Like Russia, India is likely to resist the evolution of the international system towards a rigid U.S.-China bipolarity since such an evolution would inevitably deprive New Delhi of the freedom of manoeuvring that it enjoys now
Recently there have been many speculations ...
... pass through the Strait of Hormuz daily, not to mention liquefied natural gas from Qatar, the world’s second-largest (after Russia) exporter of natural gas. Multiple predictions were made concerning the possible consequences that blocking the Strait ... ... problem has in it the seeds of its own solution.
Let us rewind history 15 years and move southwest of the Strait of Hormuz to the Indian Ocean around the Horn of Africa. It is here, in the Gulf of Aden, that Somalian pirates regularly captured dozens of foreign ...
Interview with Dattesh Parulekar, Assistant Professor, Centre for Latin American & International Studies, Goa University
How do Indian experts see the role of BRICS in world politics and what do they think about current relations between Russia and India?
Dattesh Parulekar
, Assistant Professor, Centre for Latin American & International Studies, Goa University and Vice President, Forum for Integrated National Security (FINS), shares his thoughts on these issues.
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... and reflect on the prospects of astronautics not just from the Russian perspective but in terms of humanity in general. The April ... ... achievements catalyzed the space programs of other countries, from India and Brazil to New Zealand and Iran.
Washington reacted nervously ... ... U.S. research, namely the creation of space stations and/or reusable manned spacecraft.
The so-called second space race was a ... ... exploration, it is apparent that the impact of space equipment on international security is rather complex.
On the one hand, spacecraft ...