Chinese-Dragon
RETIRED TTA
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2010
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India will have to live with China like it's been living with them since time immemorial; and vice versa!
Sounds good to me.
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India will have to live with China like it's been living with them since time immemorial; and vice versa!
Why would China and NATO have a Cold war?
We are halfway across the world from each other, and strong trading partners.
Why would China and NATO have a Cold war?
We are halfway across the world from each other, and strong trading partners.
Please spare me, If you want to become a Confucious in this world of Hostility then go on ..
China is, rightly or wrongly, likely just to continue to ignore India.
Just because you wish for something to happen, does not mean it will happen.
China is not going to get into a Cold war with NATO, that is just pointless.
It will only hurt the economies of both sides, with no benefits whatsoever.
We made a mistake in helping the Americans hurting the soviets so bad that they collapsed and when that happened Pakistan became a Relic of the Cold war.If only Pakistan at that time would have realized the Aftermath of Collaborating with the West for which it suffers to this date even.
India should not endup hurting the Chinese so much that it too might get dumped back to Snake-Charmers Status as it once had in the Western Media. The time is good for India to extract the juice ,they should make the most of it , and make sure they continue to do it for a long long time.
God Forbid if the Chinese collapsed the Way Soviets did , things could turn out mighty ugly for super bright snake Charmers
Ignoring is an illusion u chinese are having about india
If u dont care about india then y ur People's Daily is saying that india's Look-East ploicy is a failure even though india have just started the realtion .And the same paper said india as a threat and the same paper has given a 2 page article about Agni-5 missile even though india have not even tested and last but not least y china is haivng a trade of about $60 billion with india .If u still want to say that u ignore india u are free to say but u should read ur chinese newpaper before saying so
Everytime you guys get your feelings hurt you jump all over media censorship. This just demonstrates it's racism no more no less. I am a Canadian citizen and I have lived in Germany, the US and Canada most of my life yet just because I am ethnically Chinese, I'll always be racially some of kind brainwashed muppet.
clap clap clap
Everytime you guys get your feelings hurt you jump all over media censorship. This just demonstrates it's racism no more no less. I am a Canadian citizen and I have lived in Germany, the US and Canada most of my life yet just because I am ethnically Chinese, I'll always be racially some of kind brainwashed muppet.
clap clap clap
Clever guy.
Every single country on Earth recognizes Tibet as a part of China, including your own government.
Well, what is the cost of a changed line from the Government.
Can you please assist us make an assessment?
Please do not hold out the "MIlitary" card.
The troubles in Tibet have accentuated China’s concerns about the “Dalai Clique” and its links with India. Repeated calls in Indian public discourse on the need to play the “Tibet card” only serve to stoke China’s suspicions. Beijing’s protests against the Dalai Lama’s visit to Tawang were vehement precisely because it put the spotlight on the links between the Tibetan problem and China’s territorial claims on the area. Indeed, Tibet is the one issue that could undermine India’s steadily improving ties with China. Contrary to wishful thinking in some quarters, the Tibetan issue does not afford any leverage to India. The issue has no purchase on the Indian political class or public opinion. This being case, the realistic course is to find ways of offering more convincing reassurances to China about its attitude to Tibet. This will be essential to removing needless mistrust and to reaching an accord on the boundary. Towards the latter end, it is equally imperative that the Indian government informs and shapes domestic opinion on China. The bogey of an aggressive China may well become a selffulfilling prophecy, for strident views on both sides feed on and accentuate the other. An accord on the boundary may not be reached in the near-term. But the boundary dispute need not hold to ransom the multifaceted relationship between the two countries. As Deng Xiaoping once observed, perhaps our grandchildren will be wiser than us
Dr Srinath Raghavan, Kings College London.
Contrary to wishful thinking in some quarters, the Tibetan issue does not afford any leverage to India. The issue has no purchase on the Indian political class or public opinion.