India and Pakistan cannot afford to stay away from each other for too long. But they cannot stay with each other either.
The consequences of a breakdown in dialogue between India and Pakistan might be unpredictable and could well push bilateral relations, as well as the situation in Kashmir, into uncharted waters.
In refusing to call off the talks between Indian and Pakistani national security advisers, Modi might be signalling the strength to rethink the core assumptions of India’s recent Pakistan policy.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has seized a rare moment of change in the Gulf and launched a new phase in India’s relations with the United Arab Emirates.
India is less popular with ordinary Americans. But this may not be a problem for U.S.-India relations if hard power considerations make up for it.
Recent developments demand that New Delhi take a fresh strategic look at the Gulf region.
The U.S.-India relationship was often distant during the Cold War, but the partnership is now critical for both countries’ strategic aims.
Defense cooperation is the cornerstone of the steadily strengthening bilateral U.S.-Indian relationship.
The fragile security environment in South Asia is marked by territorial disputes, radical extremism, and nuclear weapons.
Going against the grain of entrenched pacifism in Japan, Abe is making the case that Tokyo should respond to the rapidly unfolding geopolitical changes in the region.