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1 |
ID:
163012
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Summary/Abstract |
The change of Guard in Maldives came with the wining of presidential election by Ibrahim Solih (belongs toMaldivian Democratic Party) whose swearing ceremony took place on 17 November 2018. This result not only brought fresh wave of change in the domestic politicsof Maldives but also it is expected that it will help to steer a new direction to its foreign policy by forging new equation.Election saw Solih as joint candidate of three opposition political party- the Maldivian Democratic Party, Jumhooree party and the religious Adhaalath party1 garnered majority vote and declared as awinner.
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2 |
ID:
162991
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Summary/Abstract |
In International power politics, the big question is aroused, in regard to how India will respond to the recent democratic triumph in India’s neighborhood especially in Pakistan and Maldives. Whether the answer is simply confined to customary routine practice and ritualistic gestures of congratulating and respecting the formality or much more? In this above backdrop, this paper has two objectives. First, it examines the latest development taking shape in Pakistan particularly after the victory of Imran Khan as a Prime Minister of Pakistan and what expectation has been made from India and how India responds to improve India-Pakistan relations. Second, it analyses Maldives recently concluded Presidential election and victory of Mr. Solih (a democratic candidate) and how India will respond to these development.
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3 |
ID:
165713
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Summary/Abstract |
International Order in the Post –Cold War phase mostly revolved around three major changes that the world has witnessed. First, US‘s failure to provide security in different regions and new form of threat has invited new form of global cooperation and interdependence. Second, it is observed that, the peaceful rise of China is coterminous with the shifting of global economic power from West to East direction.
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4 |
ID:
156571
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Summary/Abstract |
In true sense of the term Modi’s Pakistan policy is guided by what Charles Evens the US Under Secretary of State said to President Woodrow Wilson in 1923. Charles said “Foreign policies are not built upon abstractions. They are the result of practical conceptions of National Interest arising from some immediate exigency or standing out vividly in historical perspective.
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5 |
ID:
161113
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Summary/Abstract |
Indus Water Treaty of 1960 is both strategic as well as historic because it resolved the long standing dispute between India and Pakistan on the use of water of Indus river system. Analysts and intellectual who were involved in framing the treaty said, both India and Pakistan were on the verge of war over water.
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6 |
ID:
163485
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Summary/Abstract |
The rising China’s geo-strategic and geo-political ambition and Pakistan’s security imperative have stimulated each other to work closely in the framework of ‘all weather strategic partner’. History is witnessed to some eventful moments in China-Pakistan relations. Their closer proximity goes further when Pakistan got much needed assistant from China to secure and acquire its strategic assets (nuclear weapon and missile capability) and they cooperate each other at the international forum in different field such as in UN (in Security Council on the issue of terrorism-opposing MasoodAzhar as designated terrorist) and other regional meetings.
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7 |
ID:
159732
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Summary/Abstract |
Partition related migration is a forgotten phenomenon but the graveyard of history still alive with bitter horrific memory. The instinct of suspicion and animosity prevailed after partition was insulated by the event and circumstance which suggested that the leader of India-Pakistan also carefully search for a space that would enabled them for stable coexistence and peaceful relations towards each other.
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8 |
ID:
158126
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Summary/Abstract |
A meaningful bilateral relation sustains in the strong support of trust and confidence. India-Pakistan the two major players in South Asia unfortunately has not cultivated this due to their long standing political and ideological difference since their birth as a nation-state in 1947.
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9 |
ID:
160762
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Summary/Abstract |
The path to Singapore Summit is very much historic but the road is not very untrodden. In International relations, building trust and confidence and reducing animosity can be achieved either through an institutional means called CBMs or through an active diplomacy. The success of Helsinki (between US-USSR and European state institutionalized CBMs in 1975)) experience has been tested in different region and Korean peninsula is not an exception.
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