The Candidates and India
Indians seem to have gone ga-ga over the Democrats.
Indians seem to have gone ga-ga over the Democrats.
As it tries to paint its image green, the Bank backs an Indian coal plant being built by the Tata Group.
India is under pressure to complete a nuclear deal with Washington. But don’t hold your breath.
The Belgian peace movement resists intervention in Afghanistan.
Indias launch of a new spy satellite for Israel may change the geopolitical complexion of the Middle East.
The United States is still the big dog on the block, columnist Conn Hallinan argues, but it can no longer just bark to get its way.
Can the environmental movement in the Global South, asks Walden Bello, serve as a pivotal agent in the fight against global warming?
New China-India-Russia security cooperation: a threat to U.S. security or a door to true multilateralism?
Can India and Pakistan bury the hatchet in a territorial dispute over the worlds highest battle zone?
Zia Mian explains how U.S. arms policy in South Asia sells death and destruction and buys little influence.
If passed in its current form, the U.S.-India agreement will act as a catalyst for pumping nuclear fuel and technology into a region perceived by some U.S. leaders as a “nuclear tinder box”.
Are India and Pakistan heading toward war or peace? Noam Chomsky looks at nukes, Kashmir, and diaspora politics.
Villagers are resisting Korean steelmaker POSCO’s project in India and hundreds of them are prepared to die rather than move.
The U.S.-India nuclear deal does nothing to contain the spread of nuclear technology. But, as Tim Beal argues, thats not the containment Washington has in mind.
global warming, climate change, performance standards, emissions, fuel efficiency, China, India, environment, cap and trade, carbon dioxide, 60-Second Expert