Kyusuibu Honbu
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Missing the point of allowing a nation which tried to stall our NSG waiver, UNSC amendment.
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Modern India and the India was before had many differences. Where one nations defeated others and ruled them. Also the foreign invaders always invaded here and became native people. This India was never here.Todays India is formed by many countries like Maratha, Rajputana, Hyderabad etc. BD is also an Indian country just not joined the Indian union. There are other Indian country like Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan which are Independent Indian nation like we see many countries in Europe. Todays Indian shape taken mostly by British rule. If British and Muslims were never here. We could see dozens of small countries here.
Incorrect.Modern India and the India was before had many differences. Where one nations defeated others and ruled them. Also the foreign invaders always invaded here and became native people. This India was never here.Todays India is formed by many countries like Maratha, Rajputana, Hyderabad etc. BD is also an Indian country just not joined the Indian union. There are other Indian country like Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan which are Independent Indian nation like we see many countries in Europe. Todays Indian shape taken mostly by British rule. If British and Muslims were never here. We could see dozens of small countries here. India is a historical name to identify this area of world by outsiders like Bharat, Hindustan.
Incorrect.
You are confusing it the creation of modern nation states with the historical consciousness of Ancient Bharat. We have been united before and are united. Yes, we are much smaller, but that's pretty much the only difference.
If Muslims and British were never here, you need to go back to the time of the Guptas or their successor states. That stretched from Gandhar to Banga and Kashmir to Narmada with subsidiary states further South. In between the Mughal and the British, the Marathas ruled most of present India.
because they were kings and were not elected leader of the people.Why no empire ever sustained for over a few centuries. Because they brutally ruled others. That isnt unity. No Indian empire Gupta, Murya, Mughal or Maratha could ever fully dominated and stretched to south or NE of todays India. Rebellion occured now and then.
The very idea of Akhand Bharat or one India/Undivided India was Chanakya's brainchild. . . It would not be an overstatement to say that the Maurya dynasty was established by Chanakya on this very ideology!! First educate yourself a bit before making such comment!At that time, this Ashoka didn't call himself Indian, he had no clue what India will likely be in the future time..
Inclusion of our China into this organization would make it more robust, efficient and productive.
Again you are confusing ancient kingdoms with Nation states. Even this Government is being held by State Power. Without Central Authority there can be no unity.Why no empire ever sustained for over a few centuries. Because they brutally ruled others. That isnt unity. No Indian empire Gupta, Murya, Mughal or Maratha could ever fully dominate and stretched to south or NE of todays India. Rebellion occured now and then.
Maratha, Bengal, Rajputana all are different kingdoms.
If the best that Narendra Modi’s spin doctors could do to underscore his success at the recent SAARC summit was to boast that he stuck to a simple vegetarian meal while Pakistan’s Nawaz Sharif feasted on halal meat, evidently there is little else to crow about. Beyond a point, hype becomes counterproductive.
SAARC has been a non-achiever and the 18th SAARC summit in Kathmandu was no exception. Given SAARC’s record, no one expected substantive outcomes at this summit either. Hence, lack of tangible results is neither surprising nor disappointing. No one expected Modi to fire up SAARC or turn it into a star performer. Thus, claims that this SAARC summit was a “success” because it was a “successful outing” for Modi, because he occupied centre stage in Kathmandu, because he set the tone, because he was one up on Sharif, because …, because …, only serve to emphasise the opposite.
SAARC has not been a life-changing force in South Asia. This does not mean that it is useless or should be wound up. It is as useful or useless as the UN, or, for that matter any other regional or international forum.
SAARC has its uses. Otherwise, SAARC observer countries, such as the US, China, the EU, Japan, Iran, Australia and South Korea would not be pushing hard for a greater role in this eight-nation grouping. In fact, some observers, like China, want full membership.
New Delhi is opposed to China assuming a larger role — in any form — in SAARC. Much to India’s discomfiture, the more New Delhi sets itself up against China’s role, the greater the support China gains for expanding its influence within SAARC. And, Modi, much like Manmohan Singh, seems helpless in containing China’s growing power within SAARC and over SAARC member-nations. Except for India, no other member (or observer) is opposed to China’s membership or enhanced role in SAARC.
India is isolated on this issue and engaged in a losing battle. This is a failure of both policy and strategy — not any particular party or Prime Minister — that may haunt India for a long time unless it accepts the challenge represented by China in SAARC and deals with it in a manner that redounds to India’s credit.
China has been looming large over SAARC for some years now. At the 2011 summit in the Maldives, where the issue of its aspiring status could no longer be brushed aside, SAARC settled for a “comprehensive review” of its engagement with observer-states, including the prospect of dialogue partnership.
Far from going away or being shelved, the issue of upgrading China’s status, contrary to New Delhi’s expectation, has only become more challenging. India was seen as opposing elevation of China’s status because this was proposed by Pakistan. In Kathmandu, Pakistan was joined by Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and the Maldives in the growing clamour for China, among other observers, to be granted a larger role. It can no longer be viewed as a case of all-weather friends Pakistan and China acting in tandem against India. Besides, none of the other observers such as the US, the EU, Japan or Iran have opposed an elevated role for China.
New Delhi’s assertion that there is no proposal for “expansion of SAARC” ignores the drift favouring greater engagement with observer nations, including China. The Kathmandu Declaration explicitly proposes “productive, demand-driven and objective project-based cooperation in priority areas as identified by member-states”.
Like the US, today, China is everyone’s neighbour. Like the US, China, has effective proxy players. China would be the elephant in the room at every SAARC summit. New Delhi has to accept this reality, and re-think and re-strategise for India to prevail as the cornerstone of SAARC.
The author is an independent political and foreign affairs commentator
India is no match for China in the SAARC summit | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis
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I laughed when Indians said that if Pakistan not happy with SAARC it can leave but I think eventually India will have to leave SAARC if they're not happy with China admission. As the author said the China admission issue is far from going away or being shelved, we look forward to be the member of 19th SAARC.
But, the India connection …yes he called himself Bharatiya. Bharat, Aryavrat, India, all are names of a single country you fool
Looks like people here have confused notions about a nationhood. The concept of modern nation began in Europe around the 19th century and spread to the rest of the world. Before that the ruler of a land mass decided the nation and not the people. So in times of Ashoka, Akbar and Aurangzeb the rulers of Afghanistan and Bengal were the same. The Ottoman and Persian Empire included much wider geographical region than what is Turkey and Iran are today. People were least concerned whether they were ruled by one king or another. Until the birth of modern nationalism, no country in the world was bothered about the geographical changes as it changed with every ruler and it kept changing during his regime also.
When modern nationhood was spreading, India was under the British rule and Indian nationalism became synonymous with her struggle for freedom from the British Rule. This was the uniting factor and eventually it became so strong that despite having many religions, races, languages and geographical features, India developed a strong sense of nationhood. What you see China today, it was not the same in the first half of 20th century. In fact, most nations took the shape of modern nation after the second world war by when the people had started relating themselves with a national boundary. Every nation has something core for their nationhood - some are a nation because they speak one language, some follow one religion or custom. But still a language or a religion is not the essential ingredient for a nationhood. If that was so the Arab speaking muslims will not be divided into many nations. However, the Indian nationhood perplexes many who think that a religion or a language forms the basis of a nationhood and hence wrongly assume that India is held together artificially.
hate to burst your bubble but there was no "india" before 1947 either