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May 12, 2008
Four years of UPA: Foreign policy adrift
The absolute control of the Communists on all realms of policy-making, the single point agenda of the Congress party to stay in power as long as possible and the insistence of the Bharatiya Janata Party upon destroying its credibility as a national party -- all have ensured that Indian foreign policy continues to drift without any real sense of direction.

Tokenism won't revive Sainik Schools
A nation neglects its security at its peril. And Sainik Schools are a pivotal cog in the security apparatus.

May 09, 2008
Why did the 1857 celebration fizzle out?
'There seems to be something amiss and mysterious in the way 1857 was suppressed in 2007 and 2008.'

Politics has defeated the purpose of Pokhran tests
Without the lifting of the technology denial and India acquiring the ability to interact freely with all major nations economically and technologically India will not be able to have a real independent foreign policy which will make it an effective balancer of power. That was the real purpose of Pokhran II.

May 08, 2008
The Chinese threat in the Indian Ocean
At a cursory look, the development of a new strategic submarine by China appear to be of marginal impact on India as Sanya base is far away from Indian shores and as such ground-based missiles in China could be deployed in the event of skirmishes between the two rising countries in Asia. Besides, the avowed aim in developing the new Jin SSBN is not to target India but the United States, in the Chinese quest to become a great power in the world.

May 06, 2008
Only the Dalai Lama can unite China
'Mr Premier, please meet with the Dalai Lama, it will bring more good to China's image than 1,000 Olympic Games.'

May 05, 2008
Why the Karnataka poll is critical
Every election has its own fallout but the implications of the Karnataka poll go beyond its borders. For the BJP, winning the state means gaining the much coveted entry into the south. A victory in Karnataka would give a fillip to the Congress, after the recent string of defeats, and it could boost party morale for the battles ahead in the Hindi heartland.

May 02, 2008
Iran, India and the 'great game'
Central Asia with Iran as a major gas supplier is the arena where the new 'great-game' is being played out and China, India and Japan are all seeking to protect their respective energy interests for the medium term -- and pipeline politics is the new instrumentality.

April 30, 2008
Implications of Olympic flame on Everest
The Chinese have sought to counter the soft power of the Western media through the soft power of the patriotic response of the Chinese people and the overseas Chinese Diaspora.

April 29, 2008
India should fear China's defence spending
Due to China's vigorous military modernisation drive, the military gap between India and China is growing every year. China is now capable of inducting large numbers of troops into Tibet in a time frame that is likely to unhinge Indian war plans.

April 25, 2008
China's strike hard policy in Tibet
If the effort of bidding and conducting Olympics is to showcase China's rise to the world, popular indictments at the global and Tibetan levels have unnerved Beijing. For so long Tibet is considered to be the minimalist foreign policy position for China, while the Olympics indicated its bidding for global legitimacy for its policies.

April 22, 2008
Message from bypolls: Alliances are the key
Clearly alliances will be key for the Congress and the BJP and for that matter the UNPA in 2009 and in the state polls in the Hindi heartland later this year. The just held by-polls have only underscored this.

April 21, 2008
The time is right for the desi vote
South Asians could empower the entire community by flocking to polling stations in all upcoming elections, and show the importance of their ballot.

April 18, 2008
Why must India kow-tow to China?
'Is there any peace and Olympic spirit in a flame which has become the symbol of Chinese repression, arrogance and thirst for domination in Asia?'

April 14, 2008
Proving the historicity of Ram
Valmiki knew Ram to be a human, a noble man, the best of his era and in his time wrote the Ramayana as both were contemporary. He has also shown Ram to possess human traits and emotions, just like any ordinary person. We, in our blind faith, have accentuated the question marks on the historicity of Ram and Ramayana by treating Ramayana like a fable and depicting its noble characters as birds and animals.

April 11, 2008
Towards a more perfect Indian Union
What we know -- what we have seen -- is that India can change. That is the true genius of this nation.

April 10, 2008
The Supreme Court's stunning decision!
'It is time to acknowledge that the benefits of globalisation have remained in the privileged hands of a few, for whom the world begins and ends with fashion, Bollywood and cricket.'

April 09, 2008
DRDO is not a lost cause
One hopes the big daddies of South Block and DRDO realise why radical reforms are so crucial. For guest.

April 07, 2008
10 positives from the events in Tibet
The wretched of the earth have stood up and invited themselves to the Great Game.

March 27, 2008
India needs to change its Tibet policy
It is time for India to get out of its defensive mindset and timid approach in dealing with China. There are vital national security interests at stake. Relations with China must be handled from a strategic, not a legalistic, perspective.

March 26, 2008
Change will come from within China
In 1986, during an interview, the Dalai Lama told me: "We Tibetans can't do anything, except to keep their culture alive. A change will come from within China; it is our only hope". Twenty two years later, I believe this statement is the closest to a possible future scenario or 'solution'.

March 25, 2008
Yousuf Raza Gillani: Tough man for a tough job
The new prime minister has the distinction of saying a big 'no' to both President Pervez Musharraf and the late Benazir Bhutto many times. Gillani has always been loyal to his party but he is not a 'yes man', a quality which impressed Zardari.

Kamlesh Sharma: Our Man at the Commonwealth
Sharma has to be a catalyst working like an honest broker pleading for the interest of the developing countries of the Afro-Asian region with the developed West. He has to tread cautiously carrying with him the goodwill of both the developed countries and that of the developing countries.

March 24, 2008
Changing fortunes across Taiwan strait
The one country which has played its cards with impressive dexterity ever since the beginning of the crisis is India. It has avoided any judgmental observations, while generally appealing for return to the path of peace and reconciliation, and reiterating its time-honoured policy of accepting Tibet as part of China.

Making sense of the Tibetan imbroglio
The one country which has played its cards with impressive dexterity ever since the beginning of the crisis is India. It has avoided any judgmental observations, while generally appealing for return to the path of peace and reconciliation, and reiterating its time-honoured policy of accepting Tibet as part of China.

Tibet: Resuming dialogue is the only way
With 150,000 Tibetan citizens living in exile on its soil, many of whom shuttle between India and Tibet frequently, India nevertheless has a role in the resolution of this issue. Also, with Tibet under its control China has become India's Himalayan neighbour

March 21, 2008
Advani's book shows how hawk turned soft
Neerja Chowdhury on Advani's latest book My Country My Life.

March 19, 2008
Talbott is right, so is Sinha
It was the NDA government that had first mooted the idea of additional nuclear installations being subjected to International Atomic Energy Agency inspection in return for civilian nuclear co-operation. On the basis of this, it was logical for Talbott to assume that the NDA government would have accepted the present deal or even something less. He had read the minds of his interlocutors correctly.

Provincialism: Problems of Mumbai
Sooner or later, India will have to address the issue of regional disparity. Unfortunately the solution lies in social and political reforms in the BIMARU states. Presently there seems no sign of it.

March 18, 2008
Sonia Gandhi@10: A mixed bag
Sonia Gandhi's major failure has been on the party front. The Congress is hardly a major player in the country's four large states -- UP, Bihar, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal -- which account for 200 seats. If anything, the situation has deteriorated in these states.

Congress has Left in debt trap
The Left Front had a choice in September 2007, either to push for an immediate general election or to permit the United Progressive Alliance to complete its full term without making a fuss. In trying to be too clever by half the Left Front must now both swallow the chillies of humiliation at being outwitted and accept the lash of public anger in an election.

March 17, 2008
Provincialism: A new internal security threat?
What happened in the northeast and Punjab in the early 1980s ought to be remembered. It is true that public memory is short, but surely analysts and the government should know better.

In Tibet, China dishonours Olympic spirit
For decades, the Chinese 'minorities', particularly the Tibetans, have been wanting to express their deep-rooted resentment against a regime which slowly but surely is annihilating them.

March 14, 2008
Nuclear dilemma: The road ahead
While the bilateral agreement with the US will broadly spell out the parameters with in which the deal operates, stipulating the rights and obligations on both sides, the safeguards arrangement with the IAEA will showcase the actual implementation of the agreement.

Sonia's 10 years: Lacking in vision
Sonia Gandhi has had little to show, apart from stitching together a ramshackle coalition and somehow sticking to power. But, if she had given the green signal to the nuclear deal and called the Left's bluff, she would have become the darling of the middle classes. And even those who did not understand the intricacies of the deal would have appreciated her gumption in standing by her prime minister and taking a decisive step. The world belongs to the bold, not to the timid.

McCain is a man of great conviction
As a citizen of this country, as a small businessman who is proud to contribute to its economy, and as someone who has been fortunate enough to interact with him over a period of time, I have no doubt whatsoever in my mind when I say that Senator John McCain is, among all the available options, the one best fitted to be the next President of the United States.

China's Olympics and the '3 evils'
A successful conclusion of Beijing Olympics would give China the much needed fillip to not only rise further in the global order but also the "political legitimacy" in the major capitals across the world. However, the journey towards great power status is arduous, if not impossible to realise.

March 12, 2008
McCain would be best for the US and India
Senator McCain has been a consistent advocate of free trade. If he merely persists with the Bush administration's stance towards India, arguably the most pro-Indian of any administration since 1947, he would inarguably be the best for both countries.

March 07, 2008
Why Musharraf fears the Sharif-Zardari coalition
The general election was held about three weeks ago in Pakistan, but the president of the country is reluctant to call the meeting of the new National Assembly.

Pakistan's democracy faces its biggest test
After the euphoria of 'revenge of democracy', the Pakistani political establishment is coming to grips with the fact that the verdict of the February 18 general elections in Pakistan is more than anything else, a test of democracy.

February 29, 2008
Tribute: Sujatha will live with us through his work
Sujatha's demise is an irreparable loss to the Tamil literary world.

February 28, 2008
Will Zardari dump Sharif?
'If Zardari is to go by US advice and mange a majority by taking on help of the pro-Musharraf League, he will in effect be defying the popular mandate.'

February 27, 2008
US must adopt a tough Al Qaeda policy
The United States must henceforth adopt policies that treat Al Qaeda and the Taliban as a hostile state, says scholar Harold Gould

February 26, 2008
A powder-keg on the border with China
India will, therefore, be committing a grave blunder by banking on the anaesthetising phraseology of the various formal agreements with the Chinese and time being the healer. It should clinch the issue by holding brisk and business-like parleys.

February 22, 2008
India should stand up to China as an equal
The satisfaction we seem to derive from semantic play by the Chinese on these two issues reflects our mental acceptance of an inferior status vis-a-vis China and our readiness to be patronised by that country. We should not demand equality from China, we should behave as equals. We should protect our interests more forcefully.

February 21, 2008
US will pressure PPP to keep Musharraf
The Bush administration may fail to save its most trusted friend because the PPP and PML-N are determined to form a coalition and clip all those powers through which a president can dissolve parliament.

Has the BJP become pseudo-secular?
Although there is no indication of a genuine change of heart, what is probably happening is that the BJP is slowly undergoing a process of becoming acclimatised, as it were, to India's diversity.

February 18, 2008
Musharraf heading for a painful end
By the evening of February 18 it was clear that Pakistan People's Party, PML of Nawaz Sharif and Awami National Party have swept three provinces and the PML-Q performed well in Baluchistan.

Mayawati may settle for deputy prime minister
She may not be thrilled to compromise and subdue her vaulting prime ministerial ambitions. Her BSP is just a little short of becoming an all-India party. Therefore, she has no choice -- at least, not this time.

February 17, 2008
Musharraf's advisors expect another poll after 6 months
One of the advisors did not rule out the possibility of a new election after six months.

February 15, 2008
Why the Pakistan elections will be rigged
The Pakistan army actually faces a no win situation: if the elections are stolen very brazenly, then there is every possibility that the army will have to douse the fires that engulf the country; on the other hand, if the results are scientifically managed then there will be prolonged political instability, something that Pakistan can ill-afford at this point in time. Clearly, very interesting times lie ahead for Pakistan.

Is being Indian not enough?
'To live a secured and politically correct life in India, its better to have a provincial identity than just be an Indian.'

February 14, 2008
How India can acquire great power status
To avoid heading the way Pakistan is going and to realise its full potential, India will have to learn to use the 'stick' in tandem with the 'carrot'. With unique geo-political opportunities that exist for India on the international chessboard due to it's inherent strengths in several areas, to reach for the sky should not be all that difficult!

Vision, an honest mind & a nationalist spirit
Do we need short-term easy gains, that lead to catastrophe? Or long term progress? India will have to choose very soon when it elects its next government.

February 12, 2008
Arunachal: The land of rising ire
Indeed, as regards Arunachal Pradesh, the situation has got worse. Whereas in the past China's interest was confined to the district of Tawang, in recent times, it has blatantly enlarged its claim to cover the whole state

Why is Taslima Nasreen a prisoner?
It is not often understood that foreigners too have constitutional rights, one of most important of them being the right to life and personal liberty. Clearly Taslima's right to life and liberty have been violated by her detention. Unless the government has good reasons to justify her detention, she must be set free.

February 11, 2008
'Maharishi was an emperor and an ascetic'
Sri Sri Ravishankar, the founder of the Art of Living Foundation, pays tribute to Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.

February 07, 2008
China uneasy over PM's Arunachal visit
The tracing of internal dimensions of Dr Singh's visit to Arunachal by the Chinese experts (pressure from the Indian military and the need to 'balance' the moves of anti-China hawkish sections in India) seems to reflect China's doubts over the likely impact on the border talks coming from future political equations in India, especially in the context of general elections due in that country next year.

February 06, 2008
Security in the Asian Century
What seems certain is the growing influence of major Asian countries on the structures and processes of international relations in Asia. At the same time, we cannot overlook the influence of external actors on the continent. Asian security in the 21st century will thus be shaped by the interactions between major Asian powers and influential external actors such as European Union, Russia and the United States.

January 25, 2008
Rediscover the Sainik school
The decreasing interest in joining the armed forces should worry not just the ministry of defence but the nation too.

January 24, 2008
France's Hyper President comes calling
When President Chirac arrived in Mumbai in 1998, he declared: 'In India, France is not at the level where it should be.' Ten years later, it is still true. France has a role to play in India, but will Delhi and Paris will be bold enough to seize the occasion?

January 21, 2008
How DRDO has helped the nation
Tactical systems such as main battle tank Arjun, light combat aircraft Tejas, a family of radars, electronic warfare systems, sonars, torpedoes, armaments and missiles have been successfully developed in the country and many of them are being delivered to the armed forces. The recent success of the DRDO (Defence Research and Development Organisation) in the launch of interceptor missile and Agni-III has taken our country into the elite club of a few developed nations.

January 18, 2008
How Modi hopes to overcome opposition
Be it the vexed boundary issue or nuclear co-operation or supporting India's bid for a permanent seat, whatever India and China say is mere candy floss, says B S Raghavan.

Lessons from Pakistan
Since partition, the growth of the minority population in India has been manifold while Pakistan's minority population has dwindled from 15 percent to just 1 percent. The biggest mistake that Pakistan made was in not supporting its minority communities.

L K Advani's roadmap for world peace
Can Asia, or for that matter, the rest of the world, rest in peace if ideologies of religious extremism, exclusivism and global domination -- and these ideologies neither respect democracy nor tolerate secularism and plurality -- are allowed to grow in our midst?

January 17, 2008
Sino-Indian vision: Bloated, sugar-coated candy floss
Be it the vexed boundary issue or nuclear co-operation or supporting India's bid for a permanent seat, whatever India and China say is mere candy floss, says B S Raghavan.

January 15, 2008
Euphoria over PM's China visit unwarranted
The sense of proportion with which the government handled the visit underscores a profound understanding of this ground reality. Platitudes of the vision document notwithstanding, the cold reality is that both China and India are engaged in a period of adjustment in a highly volatile regional and international environment. To compound the variables, the process of adjustment has just about begun and is likely to be drawn out.

How DRDO failed India's military
If DRDO can appreciate that a technologically advanced and vibrant defence industry is equally critical for India's security and its global aspirations, we will not replicate this mistake. In other words, it should be made to realise that it solely exists to support the armed forces and not vice versa. Therefore, New Delhi should force ruthless accountability within DRDO and ensure fruitful collaboration with the private sector.

January 14, 2008
PM in China: Engaging the Dragon
Despite "positive" signals from Beijing during the PM's visit on the civilian nuclear technology issue, no progress is made on either a nuclear "de-targeting" or "non-targeting" agreements between the two countries. Nevertheless, it needs to be pointed out that Beijing is now prepared to support India in "important" international institutions and expressed its view to work with New Delhi in regional and international affairs.

Why you should retire quickly
Pradeep Srivastava has valid arguments to make.

January 11, 2008
Dr Singh is not Richard Gere
In diplomacy, it is inadvisable to be a straggler, as you may end up crawling back on a pitiless greasy pole.

Nuclear negotiators have not learnt from Tarapur experience
Throughout the evolution of the deal, since India has not insisted on the parity issue and resigned itself to playing second fiddle as a 'client' State, there are problems galore in having to contend with a deal with conditions heavily loaded against India on technical and economic issues with political overtones.

Lanka turmoil: Threat to India's soft underbelly
The dialogue must be open and the world at large told of the issues involved. But the first step for the process to begin is for both sides to accept that they are in a no win situation. If the world and India fails to convince the Sri Lankans, then we are looking at a fire next door with China gleefully fishing in troubled waters!

January 10, 2008
Violence in Kenya: A plague in paradise
Indians are constant targets of violence not because of any particular anti-Indian feeling, but because they are the richer of the species. They have bigger homes and more wealth for the looters and the thieves. Kenyans, who serve in these homes, are witnesses to conspicuous consumption by the Indians. Many homes resemble Hindi movie sets the Kenyans watch with envy every day.

January 09, 2008
Good timing for PM's visit to China
For reluctant optimists like me, there are still some inconvenient truths. I believe that the time has come for India to follow the example of China who, in Sonia Gandhi's words, has 'shown the world how much could be achieved with pragmatism, clarity of vision.

PM in China: Stability in times of turmoil
While this visit is expected not to forge any major breakthrough on outstanding issues that afflict bilateral relations in the last five decades, as with the other high-level political visits between the two countries so far, the bottom line is to create conditions that possibly tie both countries in politico-legal frameworks of stability.

January 08, 2008
Local factors led to Kandhmal violence
However, if there is any one aspect that is pan-Indian in all the incidents related to Hindu-Christian clashes it is religious conversions. Even in Kandhamal district, one of the major factors fuelling tensions is the conversion campaign of the evangelical groups. It is noteworthy that in a state like Orissa which enacted anti-conversion laws as back as in 1967, the Christian population in Kandhamal district alone has grown from 6 per cent in 1970 to 27 per cent in 2001

January 03, 2008
Armed might won't defeat the Naxals
Having traveled several times through the 'affected' areas in Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra I have little hesitation in testifying that the insurgency has much popular support. The police, forest and excise departments are truly hated and this is just about all the government the common people encounter.

Musharraf is wrong to delay the election
In a fair contest, with an independent judiciary, an unbiased election commission and neutral officials in the field, polls suggest Musharraf loyalists would be obliterated. If a delay is simply a pretext to thwart the PPP and to gerrymander a return of a pliable, pro-Musharraf parliament, countries that genuinely want a democratic Pakistan should condemn it.

The other Benazir we should remember
While paying tribute to the slain leader, keep in mind her anti-India stance and role in transferring nuclear technology to North Korea.

January 01, 2008
Benazir's disrupted dream: Bridging Islam with the West
Bridging an increasingly diverse West with the Islamic world was Benazir's dream and agenda.

December 31, 2007
Why Musharraf is not responsible for Benazir's death
People are gunning for Musharraf because they feel he is partly responsible for Benazir's assassination. Nothing could be far from truth. In fact, Musharraf and Benazir might have entered a secret pact, says Sudhir Bisht.

She resorted to anti-Indianism to please voters
Is Benazir Bhutto one of the outstanding leaders of our sub-continent, who always looked for reconciliation between India and Pakistan?

Remembering the truth about Benazir
She was the prime minister who gave the ISI the go-ahead to wage jihad on India. She was the one who exhorted the Pakistan trained and financed terrorists to 'jag-jag mo-mo han-han' Jagmohan the then governor of Jammu and Kashmir, with an explicit chopping motion of the right hand across the open left palm. She was the one who shrieked 'Azadi-azadi' from across the LOC and extended Zia-ul-Haq's doctrine of death by a thousand cuts to Kashmir

Indo-China army drill is symbolic, more to be done
This programme is qualitatively a downgraded version as compared to the Chinese military exercises with others such as with Russia (in August 2005), Pakistan (in 2005 at Taxkorgan area north of Sakshgam valley and in December 2006 at Abbotabad in Pakistan), Central Asian Republics (in August 2007).

December 28, 2007
Benazir's death won't have long-term impact
'The military is so deeply entrenched in Pakistan's economic and political life that no democratic entity in the country can survive a challenge from it.'

Al Qaeda does not have a mailing address
'In all such cases of assassinations, the opportunity to act, and access to the target, are the most important aspects. Once these two are available and there are guns for hire, the rest is easy as a matter of patient waiting, or a speedy arrival and quick escape.'

Brave Bibi Benazir
'She was not a politician a newly created country like Pakistan needed. But, among the choices that are available, she was the best.'

Bhutto murder brings US-Pak ties to breaking point
The tragic irony could well be that what Bhutto couldn't achieve over the recent years, she might well have managed by laying down her life -- the beginning of a parting of ways between Bush and Musharraf.

December 24, 2007
Will Modi now modify his style?
'He will have to undertake course correction. He will have to be respecful to the norms of a democratic system and observe the rule of law. He may become more cautious lest he looks abrasive and authoritarian.'

How secularists played into Modi's hands
As opposition to Modi by the secularists become shriller, they will end up doing the job of polarising the voters for him and not the other way round.

Idols are better vote-getters than ideology
'Cynicism does not necessarily fetch votes, nor does mindless populism. Good governance, strong leadership and a squeaky clean image now command a premium.'

Dear Father Christmas
'Today, when the planet is in danger, why should India's leaders use petty arguments instead of showing the way?'

December 23, 2007
Next step for Modi -- the national stage
Modi has proved to be a formidable vote-catcher at a time when the BJP leadership is full of political bureaucrats without mass following. The survival of the party demands that these bureaucrats make way for Modi or else they and the party will perish. Surrendering to Modi is their last chance for long term survival.

Reading Gujarat's message right
The message from Gujarat is that people want to see in their leaders the time-honoured values of intellectual honesty, personal integrity, performance-oriented governance and straight dealing. They do not any longer want to put up with politicians who speak differently from different corners of the mouth and soft-pedal the looming dangers to the nation from hostile forces and traitorous groups.

December 19, 2007
Chinkara gazelle or Kashmiri Hindu?
Do you feel it is okay for government agencies to let terrorists roam free and be more concerned about Chinkara gazelles?

December 17, 2007
Why Sharad Pawar won't displace Maharashtra CM
Vilasrao Deshmukh's biggest enemy is not the BJP-Shiv Sena combine. It is not the NCP, however much he may grumble about them. The enemy is his own party.

Modi and the Ramanujam Test
Narendra Modi is not the problem. We all are, says TCA Srinivasa-Raghavan.

December 14, 2007
The battle over the new Dalai Lama
Choosing the next Dalai Lama is too profound a tradition to be controlled by the Communists in Beijing.

December 12, 2007
Pakistan: Will the fatal cycle continue?
What is even more tragic is that US diplomacy, which might have made a difference, instead acted as an enabler of authoritarianism by pursuing a militarised grand strategy almost exclusively fixated on short-term tactical results when what Pakistan has always needed if it is to avoid political self-destruction is comprehensive social reform.

Judicial accountability is at stake
While Justice A K Mathur and Justice Markandey Katju said there have to be limits to judicial activism, Justice S B Sinha retaliates the following day refusing to decide the issue whether women prisoners in jail are being denied their rights. Then, the high court retaliates by refusing to decide a petition relating to beggars, for being chastised by the Supreme Court in entertaining all petitions in public interest. While the judges fight it out, justice suffers.

When grief weighs us down...
Sharing grief allows us to ease our burden, as someone else helps us carry it. This helps us process our inner thoughts and feelings through the filter of a trusted and beloved partner, says Shankerprasad S Bhatt.

December 10, 2007
Pakistan: Doomed to a fragile democracy?
The military-bureaucratic dominance is a menacing reality in Pakistan, as a result of which the nation is unable to build a vibrant democracy, says Mohammad Sajjad.

December 07, 2007
Bhutto's manifesto hits at Musharraf's power base
Some promises made in Benazir Butto's new manifesto strike at the very root of Musharraf's power base while others -- including handing over control of the Military Initelligence and the nuclear arsenal to the prime minister -- go even beyond that.

Why Modi will score a landslide win again
This is the most one-sided election I have covered in my 28-year journalistic career, where there is no electoral issue except the incumbent chief minister who looms larger than life before the Congress's has-been and would-be small-timers. When a Tendulkar faces gali-mohalla bowlers a double century is certain.

Will the real Indian please stand up?
The Malaysian Hindus used to be Indians hundreds of years ago. Now, they are as Malaysian as any ethnic Malay.

December 06, 2007
Think consumer, engage society
Vote for clean politics without being afraid that your vote will be wasted, compare prices, join a social network and share information. There's a lot you can do to make 2008 be better.

November 30, 2007
Catch me if you can
Pervez Musharraf is taunting Pakistan, just as Osama bin Laden is taunting the West.

General Kiyani's appointment has US nod
Kiyani's appointment could be seen as part of the US grand strategy to pass off democracy on Pakistan with Musharraf as the civilian president and a civilian prime minister.

Musharraf must exit both politics and the army
To salvage what remains of his legacy, Musharraf should as soon as possible let the chairman of the senate take over as an interim president and withdraw from politics.

November 28, 2007
Dear Taslima, let's forget Nandigram
The Islamists are unhappy with Taslima, there is no confusion about that. But what baffles me ? what has that got to do with an issue as grave as Nandigram? I fail to see any connection between the two. Nandigram, Taslima; Taslima, Nandigram -- I give up. Which is exactly when realisation dawns.

November 27, 2007
This Jest In
Aditi Nadkarni looks at the funnier side of life as an immigrant.

Jettison the no-first-use nuke policy
The NFUP smacks of an extremist version of masochism. It's tantamount to: You, there, c'mon clobber me, but if you leave me alive I'll disembowel you!

November 26, 2007
Pakistan: Towards democracy?
The Pakistani elite seem to be realising for the first time that they need to move away from the idea that Pakistan must necessarily confront India as a matter of honour.

November 20, 2007
Stalingram
Nandigram was Stalinised the same way Stalin had Siberia-ised Soviet Russia.

November 16, 2007
The nattering nabobs of negativity
The nuclear quagmire illustrates our historic bent towards shooting ourselves in the foot, our indecisiveness, and the perils or the pretensions of an unbounded 'universalism.'

November 15, 2007
Busharraf of Pakistan
If Pakistan is today on the brink, the blame should be squarely put on the US and the other Western nations.

November 14, 2007
Who did what in Nandigram?
The happenings of the past 10 months in Nandigram -- that once obscure hamlet of the hinterland of West Bengal, which has now begun hitting headlines in world media -- do not lend themselves to any clear appraisal of the situation. Nobody knows for sure who did what there.

November 13, 2007
Of Bengal's Magaj Dholai & lost dynamism
When Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee became chief minister after Jyoti Basu stepped down in 2000, the younger generation could not have been happier. 'Change is about to set in' they thought. But the euphoria was short-lived.

November 07, 2007
Tehelka sting: Time to speak up
'The response the sting has evoked from some among us is both shameful and dangerous. And when it comes from leaders -- the so-called intellectuals and especially editors who are supposed to mould public opinion -- it is despicable.'

November 06, 2007
Why Deve Gowda is the man of the moment
With the Congress unable to make up its mind, Deve Gowda's in power once again.

What do Indians think of the Indo-US relations?
The Indian public is not naive and indeed demonstrates a streak of hard realism in its judgments about the US.

The case of Musharraf and the drunk uncle
'When he said, "Extremists have gone very extreme," it suddenly occurred to me why his speech pattern seemed so familiar. He was that uncle that you get stranded with at a family gathering when everybody else has gone to sleep but there is still some whisky left in the bottle.'

Partition's ghost haunts Pakistan
'Pakistan's Islamic dream has gone sour miserably.'

November 05, 2007
'We need to be creative about federalism'
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh speaks at the inauguration of the International Conference on Federalism in New Delhi on November 5, 2007.

Will Musharraf survive and succeed?
'Any weakening of army support would spell doom for Musharraf. The Pakistani army's image is much dented and it is doubtful if it can withstand a civil war with the Taliban.'

Where does Pakistan go from here?
'The question of whether General Musharraf will remain army chief for another five years or take off his uniform then will have to be settled by the new parliament in 2008 as happened in 2003.'

November 04, 2007
Musharraf has support of US, UK
It is quite evident that the timing of Pervez Musharraf's decision to impose emergency rule in Pakistan is linked to the impending judgment by the Supreme Court regarding the propriety of his re-election as president for another term. But that is only part of the story.

November 01, 2007
Emboldened extremists threaten Pakistan, US
In the past six months, (Pakistan President Prevez) Musharraf has been seriously weakened, the major non-religious political figures have been diminished, and the US has been publicly involved in the deal-making leading to Pakistan's next government. The biggest security challenge for the US, however, comes from the newly emboldened violent extremists who are challenging the authority of the Pakistani state.

October 31, 2007
India's foreign policy running aground
The idea of India under compulsion harmonising its foreign policy with the US global strategies -- militates other powers. Which is why Iran becomes a test case. The world watches us, and it takes us seriously. We shouldn't appear as one-dimensional men.

October 30, 2007
Sonia in China: Mending fences
Sonia referred to her trip as a 'milestone' in bilateral relations, while Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao termed her work in improving bilateral relations as 'of great importance'

October 29, 2007
Barak Obama and the Pakistan conundrum
His declaration that the Pakistani junta will no longer be given carte blanche to stonewall further on dislodging Al Qaeda from Waziristan cannot, therefore, be dismissed as the ranting of a politically immature novice, as his detractors aver; it is the right thing to say and should be seen as another instance of Obama once again getting ahead of the pack.

Colombo port adds to India's China woes<
'A Chinese company is in the final fray to get a foothold in the strategic Port of Colombo.'

October 25, 2007
The price of pusillanimity
'The N-treaty volte face is a big loss of face for our country. I wonder who will take a frivolous India seriously now. Given the resounding triumph of Leftist blackmailers, wannabe blackmailers can roll their sleeves up and expect a field day hereafter.'

October 24, 2007
Mayawati goes after UP’s Big Three
Mayawati was, pre-election, hell-bent upon preventing Amar, Mulayam and Subroto Roy from 'running away' from India. But for Cabinet Secretary Shashank Shekhar Singh's temporary intervention with behenji, Amar Singh would have been put behind bars the day she took over as chief minister.

Bangalore is the best Indian city I've seen
We watched the Global Bazaar come to IIM Bangalore. The days before the recruiting marathon began it felt as if there was a wedding on campus.

October 19, 2007
Benazir Bhutto's magic works
Now comes another test in the coming days. As Benazir travels to the province of Punjab in the coming days, what will be her reception? Will it match another homecoming - no less fortuitous, no less breathtaking - two decades ago?

October 17, 2007
A gold medal for the Tibetan cause?
The award to the Dalai Lama is good 'for the conscience of the US,' but it does not help the Tibetans in their aspiration for freedom.

October 15, 2007
Why India must watch China's communist congress
What India needs to take note of is that relatively younger and educationally qualified candidates are getting elected to the congress over a period of time.

BJP must step in and save N-deal
Failure or inordinate delay in taking forward the deal, by way of engaging with the Internation Atomic Energy Agency and the Nuclear Suppliers Group will actually result in keeping India's sovereignty shrunk and eroded ? the very objective that the Left parties are claiming to advance!

October 11, 2007
The RTI movement will lead India to Swaraj
In its true sense, the RTI is a citizen's search for the truth about how his government functions -- a satyagraha. The movement is growing relentlessly and will lead India to the 'Swaraj', which we missed in 1947. A quiet peaceful revolution called the 'Right To Information' campaign is sweeping across the nation.

October 02, 2007
Futile bloodshed in Myanmar
Myanmar's history of the last 47 years or more makes it extremely unlikely that change will come through a popular uprising. The military is so well entrenched and the people are so patient that change has to come through a process of reconciliation.

October 01, 2007
Gandhi Jayanti calls for multiple levels of introspection
Wiping the tears of the most oppressed in society and giving them succor remains central to the Gandhian vision and the mismatch between rhetoric and reality in the current Indian context is glaring.

September 26, 2007
India@60: Still a long way to go
Everything in India has happened despite the system. However, the system needs a complete overhaul -- into one of strict meritocracy -- and until that happens India will continue to play second fiddle to China.

September 25, 2007
Sonia must back Priyanka, not Rahul
She has all the charisma sentimental Indian voters look for in a popular leader. Priyanka can try and mobilise the youth, cutting across caste lines.

September 24, 2007
The real Ram Setu fight
The attack on Ambika Soni is aimed at stopping her return to the party during election time.

September 19, 2007
Has the PM thought of his grandchildren?
'Several countries in the West are on the way to close their nuclear plants because nuclear energy is not considered a clean energy.'

Why the Saudis got involved in Pakistan
The Saudis have made a timely, shrewd investment in Musharraf's political future.

September 18, 2007
Indo-US military ties are inevitable
`I doubt if India would let this partnership dilute its strategic relations with Russia and China.'

September 14, 2007
Denying Ram is denying India
Gandhi stood firmly for Ram Rajya. He died with Ram's name on his lips. His samadhi in Delhi has only one inscription etched on it, He Ram. But Hindus are asked to provide proof of Rama's birthplace and the data of his bridge's construction plans.

September 12, 2007
As difficult as 123
It may not be the easiest of deals to forge, but with patience and understanding it can be done.

September 10, 2007
What Nawaz Sharif's return means for Pakistan
Pervez Musharraf's re-election as president looks fanciful. Nawaz Sharif senses it is time to strike.

September 07, 2007
Delhi fiddles while the northeast burns
'All the power, position, money and glitter weigh nothing before the question of the nation's sovereignty and territorial integrity.'

September 05, 2007
Pakistan and the 'minus 2 formula'
Musharraf was serious about sharing power with Bhutto but her demands exposed her real intentions; she actually overestimated her importance and tried to grab everything from Musharraf through negotiations.

August 28, 2007
Mayawati’s plans to rule India
With her pan-Indian Dalit following her in a frenzy, slogging for her in the field, with their dreams of seeing a Dalit prime minister in India, the possibility is not as distant as most Indians wish/dread it to be.

August 27, 2007
India and Japan: Limits of convergence
India, which has kept its distance from the militaristic dimension given to the SCO by the recent Sino-Russian exercises, should equally avoid closer involvement in a quadrilateral combine which will harm its relations with China.

August 24, 2007
IIM and IITs' class-less future
Is the future of education online?

August 23, 2007
Amend Constitution to enable debate
The Left has raised an important issue using their bargaining power. Non-party people's formations may not have the power in Parliament, but we have an important set of issues that need to be considered

Why Japan and India are moving closer
Although Shinzo Abe's itinerary in India indicates a bias towards financial-related issues, several issues of concern would have been discussed between the two sides

August 22, 2007
Who holds the Indian flag in Kashmir?
It is these 7,000 Kashmiri Hindus who still believe in the Constitution. If we lose them, we lose Kashmir.

Shinzo Abe is an admirer of India
Between India's democracy and China's opaque political system, non-military transparency in particular, Abe sides with the former. On India's nuclear programme, the Japanese prime minister had refused to compare India's case with that of North Korea.

August 21, 2007
We need to tend to the grassroots
'The fault is not in our freedom but how we are milking the magnificent opportunity it has afforded. Should we not ponder and correct the course?'

Why the Japanese PM's visit is crucial
'On the agenda: A nearly $100 billion Delhi-Mumbai fast track freight corridor, a similar corridor for Delhi and Kolkata, cooperation in counter-terrorism and security matters, and civil nuclear cooperation.'

August 20, 2007
Is Pakistan headed for martial law?
'Many believe that Pakistanis are ready to fight martial law with the firm belief that Musharraf will be the last military dictator,' writes Hamid Mir

The comrades and BJP are putting India in danger
'India, facing Chinese encirclement on the sea and a rapidly Talibanising Pakistan in the west, needs American technology to defend against rogue missile attacks.'

Dragon tears, not national interest
'If nuclear tests are foolish, if they epitomise jingoism, why this Communist insistence on the right to test now?'

'These are vital issues which cannot be ignored'
CPI-M General Secretary Prakash Karat on why his party opposes the India-US nuclear deal.

August 14, 2007
The US cannot dictate to Pakistan
Pervez Musharraf's willingness to be persuaded by the US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to attend the Kabul jirga underscores the criticality of Pakistan's cooperation for Washington.

India should not waste this last chance
The future may not be as rosy as the cheerleading cohort may think, and yet it need not be as bleak as the pessimists fear.

We need to set lofty goals
We need to set lofty goals just as our forefathers. Like them, we need to be dreamers with a pragmatic approach.

Nuclear steal: It's the Constitution, stupid
`The Constitution needs one more amendment to overcome the perils of anything like the latest 123 Agreement. But a repair job will not do; what is wanted is a total overhaul to overcome contradictions and complications.'

Which part of India are you from?
After 60 years, we know from our own everyday experience that there is 'an idea of India' which transcends sub-identities and unifies us when needed.

August 10, 2007
The nuclear deal: A positive fallout
The boldness of the nuclear deal could provide a much-needed boost of confidence to a country which, at 60, is only now learning to tightrope across the world stage without the safety net of the United Nations or the Non-Aligned Movement.

August 07, 2007
Wanted: A vision for air and space
Are we doomed to having an obsolete IAF for the next 20 years? Are we still going to buy old planes that don't even function well in the seller countries?

M K Bhadrakumar: Why India is sleeping on foreign policy
'Whenever it hears the term SCO, Delhi faces an existential dilemma -- of its own making.'

August 06, 2007
Nuclear deal: It could have been worse
'In the event of a nuclear test by India, the Agreement will stand automatically terminated.'

Nuclear deal: India has no leverage
'We are now in effect reduced to a mere recipient State mandated by the Hyde Act to carry out a set of dos and don'ts and to strive to earn a good behaviour report card to become eligible to continue receiving what the Americans can offer.'

Abuse as argument
It is only the apex court that can decelerate, though not stop, the march of casteism. Politicians have not opposed and will not oppose the expanding scope of reservations.

August 03, 2007
Gandhian gangster goes to jail
'Will Sanjay Dutt prove himself a real-life Munnabhai, a true devotee of Bapu?'

Disturbing implications of 123 Agreement
Rajiv Sikri lays threadbare the implication of the nuclear deal.

August 02, 2007
The Musharraf-Bhutto deal is in doldrums
'The deal between two individuals will not materialise unless it is expanded to all the major political parties on a specific national agenda.'

The nuclear deal: America's Dhritarashtra's embrace?
'The new phase of intensive engagement with the United States will have its own challenges and rewards.'

July 31, 2007
Lessons from the 14-year Mumbai blasts trial
Without the trial of 'Tiger' Memon and Dawood Ibrahim, the most important anti-terror case in independent India will always remain an unfinished chapter.

July 27, 2007
Does N-deal really solve issues?
What we are fed up with is one-sided interpretation of the text by the official side though there is promise that the text will be made public soon in consultation with the US.

July 20, 2007
N-deal: Parliament must have decisive authority
It is time Indian Parliament woke up to the need for the nuclear deal to be subjected to parliamentary scrutiny and approval in the Indian national interest

July 19, 2007
Musharraf's moment of truth
'Storming a mosque, that too with a VIP tag, would have been impossible in India.'

July 18, 2007
Weaving it together: Web 2.0
'It is early days as yet and what is certain is that like all technology Web 2.0 will irrevocably and irreversibly change the way we interact with the Web and with each other.'

July 17, 2007
Pakistan after Lal Masjid
The perception that the extremists have got a clear signal from the establishment regarding its threshold to tolerate such nonsense will keep others in check.

July 16, 2007
Lal Masjid: What should Musharraf do now?
'The Lal Masjid battle is part of the wider civil war within the Islamic world waged by totalitarian forces that seek redemption through violence. Their cancerous radicalism pits Muslims against Muslims, and the world at large.'

Karnataka is a state in danger from itself
The real, frightening problem is that there is no one fighting communalism in Karnataka.

July 12, 2007
11/7: We MUST remember
July 11 did not deserve to be an ordinary day. It is a day of anger. A day to respectfully honour hundreds of citizens -- who could have been you or me – killed in the space of minutes. Of lives lost. Of homes shattered. How can we not remember?

July 10, 2007
Beyond the Lal Masjid operation
'Pakistan faces no such danger as a takeover by the Islamist radical forces. The temper of the overwhelming majority of Pakistanis is also such that they share a dislike toward the forces of extremism.'

July 07, 2007
Goal post shifts for Indo-US nuclear deal
The heart of the matter is that the Indo-US nuclear deal, unless it is closed now ? right now ? and on American terms, will soon need to be harmonised with the new Russian-American format and the international regime emanating out of it.

July 06, 2007
Lal Masjid + judicial crisis = emergency?
'Any outbreak of civic disturbances and that too at a time when the Pakistani State is tackling the onslaught of the Islamists will almost certainly make a regime change inevitable.'

July 04, 2007
The real tragedy of the Presidential elections
'The air is thick with accusations and disputations, most of it cluttered with irrelevant or tangential arguments.'

June 25, 2007
INS Jalashwa a reflection of India-US trust
'From a modest beginning of 33 antiquated vessels in 1947, the Indian Navy has grown into a modern and forward looking fleet.'

June 19, 2007
Musharraf, the last military dictator in Pakistan
'In Pakistan, people have started believing that democratic forces will win this battle and the army will go back to the barracks, this time forever.'

June 18, 2007
Mute spectators or change activists? Who are you?
'We should not allow our nation to become a banana republic where terrorists roam free with Z-level official security while Kashmiri Hindus, who believe in India , live like refugees.'

June 15, 2007
No way to treat Pakistan
'Washington knows that it ultimately has to depend on the Pakistani army.'

June 14, 2007
Pakistan: Some likely scenarios
'A major internal upheaval cannot be ruled out.'

June 13, 2007
Why Guruvayur is different
'There seems to be a general ignorance of the laws among the lawmakers, Hindu and non-Hindu devotees.'

June 12, 2007
Saharashri-Amitabh: Friends in need
Politicians associated with Amitabh Bachchan have invariably nursed grand illusions. And suffered.

What a visit to Pakistan revealed
'The overall situation is unstable and any trigger like the capture/killing of Osama bin Laden or Musharraf extending his presidency could trigger events which could threaten the military's rule.'

June 07, 2007
Can the Adivasi status take Gujjars forward?
'Rajasthan Gujjars have not been able to benefit from the OBC quota. How do we interpret this extraordinary spectacle of backwardness?'

Don't ask for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee...
The G-8 summit provides a useful window seat for Dr Singh to assess the intensity of the 'new Cold War'.

May 31, 2007
In Bihar, will find money, will spend it
Aditi Phadnis on the new Bihar

Why Pranabda makes sense
As Pranab Mukherjee rightly emphasises in the case of Iran, Afghanistan too cannot be dealt with as a 'political entity' prised out of the ebb and flow of its history, its proud traditions.

The ABC of India's nuclear economics
Economics, not politics, is the hurdle in the US-India nuclear agreement's path.

May 30, 2007
Remembering India's old friends
Galbraith, Rosenthal and Moynihan saw India holistically for all its capabilities and its challenges.

May 29, 2007
Is the elite blocking India's new social order?
'The arrogant-affluent elite is putting roadblocks in the march of history, and that of democracy.'

May 26, 2007
Wanted in Cong: Natural leaders
Why would one join the Congress party, and have a zero per cent chance of ever being the leader, versus having a 0.1 per cent chance somewhere else?

May 25, 2007
Musharraf battles the odds
Musharraf's problems keep multiplying, and as elections approach, he finds himself fighting for his political survival. But generals do not let go of power easily. Their instinct is to cling on at all costs.

Hyderabad blasts: The ISI hand
The ISI's new terror matrix comprises three major terrorist groups, at least half-a-dozen big and small front organisations with extremist ideology, spanning three countries.

May 24, 2007
Saharashri vs Mayawati. The war is on!
The battle-lines are drawn. Both titans are flexing their muscles.

Are Pakistan's bombs safe?
'While most alarmist predictions about the security of Pakistan's nuclear weapons are unlikely to materialise, instability is likely to increase unless Musharraf redirects the Pakistani ship of state.'

May 22, 2007
Manuwadi in Mayaraj
The man who helped Mayawati to keep her head down and nose to the grindstone.

Why the defence ministry failed to spend Rs 3500 cr
MoD bureaucracy's reluctance to conclude contracts for fear of victimisation by "the three Cs". That's the CBI, the CVC and the CAG.

Karachi burns, India gains
The Karachi carnage was far worse than the demolition of the Babri Masjid and the Gujarat carnage, says Mohammad Shehzad

May 17, 2007
Why should India test now?
Deterrence, like beauty, lies in the eye of the beholder. And if the beholder cannot see a well-tested 100 KT warhead, he is unlikely to be deterred for long.

It's the NPT, not Iran
Iran is a large country with great civilization and culture behind it and it would be foolhardy to try pushing it around as a non-entity.

May 16, 2007
Do we really have a nuclear deterrent?
'India has had seven years after the 1998 tests, what has it done on the weapons front?'

The split between the two Frances
The French election probably reflects the deep uneasiness of a nation caught resting while the world around is changing.

May 15, 2007
The case for nuclear testing
We have only thought of acquiring a nuclear deterrence capability, but we have deluded ourselves into believing that we have already accomplished it.

May 14, 2007
Mayawati ushers in a new social revolution
'Her victory has the potential to trigger a new social revolution in India.'

Amend US law, or reject nuclear deal
'India should not succumb to the US ploy and help their approach by over-dramatizing the importance of the 123 Agreement to the Indian public.'

May 10, 2007
Who killed India’s 1857 legacy?
'The India that 1857 represents is not the India where a Hindu police officer from Gujarat kills a Muslim in a fake, fascist, communal encounter.’

May 09, 2007
The glorious example of 1857
'The movement of 1857 was in expanse and significance greater than just a mutiny in the army. Its most significant characteristic was the unity of the Hindus and Muslims in the struggle against foreign rule.'

Can the US escape from Empire?
'America's latest post-Cold War tryst with neo-con global political evangelism in Iraq is nearing the end of the trail.'

May 07, 2007
Lesson from 1857: don't forget your past
The significance of 1857 for today's youth is that it makes you realise that we all are one people in spite of our diversity.

Mayawati will win over 184, double digits for SP, BJP
In case Governor Rajeshwar Rao refuses to recognise her numerical strength and dares to invoke President's Rule, then UP may have some rare fireworks.

April 30, 2007
BJP in UP: Hindu Divided Family
The BJP's Lilliputians have not grown up, though they have grown old.

Why the mullahs will win in Pakistan
The storm will wreak havoc not just in Pakistan but around the world, which still has its eyes tightly shut to the silent revolution sweeping through Pakistan.

April 25, 2007
Why the Ram Setu must not be destroyed
Nobody is opposing the Sethu Samudram Project, only a realignment of the route is being asked, as the present one destroys the Ram Setu.

April 23, 2007
Forever separate and unequal
'Quotas based on caste- and creed-neutral standards that exclude the 'creamy layer' may be the only way to get out of Arjun Singh's casteist chakravyuha.

April 18, 2007
Battleground UP: a verdict that will shock
Imagine a Dalit naari single-handedly fighting Moolahyumm Singh, the BJP star brigade and the Congress party! Today, Mayawati is the darling behenji of the masses.

April 17, 2007
SEZs could create a water crisis
The trouble is, in backward areas where infrastructure is weak, the impact of SEZ on access to water would be even more serious.

April 16, 2007
Misconceptions about India, Pak abound
Excerpts from India's Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar Menon's speech on 'India-Pakistan: Understanding the Conflict Dynamics' at Jamia Millia Islamia on April 11.

The unnamed enemy of Pakistan
Pakistan Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry is fighting for the supremacy of law, and that is why a judge has become a hero of the masses for the first time

April 12, 2007
Pakistan's lies, exposed again
'Zahid Hussain lays out, in considerable detail, the extent of Pakistan's involvement and active support for terrorism.'

April 11, 2007
America, India and their role in global security
The United States must reach out for new allies, and its focus must expand from Europe to Asia.

Mizoram: Peace in peril
David Buhril on the perils that face a 'peaceful' Mizoram.

April 04, 2007
Mulayam faces uphill battle in UP
Mulayam's exit will make way for Mayawati to return to power. UP has now begun to resemble Tamil Nadu. Two regional parties rule by turn.

Lessons for SAARC from the European Union
The journey towards South Asian integration will be long and arduous, but it has to start one day!.

March 29, 2007
The transformation of SAARC
In reality SAARC is largely a name board with annual rituals, not always regularly observed.

March 28, 2007
Why Mayawati is wooing the Brahmins
Dalits are seeking a new social contract -- this time at the initiative of the Dalits themselves, and on their own terms and conditions.

Moolahyumm, Congress battle for 3rd place in UP
All the crores coming out of the coffers of Moolahyumm, Subroto Roy, Anil Ambani, Amar Singh, Shivpal Singh, Adi Godrej and others cannot influence the disgusted electorate of UP.

March 26, 2007
'I believe in freedom'
President Pervez Musharraf says Pakistan is progressing and no one can stop that progress.

March 23, 2007
What happened in Nandigram
CPI-M General Secretary Prakash Karat on the incidents in Nandigram and its aftermath.

March 16, 2007
Maoists' dream can become India's nightmare
The Maoist threat needs to be taken very seriously.

March 13, 2007
Lessons from urban Punjab for the Congress
The Congress policy of minority appeasement and burdening the middle-class has cost it dear in Punjab.

March 12, 2007
Will the peace process survive Musharraf?
With President Musharraf under pressure from the US, his continuance as leader of Pakistan is under a cloud, says Anil Athale.

March 02, 2007
Just why did Cheney meet Musharraf?
'To belittle the general, to chastise him like an errant school boy -- that was the last thing on Cheney's mind.'

February 28, 2007
What Kalam told India’s defence scientists
What President Kalam told young scientists at DRDO.

February 23, 2007
Why Pak needs to keep the peace process going
In 2007, Musharraf faces a situation more critical than the one he faced after the 2002 confrontation with India. At that time the US Administration was not as unfriendly to him as it is today. The jihadis were not as defiant as they are today.

February 22, 2007
Are India, China & Russia ready for a breakthrough?
What we are seeing is a demonstration of how in today's complex global scenario there can be issue-based coalitions of States.