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An analysis of the issues discussed by US President Barack Obama on his visit to India. Will he keep to his word?
An analysis of the issues discussed by US President Barack Obama on his visit to India. Will he keep to his word?
By coming to Mumbai first, President Obama has ushered in a new phase in bilateral relations. Mumbai and all it represents is now firmly a part of Indian foreign policy. This is a game changer for the future, and is arguably the most significant outcome of the Barack Obama visit.
Gateway House at four different horizontals of Indo-US relations to try to answer the question of what it means to be a “natural ally” and how it is different from having a “strategic partnership”?
With President Obama’s popularity waning and the polls predicting a win for the Republicans in the US midterm elections, how the President conducts himself on his Indian visit will offer clues to his next two years in office
US President Barack Obama will visit India fresh after the US mid-term elections, where his party is expected to do poorly. But the India visit will be full of warmth and bonhomie, it will also throw up some thorny issues, such as cross-border terrorism from Pakistan and the outsourcing imbroglio
What can India expect from President Obama’s visit? Ambassador Neelam Deo tackles the laundry list of issues that confront Indo-US relations.
Highlights of the Indo-US Youth Dialogue
New Delhi is keen to see what President Obama has in mind when he visits India in the first week of November 2010, we spoke to Dr. James Lindsay, Director of Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations
No longer can New Delhi afford to live in denial about the rising influence of the Chinese juggernaut
Along with the United States and the United Kingdom, India could be the major player in a 21st century partnership of the English-speaking countries. Closer contact with the “Anglosphere” would possibly align Indian institutions and regulations closer to those of mature democracies