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Articles 12421 through 12520 of 12768:
- The Battle For The Muslim Mind (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Oct 09, 2001)
NEW DELHI, OCT. 8. A determined America and a defiant Taliban.
- Vajpayee Govt. Soft On Terrorism? (Hindu, Subramanian Swamy , Oct 09, 2001)
In 1991, when Mr. Chandra Shekhar was Prime Minister, and I was a Minister in his Cabinet, the U.S. had wanted India's airport facilities for the Gulf War operations.
- Black Tuesday, Grey Sunday (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 09, 2001)
THERE was no doubt that America would one day avenge the carnage at New York and Washington. What was uncertain was how long would it take the US to string together a coalition of nations, other than those in the West.
- American Strategy Against Terrorism (Tribune, Ashok Kapur, Oct 09, 2001)
IS the American campaign only against Osama bin Laden and the hardline Taliban?
- Aik Lamhe Ka Sultan (Tribune, Dharam Bir Sharma, Oct 09, 2001)
IT was the year 1950. The Bhakra Control Board had convened a high level Indo-Pak meet of senior officers to settle the river water dispute. The venue was Rashtrapati Bhavan, New Delhi.
- India And Bush’s Osama War (Tribune, P. Raman , Oct 09, 2001)
IT is nearly a month since the Osama terrorists hurt American pride on that Black Tuesday.
- Do Not Escalate The 'Smart' War (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 09, 2001)
THE MILITARY OFFENSIVE that the United States and Britain have launched against Afghanistan is presumably the first overt aspect of a smart war against the terrorists with a global reach and also their hosts.
- Will It Be An American Blitzkrieg? (Business Line, B. S. Raghavan , Oct 09, 2001)
THE air strikes on Kabul, Kandahar and Jalalabad in Afghanistan launched on October 7 by the US are the long-expected culmination of a series of tragic events set in motion by the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington a month earlier.
- From Bosnia, With Terror (Business Line, B. Raman , Oct 09, 2001)
THE Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), the militant wing of the Pakistan-based Markaz Dawa wal Irshad (MDI), has been behind most of the recent terrorist attacks in Jammu and Kashmir (J&K).
- Lifting Of Us Sanctions: Type, Scope And Legal Backing (The Financial Express, G. Balachandran, Oct 09, 2001)
On September 22, 2001, George W Bush, through Presidential Determination No. 2001-28, lifted sanctions imposed on India and Pakistan in May 1998.
- Fine-Tuning The Anti-Terror Chorus (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 08, 2001)
THE GLOBAL `CAMPAIGN' against terrorism seems to be gradually acquiring some clarity as a possible broad mission, but the signs are still far from being definitive.
- Afghan Events’ Impact On India (Tribune, T. V. Rajeswar, Oct 08, 2001)
THE war clouds are gathering over Afghanistan and when the US forces commence attacks the entire West Asia and the Indian subcontinent will feel the tremors.
- Blair’s Blank Words (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 08, 2001)
MR Tony Blair did not come to New Delhi as the British Prime Minister but as a special representative of US President Bush to drum up support for the super power’s plans on Osama bin Laden and the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.
- The Blair Project (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 08, 2001)
OPINIONS may vary about British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s role in the grand coalition the US has built against global terrorism.
- What Should Have Been The Indian Response To Black Tuesday (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 08, 2001)
THE terms of reference for assessing the Indian response to the terrorist attack on America should be based on the following criteria: first, the ground realities; second, the motivations and objectives of the counter-measures planned by the US.
- Rebels In Demand (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Oct 07, 2001)
IF YOU are wondering about the delay in U.S. counter strikes on Afghanistan, then shift focus to the Northern Alliance and its increasing clout and control over territory.
- The Verdict And After (Hindu, HAROON HABIB, Oct 07, 2001)
THE FOUR-PARTY alliance led by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) chief, Begum Khaleda Zia has got a stunning and unprecedented two-thirds majority in the elections held on October 1.
- Can The King And His Men Do It? (Hindu, VAIJU NARAVANE, Oct 07, 2001)
MOHAMMED ZAHIR Shah, the former ruler of Afghanistan who turns 87 on October 15, lives in a secluded villa surrounded by gardens in the northern Roman suburb of Cassia.
- Will It Ever End? (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Oct 07, 2001)
KASHMIR'S AGONY is deepening with each passing day.
- Will It Ever End? (Hindu, Shujaat Bukhari , Oct 07, 2001)
KASHMIR'S AGONY is deepening with each passing day.
- Daunting Challenges Before Khaleda Zia (Tribune, Harihar Swarup , Oct 07, 2001)
TWO warring Begums of Bangladesh, not on talking terms and disagreeing on almost everything, have performed a feat; they have ushered in democracy in their poverty-stricken country.
- Afghanistan Caught In The Crossfire (Tribune, Rakshat Puri, Oct 07, 2001)
AFGHANISTAN is passing through a crucial phase in its history.
- Concerted Global Effort Needed To Combat Terrorism (Tribune, Kuldip Singh Bajwa, Oct 07, 2001)
THE terrorist strikes in the USA on September 11 have brought the scourge of terrorism into very sharp global focus.
- Rebels In Demand (Hindu, B. MURALIDHAR REDDY, Oct 07, 2001)
IF YOU are wondering about the delay in U.S. counter strikes on Afghanistan, then shift focus to the Northern Alliance and its increasing clout and control over territory.
- Helpless In The Afghan Quagmire (Tribune, Syed Nooruzzaman, Oct 06, 2001)
WHILE the USA, the leader of the anti-terrorism coalition, is busy applying its energies to punishing the perpetrators of the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington.
- Hasty Offer Of Help To Usa (Tribune, Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, Oct 06, 2001)
TO repeat what the majority leader in the German parliament said recently, adapting John F. Kennedy’s famous words in Berlin, Wir sind Amerikaner, We are all Americans.
- Pakistan’s Anti-Osama Policy (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 06, 2001)
IN a spectacular diplomatic somersault, the second in three weeks, Pakistan has disowned the Taliban and its honoured guest, Osama bin Laden.
- Terrorism In Kashmir (Business Line, Ranabir Ray Choudhury , Oct 06, 2001)
THERE is, no doubt, whatever that Islamabad is actively engaged in aiding and abetting terrorist activity in the Kashmir Valley.
- Wanted, A United Resolve To Fight Terrorism (The Financial Express, Ashwani Kumar, Oct 06, 2001)
The terrorists’ strike of September 11, 2001, unprecedented in its fanatical savagery, is a turning point in the global endeavour against international terrorism.
- Prepare An Iron-Clad Case Against Pak. Terrorists (Hindu, Kuldip Nayar, Oct 06, 2001)
I seldom watch Pakistan TV news. It is more biased than Doordarshan's. The other day, I was horrified to listen to Pakistan's reaction to the Jaish-e-Mohammed's attack on the Jammu and Kashmir Assembly building in Srinagar.
- Good Morning, America? (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 06, 2001)
YOU live an entire half century cowering under the fear of ‘‘third party intervention’’.
- Osama And The Deeds Of Mass Terror (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 06, 2001)
A FORCEFUL CASE has been presented by the British Prime Minister, Mr. Tony Blair, against Osama bin Laden, the suspected evil genius behind the atrocities of mass terror that stunned the world on September 11.
- Hit Back (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 06, 2001)
There is a time to write and a time to act. The prime minister, Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee, should recognize that the time to write polite, if pointed, letters to the president of the United States of America or the head of any other country is long past.
- Cnn Vs Bbc, Bias Vs Balance (Indian Express, Rajeev Shukla, Oct 06, 2001)
THOSE who have been following both BBC and CNN after the September 11 attacks in New York and Washington DC, must have realised why the former is unquestionably the more professional and balanced of the two.
- Hijack Drama (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 06, 2001)
AFTER the September 11 World Trade Centre calamity, panic is in the air - literally. Every straying plane appears to be a ticking bomb.
- Thus Far And No Farther (Tribune, Hari Jaisingh, Oct 05, 2001)
AMIDST new-found global determination to fight terrorism the official Indian voice tends to be marginalised, notwithstanding the fact that this country, as pointed out in my last column.
- Economic Consequences Of Terrorism (Business Line, R. Parthasarathy , Oct 05, 2001)
NO DOUBT, America's response to the heinous terrorist attacks that resulted in the loss of thousands of innocent lives was initially one of anger.
- 70 Per Cent Of Pak’s Privatisation Plan On Hold Over Crisis (The Financial Express, Jack Redden, Oct 05, 2001)
Pakistan said on Thursday that 70 per cent of a privatisation programme that was to raise $1 billion by the end of this year has been put on hold because of the Afghan crisis.
- The World Must Unite To Kill Terrorism (Business Line, Aravind Sitaraman, Oct 05, 2001)
WITH terrorism going global, it is important that its principal victims, the United States, India, Israel, and other democratic nations, pro-actively co-operate and collaborate to pre-empt and challenge this new destructive anti-democratic force.
- America's Passing Paranoia? (Hindu, Raju Rajagopal, Oct 05, 2001)
Remember the momentary panic over a fifth missing plane as we watched the unfolding horror on Sept. 11, and our collective sigh of relief when it turned out to be a false alarm?
- India, Luckily, Left Out Of Great Game (Tribune, Arundhati Roy, Oct 05, 2001)
IN America there has been rough talk of bombing Afghanistan back to the stone age.
- The Algebra Of Infinite Justice (Tribune, Arundhati Roy, Oct 04, 2001)
IN the aftermath of the unconscionable September 11 suicide attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center, an American newscaster said: Good and evil rarely manifest themselves as clearly as they did last Tuesday.
- Fundamentalist Turn (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 04, 2001)
IN a country where pre-poll violence claims many lives, a citizen heaves a sigh of relief on the completion of the election process.
- After Taliban What? (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 04, 2001)
NOW it is almost certain that the infamous Taliban regime of Afghanistan has to pave the way, of course not voluntarily, for a new dispensation in the war-torn country.
- Will Terrorists Have The Last Laugh? (Business Line, B. Raman , Oct 04, 2001)
WILL the world's terrorists have the last laugh?
- Us Action Against Osama And Taliban (Tribune, Inder Malhotra, Oct 04, 2001)
THREE weeks after the infamous September 11 slaughter the future scenario is less clear than it seemed to be in the immediate aftermath of the ghastly terrorist outrage against the USA.
- Making A Killing Post-Wtc (Indian Express, Anuradha Raman, Oct 04, 2001)
IF terrorism had found a captive audience, corporate houses were going in for the kill. After September 11, corporate houses loosened their purse strings and upped their ad spend on Indian news channels.
- Bangladesh Will Be Another Front, Unless Taliban Is Smashed (The Financial Express, Rohit Bansal, Oct 04, 2001)
Will the smashing victory of Ms Khaleda Zia eventually boil down to an alliance of India-baiters smacking their lips in Bangladesh and Pakistan? The question has repercussions on our polito-economic, and diplomatic interests on our eastern front.
- The Road To Doha Is Paved With Imponderables (Business Line, K. P. Prabhakaran Nair, Oct 04, 2001)
URUGUAY 1986, Seattle 1999 and now Doha 2001.
- Letter From The Edge (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 04, 2001)
Dear Prime Minister...have we completely lost it?
- Allies In The Anti-Terrorism War? (Hindu, Sudhanshu Ranade , Oct 04, 2001)
India's External Affairs Minister visited Washington earlier this week to hold discussions with the American National Security Adviser, Dr. Condoleezza Rice, State Department officials, Senators and Congressmen.
- Can U.S. Restrain Pakistan? (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Oct 03, 2001)
NEW DELHI, OCT. 2. As the Government reacts strongly against the escalation of terrorism in Jammu and Kashmir, Indo-Pak. tensions pose an important test to the international coalition against terror that the Bush Administration has assembled.
- Taliban And The Anti-Terror Stakes (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 03, 2001)
THE TALIBAN `GOVERNMENT' has put itself on a collision course with the United States by openly acknowledging that Osama bin Laden, the suspected evil genius behind the latest terrorist strikes against America, is actually present in Afghanistan itself.
- Barbarians At The Gates (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 03, 2001)
THERE was nothing arbitrary or rash about this attack.
- The Chief Of Defence Staff Idea (Tribune, Harwant Singh, Oct 03, 2001)
THE Group Of Ministers approved the setting up of the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) some time ago.
- Three Presidents And A Terrorist (Tribune, Amardeep S. Dahiya, Oct 03, 2001)
IT’S a strange world they say and a violent and unpredictable one as well.
- Terror Revisited (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 03, 2001)
The terrorist attack on the Jammu and Kashmir assembly suggests that there is likely to be a rapid escalation of violence by terrorist groups operating in the state in the days to come.
- Life After The Taliban (Telegraph, Chandrashekar Dasgupta, Oct 03, 2001)
Looking beyond the impending war in Afghanistan, the international community must start planning for the political and economic reconstruction of that ill-starred country.
- Musharraf, Brazening It Out (Business Line, Rasheeda Bhagat , Oct 03, 2001)
THOSE of us who watched Pakistan's President, General Pervez Musharraf's much-publicised breakfast meet with Indian editors in Agra a couple of months ago.
- ‘Foreign Policy Isn’t Sacred, It Changes To Suit National Interest’ (Indian Express, Neerja Chowdhury, Oct 03, 2001)
FORMER prime minister I.K. Gujral’s foreign policy initiatives, whether in government or out of it, has always been driven by the conviction that stability in South Asia should be the desired end of any move India makes.
- Unmitigated Terror (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 03, 2001)
THE SUICIDE BOMBER attack on the Jammu and Kashmir Legislature complex in Srinagar on Monday, by far the most dastardly act in the nearly three weeks since the U.S. declared a global `war' on terrorism.
- Neglecting Neighbours (Hindu, Editorial, The Hindu, Oct 03, 2001)
Even before September 11, when the World did change, this country, including its lively media, had paid scant attention to Bangladesh and the campaign for the election there that has ended in the victory of Begum Khaleda Zia.
- Can U.S. Restrain Pakistan? (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Oct 03, 2001)
NEW DELHI, OCT. 2. As the Government reacts strongly against the escalation of terrorism in Jammu and Kashmir, Indo-Pak. tensions pose an important test to the international coalition against terror that the Bush Administration has assembled.
- Repeal Evil With Good (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 03, 2001)
What Gandhi would have told the US: war won’t ensure safety.
- Keeping Away From Us Will Not Help India’s Interests (The Financial Express, B. P. Singh, Oct 03, 2001)
This refers to Kuldip Nayar’s article “A wishy-washy foreign policy will not work to India’s advantage” (The Financial Express, September 26).
- Purchased Silence (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 02, 2001)
THE news that Gen Pervez Musharraf bought several religious leaders over with hefty sums of money to keep a low profile on street demonstrations against the military government's decision to support American action makes interesting reading.
- Lighting Bush Fires (Indian Express, Editorial, Indian Express, Oct 02, 2001)
ARE we fighting USA’s war on terrorism? Or are the Americans fighting our war on terrorism?
- Manhattan’s Mumbai Connection (Indian Express, J. Dey, Oct 02, 2001)
The E plot to hijack the Indian Airlines flight IC 814 was hatched by the Pakistani Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) sometime in 1997 after Maulana Masood fell into the hands of Indian authorities.
- Battle Hymn Of The Republic (Telegraph, Partha Chateerjee, Oct 02, 2001)
Let me say at the outset that I consider the attacks carried out in this city on September 11 as heinous and barbaric.
- The Loss Of Vision (Telegraph, SURENDRA MUNSHI, Oct 02, 2001)
Ever since the terrorist attack on critical targets in the United States, officially characterized as war against the US, a peculiar situation has emerged from the images and words that the tragedy has thrown up.
- Pakistan-U.S. Strategic Idiom (Hindu, P. S. SURYANARAYANA, Oct 02, 2001)
AMERICA'S ``WAR'' on international terrorism is now being plotted in a nebulous strategic environment.
- War In Afghanistan (Hindu, V. R. Raghavan , Oct 02, 2001)
A NEW Afghan war is about to commence shortly. A massive coalition of countries interested in eliminating terrorism has agreed to combine its resources to cleanse Afghanistan of its terrorist ideology.
- Second Thoughts On The Taliban! (Hindu, C. Raja Mohan, Oct 01, 2001)
NEW DELHI, SEPT. 30. What should the United States do with the Taliban?
- Video Games And Media Wars (Indian Express, Shailaja Bajpai, Oct 01, 2001)
‘The media,’’ spluttered Pramod Mahajan on Star News, ‘‘is fighting a war before it has started.’’
- Handle With Care (Telegraph, Editorial, The Telegraph, Oct 01, 2001)
Banning any organization is an extreme step, and the two-year ban on the Students’ Islamic Movement of India has naturally provoked violence, outrage and frenzied arguments among political parties.
- An American Somersault (Telegraph, J. N. Dixit , Oct 01, 2001)
The world at large remains concerned and bemused by the policy statement made by the president of the United States of America, George W. Bush, on May 1 at the US National Defence University.
- America's Script For Afghanistan (Hindu, T. Sreedhar, Oct 01, 2001)
THE DEVELOPMENTS in the international system since September 11 clearly indicate that the U.S. is attempting coercive diplomacy to defeat its adversary in Afghanistan.
- ‘India’s Battle Over Basmati Patent Not Fully Lost Yet’ (The Financial Express, Ashok B Sharma, Oct 01, 2001)
India could not present its case well before the United States Patents & Trademark Organisation (USPTO) in the recent battle over basmati rice despite ample evidence given by the country’s scientific community.
- Un Bans Terrorism (Tribune, Editorial, The Tribune, Oct 01, 2001)
IN what is obviously a tentative first step, the United Nations Security Council has called on all member-countries to crackdown on terrorism of all types.
- Did Govt Learn Any Lesson From Agra? (Tribune, Sumer Kaul, Sep 10, 2001)
The Vajpayee government appears to be keenly looking forward to another meeting between the Prime Minister and the Pakistani President later this month in New York.
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