Publication |
2010.
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Summary/Abstract |
India and Japan have a multi-secular spiritual, cultural and commercial relationship, which is becoming increasingly important to both nations in an era of global terrorism when they need each other's support. While their economies are in many ways complementary, strategic cooperation is growing rapidly between the world's second largest economy and the second largest country by population. Saroj Kumar Rath observes that New Delhi and Tokyo have also finally overcome misgivings related to their divergent geopolitical alignments and contrary positions on nuclear weapons.
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