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020 _a8172731736
040 _cAL
041 _aeng
082 _223
_a327
_bEGRW
100 _aEGRETEAU (Renaud)
_910757
245 _aWooing the Generals: India's New Burma Policy
260 _aDelhi
_bAuthors Press
_c2003
300 _ax,234 p.
_bHB
_c22x14 cm.
365 _b550.00
_c
_d550.00
520 _aBook Description Condition: As New. Contents: Introduction. I. Historic and geostrategic background: 1. Indo-Burmese relations in history. 2. Geostrategic importance of the region. II. Stakes involved: geopolitical framework of relations between India and Burma/Myanmar: 3. Instability of North-East India: the Burmese connections. 4. The Chinese presence in Myanmar. 5. India's entry into Asia - the Burmese frontier first. III. India's response: tools of Indian diplomacy: 6. India's Burmese policy. 7. Economy as the tool of choice. 8. India's strategy in the Indian Ocean - counter-balancing the Chinese. IV. Problems and prospects: betwixt fantasy and reality: 9. Facts and reality: Indian fantasies and Chinese realpolitik. 10. Burmese military: master of its diplomacy? Appendices. Bibliography. Index.Relations between India and Burma (now Myanmar) date back to the 3 century BC and Burma happened to be the largest province of British India. After a close partnership resulting from Nehru and U Nu's friendship, the advent of a military rule in Burma in 1962 isolated the country by throwing a bamboo curtain on it. India has thus long ignored its eastern neighbour, choosing not to deal with another military regime. With the dramatic up-rising of 1988 and the renewal of the Burmese Junta, the idealist policy India defined towards Myanmar was not altered.But with the launch of its Look East Policy, along with the geopolitical upheaval in Asia's regional order in the 1990s, India's Burma policy showed a radical U-turn. After years of political rejection and isolation of the Burmese Junta, India clearly opted for a realist policy and began to court the Burmese Generals. Since many crucial stakes are involved in the region (including the Chinese thrust in South-East Asia) India could not afford to alienate itself from the Burmese regime. Thus, New Delhi opted for a realist approach and decided to engage the Burmese Military in its own interest. 234 pp. Seller Inventory # 50289
650 _aInternational Relation
_910758
650 _aIndia And Burma
_910759
650 _aIndian Diplomacy
_910760
650 _aPolitics and Government
_910761
700 _aEGRETEAU (Renaud)
_910757
942 _2ddc
_cGF
999 _c220720
_d220720