Bhutan 2010: Foreign Policy Developments
Security and development cooperation have become the twin pillars of the India-Bhutan relationship.
- Medha Bisht |
- December 30, 2010 |
- IDSA Comments
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Security and development cooperation have become the twin pillars of the India-Bhutan relationship.
The world needs India as a balancer – in trade, as a market, as an alternative model, and as a world power.
The Maoists are trying to cash in on major issues like Telangana to expand their mass base in Andhra from where hail their top leadership.
ISRO needs to conduct a thorough enquiry particularly because failure in a time-tested and launch proven “stage one technology” is undesirable.
The conflict over rare earths is not only a consequence of the monopoly amassed by China but is also reflective of the current flux in global power hierarchies.
With a friendly dispensation in Dhaka, it is an opportune moment for India to deliver on its promise to exchange the enclaves and surrender adverse possessions.
Would China’s strategic error in inviting Japanese hostility place more blocks to its rise as an unchallenged regional power or would it be able to override the Japanese threat in ample measure by altering its strategic game and finding a meeting ground with the United States?
China has all along been testing the limits of India’s tolerance and restraint and has once again given the Indian foreign ministry much home work for the next few months.
India and Russia should look at a hi-tech partnership for the 21st century in new areas of the civilian economy.
Russia is one country that India cannot afford to sideline, as it is the only trusted partner with whom India has mutual compatibility and a close political, military and economic partnership for decades.



