August 15, 2015
The India-U.S. nuclear deal signed 10 years ago is an exemplar of India’s recognition of strategic patience and the importance of building partnerships and has brought in handsome returns
As India celebrates yet another Independence Day, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi embarks on another foreign visit — this time to the United Arab Emirates, intending to sign a clutch of agreements, including one on counter-terrorism cooperation — it might be worthwhile to ponder over how far India has progressed on the world stage. Members of the younger generation would be unfamiliar, for instance, of the kind of trials and privations that India confronted during the last quarter of the twentieth century. This was the period following the 1974 peaceful nuclear explosion and the 1998 nuclear tests, when India was ostracised by many countries and faced a host of sanctions. From this dark period, India could emerge into a new dawn thanks to the efforts of Indian policy-makers during the Atal Bihari Vajpayee-Manmohan Singh years. India has since been transformed into a major global power, and a candidate for permanent membership in the U.N. Security Council (UNSC). M.K. Narayanan
The Iran-India contrast

