Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:559Hits:19908700Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID176991
Title ProperSoviet tanks, American sedans
Other Title Informationtraces of India’s cold war-era hedging towards the United States, 1966–1971
LanguageENG
AuthorRoy, Anubhav ;  Tiwary, Bipin K
Summary / Abstract (Note)Having fought its third war and staring at food shortages, independent India needed to get its act together both militarily and economically by the mid-1960s. With the United States revoking its military assistance and delaying its food aid despite New Delhi’s devaluation of the rupee, India’s newly elected Indira Gandhi government turned to deepen its ties with the Soviet Union in 1966 with the aim of balancing the United States internally through a rearmament campaign and externally through a formal alliance with Moscow. The US formation of a triumvirate with Pakistan and China in India’s neighbourhood only bolstered its intent. Yet India consciously limited the extent of both its balancing strategies and allowed adequate space to simultaneously adopt the contradictory sustenance of its complex interdependence with the United States economically. Did this contrasting choice of strategies constitute India’s recourse to hedging after 1966 until 1971, when it liberated Bangladesh by militarily defeating a US-aligned Pakistan? Utilising a historical-evaluative study of archival data and the contents of a few Bollywood films from the period, this paper seeks to address the question by empirically establishing the extents of India’s balancing of, and complex interdependence with, the United States.
`In' analytical NoteIndia Quarterly Vol. 77, No.1; Mar 2021: p. 25–41
Journal SourceIndia Quarterly Vol: 77 No 1
Key WordsArmoured Vehicles ;  Indira Gandhi ;  Balancing ;  Hedging ;  Complex Interdependence ;  Automobiles


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text