Mugwop
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eurasiantimes are the ones trolling not me.You are a title holder and trolling.
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eurasiantimes are the ones trolling not me.You are a title holder and trolling.
Not free. Only if its cash.Mark my words, US will be helping India massively to rearm within the next few years.
Us already helped India a lot .us expected that India sabotage CPEC but after February last year incident they have no faith on them .india can’t defeat Pakistan how can they fight with China.with both she will be gang bang . No body like cowards and looserMark my words, US will be helping India massively to rearm within the next few years.
Not free. Only if its cash.
Add baking soda...butter and chocolate chip.what about wheat and sugar?
what about wheat and sugar?
SJW journalists like these know jack about military manoeuvres and strategic alliances. India does serve the US deep state purpose in many ways. It is strategically located in the middle of international trade routes and airline trajectories. A stable India would ensure there are no Somali-like pirate situations in the busiest sea corridor. Indians make cheap wage coolies for US corporations looking to outsource stuff online (and a few other countries as well including Singapore). Nowadays even Pakistan is receiving attention of these outsourcers.
In the past, USA did support countries that want to play by the rules of democracy and human rights at a strategic level. In fact, one major reason India won her independence from Great Britain was due to genuine USA support for decolonization in the aftermath of World War II. Not some INA trials or other BS that the Indians have been spoon-fed by their corrupt media and inferior education systems.
But if any of these jag-offs think that USA will intervene in a potential conflict between India and China, or even India and Pakistan, they're stupidest journalists that ought to be fired. In the Trump era, USA has been pursuing an isolationist policy but even during Obama era, that was becoming the norm. The era of USA intervening in other countries internal matters is long over.
It would work out better for India to improve its relations in the neighborhood. And quit acting like a bossy c*nt with respect to Maldives or Nepal, repair its relationship with China, and find a way to engage with Pakistan through the peaceful resolution of Kashmir and other outstanding issues. No Uncle Sam will come to India's rescue when it's being pillaged by invading forces.
Just you wait for 20 years. Or are you too old to do so?Yes indeed, India has the most powerful weapon - street deification. China will surely die of suffocation.
The word "weapon" features nowhere in the article, nor is there a link to it.Australian Media Says India Has The ‘Most Powerful Weapon’ Ready Against China
June 12, 2020
With tensions seething between China and India over the Line of Actual Control in Ladakh region, Australian media says that Indian has the most powerful partner on its side – the United States.
The report states that India and the US are the world’s two biggest democracies, sharing common interests in free trade, defending the strategic sea lanes of the Indian Ocean, and preventing China’s growing ‘negative’ influence in the Indo-Pacific region.
Ties between India and the US had been marred by distrust for decades with New Delhi extensively opposing ‘extensive engagement’ with the US.
However, Indian PM Narendra Modi looks determined to change that, making moves that once would have been seen as unimaginable.
In January 2015, Modi invited then-president Barack Obama as the guest of honour at India’s annual Republic Day celebrations – the first time a US president had accepted to be the chief guest at the event.
Next year, Obama formally confirmed India as a major defence partner, and the two nations went on to sign a pact for deeper defence ties.
Under Donald Trump, ties continued to get strengthen. Last year, Indian PM publicly admired India’s ties with Washington, claiming the US as India’s most significant partner. Trump has earlier referred to Modi as his “dear friend”.
India has opened itself up to increasing volumes of bilateral trade with the US, and earlier this year accepted to acquire $US3 billion in US military equipment, in a sign of increasing political co-operation.
The two nations are now seen as “engaged democracies” rather than “estranged democracies”, as they were known during the Cold War days.
Analysts believe that growing India-US ties were somewhat driven by a fear of China’s growing economic and political clout in the region.
“In recent times, India has sought to strengthen ties with Washington, partially powered by a fear of Chinese economic and political influence in the region – especially in ports in nearby oceans,” Anik Joshi, a public policy professional based in Washington D.C., writes in Foreign Policy. “As the Chinese get more aggressive in the Indian Ocean, India has been seeking an ally to bolster deterrence.”
C. Raja Mohan, Director of the Institute of South Asian Studies at NUS, said that India has now come to understand that China is “bound to expand its influence … at Delhi’s expense”.
Mohan also noted that India was “moving into an ever-closer partnership with the US in an attempt to rebalance the Indo-Pacific region – a manoeuvre that’s quickened under PM Modi.
But he also notes that the Indian is wary of the unpredictability in the US under Donald Trump and is thus keen to retain the traditional security pact with Russia.
https://eurasiantimes.com/australia...the-most-powerful-weapon-ready-against-china/
When they are releasing Bollywood movie?Australian Media Says India Has The ‘Most Powerful Weapon’ Ready Against China
June 12, 2020
With tensions seething between China and India over the Line of Actual Control in Ladakh region, Australian media says that Indian has the most powerful partner on its side – the United States.
The report states that India and the US are the world’s two biggest democracies, sharing common interests in free trade, defending the strategic sea lanes of the Indian Ocean, and preventing China’s growing ‘negative’ influence in the Indo-Pacific region.
Ties between India and the US had been marred by distrust for decades with New Delhi extensively opposing ‘extensive engagement’ with the US.
However, Indian PM Narendra Modi looks determined to change that, making moves that once would have been seen as unimaginable.
In January 2015, Modi invited then-president Barack Obama as the guest of honour at India’s annual Republic Day celebrations – the first time a US president had accepted to be the chief guest at the event.
Next year, Obama formally confirmed India as a major defence partner, and the two nations went on to sign a pact for deeper defence ties.
Under Donald Trump, ties continued to get strengthen. Last year, Indian PM publicly admired India’s ties with Washington, claiming the US as India’s most significant partner. Trump has earlier referred to Modi as his “dear friend”.
India has opened itself up to increasing volumes of bilateral trade with the US, and earlier this year accepted to acquire $US3 billion in US military equipment, in a sign of increasing political co-operation.
The two nations are now seen as “engaged democracies” rather than “estranged democracies”, as they were known during the Cold War days.
Analysts believe that growing India-US ties were somewhat driven by a fear of China’s growing economic and political clout in the region.
“In recent times, India has sought to strengthen ties with Washington, partially powered by a fear of Chinese economic and political influence in the region – especially in ports in nearby oceans,” Anik Joshi, a public policy professional based in Washington D.C., writes in Foreign Policy. “As the Chinese get more aggressive in the Indian Ocean, India has been seeking an ally to bolster deterrence.”
C. Raja Mohan, Director of the Institute of South Asian Studies at NUS, said that India has now come to understand that China is “bound to expand its influence … at Delhi’s expense”.
Mohan also noted that India was “moving into an ever-closer partnership with the US in an attempt to rebalance the Indo-Pacific region – a manoeuvre that’s quickened under PM Modi.
But he also notes that the Indian is wary of the unpredictability in the US under Donald Trump and is thus keen to retain the traditional security pact with Russia.
https://eurasiantimes.com/australia...the-most-powerful-weapon-ready-against-china/
Australian Media Says India Has The ‘Most Powerful Weapon’ Ready Against China
June 12, 2020
With tensions seething between China and India over the Line of Actual Control in Ladakh region, Australian media says that Indian has the most powerful partner on its side – the United States.
The report states that India and the US are the world’s two biggest democracies, sharing common interests in free trade, defending the strategic sea lanes of the Indian Ocean, and preventing China’s growing ‘negative’ influence in the Indo-Pacific region.
Ties between India and the US had been marred by distrust for decades with New Delhi extensively opposing ‘extensive engagement’ with the US.
However, Indian PM Narendra Modi looks determined to change that, making moves that once would have been seen as unimaginable.
In January 2015, Modi invited then-president Barack Obama as the guest of honour at India’s annual Republic Day celebrations – the first time a US president had accepted to be the chief guest at the event.
Next year, Obama formally confirmed India as a major defence partner, and the two nations went on to sign a pact for deeper defence ties.
Under Donald Trump, ties continued to get strengthen. Last year, Indian PM publicly admired India’s ties with Washington, claiming the US as India’s most significant partner. Trump has earlier referred to Modi as his “dear friend”.
India has opened itself up to increasing volumes of bilateral trade with the US, and earlier this year accepted to acquire $US3 billion in US military equipment, in a sign of increasing political co-operation.
The two nations are now seen as “engaged democracies” rather than “estranged democracies”, as they were known during the Cold War days.
Analysts believe that growing India-US ties were somewhat driven by a fear of China’s growing economic and political clout in the region.
“In recent times, India has sought to strengthen ties with Washington, partially powered by a fear of Chinese economic and political influence in the region – especially in ports in nearby oceans,” Anik Joshi, a public policy professional based in Washington D.C., writes in Foreign Policy. “As the Chinese get more aggressive in the Indian Ocean, India has been seeking an ally to bolster deterrence.”
C. Raja Mohan, Director of the Institute of South Asian Studies at NUS, said that India has now come to understand that China is “bound to expand its influence … at Delhi’s expense”.
Mohan also noted that India was “moving into an ever-closer partnership with the US in an attempt to rebalance the Indo-Pacific region – a manoeuvre that’s quickened under PM Modi.
But he also notes that the Indian is wary of the unpredictability in the US under Donald Trump and is thus keen to retain the traditional security pact with Russia.
https://eurasiantimes.com/australia...the-most-powerful-weapon-ready-against-china/