over the pounding of the Afghan cities for the fourth day and night in succession.
- A General And A Rogue Army (Business Line, G Parthasarathy, Oct 11, 2001)
A NUMBER of Western newspapers, such as The New York Times, carried announcements labelling the Pakistan army a "Rogue Army'' during the Kargil conflict.
- Women Oppose War (Hindu, Mythili Sivaraman , Oct 11, 2001)
``We have all been overwhelmed by the attacks in the USA...
- The London Connection In The Plot That Killed Ahmed Shah Masood (Indian Express, Mohamad Bazzi, Oct 10, 2001)
The men who assassinated Afghan opposition leader Ahmed Shah Massood succeeded where the Soviets failed at least 15 times.
- Testing Time For Musharraf (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 10, 2001)
IN the US-led war against terrorism, Pakistani ruler General Pervez Musharraf is fighting his battle on two major fronts.
- Islam And Freedom (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Oct 10, 2001)
THE Italian Prime Minister, Mr Silvio Berlusconi, has been at the centre of a storm.
- Taliban: The Passing Phase? (Tribune, Parshotam Mehra, Oct 10, 2001)
FOR both the jittery Taliban regime and the hapless, harried Afghan people the end of another short interlude, of a little over five years, appears to be close at hand.
- More Global Trade Will Heal The World (Business Line, G. Ramachandran, Oct 10, 2001)
``The main reason for the absence of a serious challenge to American hegemony is that it is so benign.
- Colin Powell's Visit (Hindu, Chinmaya R. Gharekhan, Oct 10, 2001)
WHAT IS the purpose behind the visit of the American Secretary of State, Gen. Colin Powell, to India and Pakistan at this stage?
- Through The Haze Of War (Hindu, Sudhanshu Ranade , Oct 10, 2001)
It's been only a month, the dust hasn't had time to settle; so some confusion is understandable. But there is more of it than is really necessary.
- Danger Sign (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 10, 2001)
The military regime of the Pakistan president, Mr Pervez Musharraf, is showing serious signs of instability. Mr Musharraf’s decision to sack or sideline three of his closest aides reveals.
- Can Pakistan Survive? (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 10, 2001)
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I —
I took the ones less travelled by,
And that has made all the difference.
- Will History Repeat Itself In Afghanistan? (The Financial Express, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 10, 2001)
A US official has said: “You cannot win Afghanistan and lose Pakistan.” Whatever that means, the fight against the Taliban was bound to bring this predicament in public.
- Redefining Pakistan’s National Interest (Indian Express, Husain Haqqani, Oct 10, 2001)
General Pervez Musharraf has explained that his decision to join the US-led coalition against global terrorism is in Pakistan’s national interest.
- Politics And Evil (Hindu, Supriya Roy Chowdhury, Oct 10, 2001)
The depiction of evil is writ large in politics. From the epics to modern times, all wars are ultimately predicated on the opposition of good and evil.
- The End Of Pakistan's Great Game? (Hindu, KESAVA MENON, Oct 10, 2001)
``WON'T ALL of Afghanistan's problems be solved if it becomes a part of Pakistan?''
- Whither Co-Fighters' Credibility? (Business Line, Sundara K. Datta-Ray, Oct 10, 2001)
UNDOUBTEDLY, the US is the most free and democratic of nations.
- Not By Arms Alone (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 10, 2001)
THERE is irony, yes, in those canary yellow packets that have also been rained from Afghanistan’s night skies. But those stop-gap, symbolic rations of beans, biscuit and jam can also be seen to be carriers of a crucial political message:
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