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INDIA’S GRAND STRATEGY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   165578


BRI and India’s Grand Strategy / Basrur, Rajesh   Journal Article
Basrur, Rajesh Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract India’s rejection of the BRI for strategic reasons does not mean it is resistant to Chinese investments, which are—to the contrary—both welcome and rapidly increasing. Indian strategy in this respect is in accord with the changing character of the international system, where strategic competition co-exists with economic cooperation as well as competition. In contemporary international politics, structurally driven conflictive behaviour is modified by high levels of strategic and economic interdependence. This incentivises India, like other major powers, to seek optimal gains through economic exchange even as it defends its strategic interests through military means short of war.
Key Words India’s Grand Strategy  BRI 
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2
ID:   145817


Decision to intervene: first steps in India’s grand strategy in the 1971 war / Dasgupta, Chandrashekhar   Journal Article
Dasgupta, Chandrashekhar Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract One of the most popular anecdotes of the 1971 war is Field Marshal Manekshaw’s tale of how he restrained an impatient Indira Gandhi from ordering an unprepared Indian army to march into East Pakistan in April. The Field Marshal’s prowess as a raconteur fully matched his military skills but exceeded his grasp of the political and diplomatic dimensions of the grand strategy shaped by Indira Gandhi and her advisors. The prime minister had no intention of going to war in April since India’s political aims could not have been achieved at that stage simply through a successful military operation.
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