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SINO - INDIAN RIVALRY (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   137895


Importance of Myanmar: the Indian navy can offer a viable alternative to Chinese influence on our eastern neighbour / Chauhan, Pradeep   Article
Chauhan, Pradeep Article
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Summary/Abstract As the geo-economic and geo-strategic competition-space between India and China coincides in the Indian Ocean, there is a significant possibility of this ‘competition’ transforming into ‘conflict’. The fact that China (including Hong Kong) is today India’s largest trading partner offers cold comfort, for history has repeatedly shown that trade-based inter-dependence between nations offers no bulwark against state-on-state conflict.
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2
ID:   157966


Indian Ocean futures: new partnerships, new alliances and academic diplomacy / Doyle, Timothy (ed.); Seal, Graham (ed.) 2017  Book
Doyle, Timothy (ed.) Book
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Publication Oxon, Routledge, 2017.
Description xi, 137p.hbk
Standard Number 9781138205253
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
059335320.91824/DOY 059335MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   123438


Tilting triangle: geopolitics of the China-India-Pakistan relationship / Smith, Paul J   Journal Article
Smith, Paul J Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract For more than six decades, the geopolitics of South Asia have been shaped by a symbiotic and triangular relationship involving India, Pakistan, and China. A succession of interstate conflicts has created two fundamental and enduring security structures, one rooted in India's partition and subsequent Indo-Pakistan wars (the "1947 structure") and the other in a persistent and often antagonistic Sino-Indian rivalry, including a border conflict in 1962 (the "1962 structure"). During the Cold War, exogenous powers, including the United States and Soviet Union, sought to use or manipulate these structures to advance their political objectives. In the long term, however, the 1962 structure is likely to become the dominant security architecture in the region, a trend that can be attributed to China's growing military and economic power, Beijing's increasingly intimate relationship with Islamabad, and the Chinese navy's expanding reach into the Indian Ocean.
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