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How will the security challenges in South Asia shape security cooperation between the United States and India?
Joshua Muravchik reviews After Bush: The Case for Continuity in American Foreign Policy by Timothy J. Lynch and Robert S. Singh.
This event has been postponed. A future date will be announced shortly.
When Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh met with President Bush in July 2005, the two leaders set forth a bold vision to “transform the relationship between their countries and establish a global partnership.” Much attention, however, has narrowly focused...
Two recent books on American foreign affairs suggest that a dramatic shift in U.S. national security policy come January 2009 is both imprudent and unlikely.
By helping India become a major world power, the administration is showing the global seriousness of the Bush Doctrine.
It is important for the U.S. to help India become a truly global power, show how it can play a leading role in the world, and cure its South Asian myopia.
We might be another long, hard slog with India.
The number of food-borne illness outbreaks has not been increasing. Food-safety agencies have been getting worse at identifying the causes of outbreaks.



