US is clear Arunachal is part of India. Why doesn't it take a stand on Aksai Chin?

The Indian Express | 1 week ago | 18-03-2023 | 12:45 pm

US is clear Arunachal is part of India. Why doesn't it take a stand on Aksai Chin?

Oregon’s Democrat Senator Jeff Merkley introduced a resolution in the US Senate on February 16 reaffirming the state of Arunachal Pradesh as Indian territory and condemning China’s provocations in South Asia. Tennessee’s Republican Senator Bill Hagerty and Texas’ Republican Senator John Cornyn co-sponsored the resolution. The resolution has been referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.Senator Hagerty’s term as US Ambassador to Japan (2017-2019) overlapped with mine (2015-2018). I recall candid one-on-one discussions with him about China’s rise and the emerging challenges in the Indo-Pacific. Senator Hagerty has vast experience of Asia and knows his facts.This is not the first time a resolution regarding Chinese aggression has been moved in the US Senate. Senator Cornyn had introduced a resolution, co-sponsored by his Democrat colleagues, in the Senate on August 13, 2020, condemning China’s use of military aggression to change the status quo at the Line of Actual Control between India and China.The three Senators have done the right thing by introducing a resolution rejecting China’s specious claims to Arunachal Pradesh and reaffirming India’s position.The US position on Arunachal Pradesh has been helpful since 1962. At that time, Deputy Special Assistant for National Security Affairs Carl Keysen proposed that the then Ambassador to India John Kenneth Galbraith make a public statement that “we recognise the McMahon line as the traditional border between India and China (this is the Northeast border)” in his Memorandum to President John F Kennedy on October 26, 1962. The Memorandum was meant to be a background note to the President before his meeting with Ambassador B K Nehru. Galbraith was authorised vide telegram 1663 on the same day, to announce that “the United States recognised the McMahon Line as the traditional and generally accepted international border and fully supported India’s position in that regard.” This was days after China launched a massive attack on India on October 20, 1962, with simultaneous aggression in Ladakh as well as along the McMahon Line.The historical significance of Galbraith’s announcement lay in the fact that it reversed the earlier US policy, as expressed in the acting US Secretary of State Christian A Herter’s public statement of November 12, 1959, that “the US had not taken ‘any side on the border dispute’ and as far as the legalities of rival border claims were concerned the US had ‘no views’.”In his well-researched book India China Boundary Issues: Quest For Settlement, the late Indian diplomat R S Kalha states that “when the Chinese ambassador, Wang Bingnan, remonstrated with the US interlocutor, Ambassador John Cabot, at their meeting at Warsaw on 13 December, 1962, about the change in the position of the US on the McMahon Line, Cabot had said that in the US view it was clear that China, by military action had taken territory that had long been in Indian hands. Cabot also conveyed that while the US had no particular view on the merits of the border dispute, yet its policy was that ‘any settlement’ must be one ‘which India could accept with honour’. The US felt this Chinese ‘blunder’ had opened for them an unprecedented opportunity to win over India to its side.”The latest Resolution reaffirms is noteworthy in that it also covers recent military provocations and aggressions by the PLA that have upended India-China relations. It mentions the Chinese villages (the so-called “Xiaokang” or “well-off” villages) constructed along the border areas of Arunachal Pradesh.It also underlines China’s questionable narrative on the visits by “the Dalai Lama and other leaders [to Arunachal Pradesh] and has refused to grant residents of the Indian state visas for travel to China.” It accuses China of impeding poverty alleviation and economic development in Arunachal Pradesh as its behaviour compels “many international donors to be cautious of providing assistance due to the state’s perceived status as disputed territory.” In any case, a reading of Tibet And Its History by H E Richardson suggests that Qing presence in Tibet began to emerge around 1720, following intervention in the internecine succession struggle after the death of the Sixth Dalai Lama (1683-1706). There is no basis, therefore, to the Chinese claim over Tawang on the flimsy grounds that it is the birthplace of the Sixth Dalai Lama, since China, in any case, had no locus standi in Tibet at the time.Official US maps depict Arunachal Pradesh as an integral part of India. At the same time, Washington’s position on the India-China boundary issue is far from perfect. The US Department of State’s international travel advisory maps clearly show Aksai Chin and some other parts of the western sector as disputed. China is in illegal occupation of 38,000 sq km of Indian territory in Ladakh and has usurped a further 5,180 sq km of Indian territory in Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (POK) through the so-called “Agreement on the Boundary Between China’s Sinkiang and the Contiguous Areas” concluded in Beijing on March 2, 1963.The fact that the US has an ambiguous stand even today on the boundary dispute in Ladakh limits the possibility of a ground-level tandem between India and the US in the western sector, unlike the wider possibilities for naval cooperation in the Indo-Pacific.As things stand, the US position of neutrality on the India-China boundary dispute over Aksai Chin contradicts its supportive position on the McMahon Line in Arunachal Pradesh, even though the fiction of “historical” Chinese claims to these territories and the proclivity of the PLA to engage in unilateral military provocations are common to both sectors. It is time for the US to reject China’s fictitious claims and the illegal possession of Aksai Chin as well.The writer, a former Ambassador to Japan, is currently the Director General of Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses and Think-20 Chair for India’s G20 Presidency. Views are personal

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Surya to be stand-in MI captain if Rohit sits out a few games to manage workload
The Indian Express | 12 hours ago | 29-03-2023 | 12:45 pm
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Surya to be stand-in MI captain if Rohit sits out a few games to manage workload
Nani on promoting Dasara across India and why he won’t follow this template for other films: ‘It depends on the content’
The Indian Express | 1 day ago | 28-03-2023 | 12:45 pm
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1 day ago | 28-03-2023 | 12:45 pm

The success of  Telugu films like RRR and Pushpa: The Rise has encouraged filmmakers to take their movie to different parts of India for better reach.  Telugu star Nani is also gearing for the release of his upcoming film Dasara on March 30 and has launched a country-wide campaign to spread the word about this film. Not just big markets like Mumbai and Delhi but Nani has promoted Dasara in cities like Jaipur, Nagpur and Lucknow. However, the actor says not all his upcoming films will follow the same template of promotions.Nani plays the role of Dharani, a coal mine worker who is full of rage and attitude. However, things take a turn for the worse when he crosses paths with dangerous people. Although the Telugu film is dubbed in other languages, Nani strongly feels that this film will be loved by audience across the country.The actor, who is in Delhi to promote the film, tells indianexpress.com, “It depends on the content. I will not promote everything here. If I feel this is the content which – irrespective of place, language, emotion – people will connect to, I will bring it to everyone. If it is a native Telugu film then I will not bring it to North India. If those films work, then it will definitely give me a boost. I genuinely fel that the Hindi audience will love Dasara as much as the Telugu audience and that is why we are bringing it here.”However, the actor is thrilled that he finally got a chance to explore different parts of the country, which he could never do earlier. The actor says, “I got to explore so much. All those names, Nagpur, Jaipur, Lucknow… I have heard all my life because these are cities in our own country but somehow, I never thought that I would travel in all these places but now I did.However, because I am here for promotions, I am running from one place to another place and I am really not getting time to sit back and chill. So, may be after the release I will visit these places again.”Dasara is written and directed by debutant Srikanth Odela and also stars Keerthy Suresh in the lead. In Dasara, Nani, who is otherwise seen in a clean-shaven, city-boy look in his earlier films like Tuck Jagadish, Shyam Singha Roy and Ante Sundaraniki,  will be seen in a messy, long-hair and beard avatar. The actor says that his look is never detrimental in him being part of a film.“I didn’t choose anything. See, scripts come to you and whatever excites you, you jump into it. Even those films I didn’t choose because of the look, I liked the story, I did them. This because I liked the story and whatever you need to do for the story, you do,” says the actor, who will be seen in Dasara on March 30.

Nani on promoting Dasara across India and why he won’t follow this template for other films: ‘It depends on the content’
Mumbai monorail, once an infrastructure white elephant, turns the corner
The Indian Express | 2 days ago | 27-03-2023 | 12:45 pm
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Mumbai’s monorail service, which had turned into an infrastructure white elephant that was rapidly losing ridership, is slowly making a turnaround, registering its highest passenger usage in the last six years. In the financial year 2022-23, a total of 36.36 lakh commuters have used the service so far, which is the highest in the last six years.While the number is no way close to the 61.66 lakh passenger count that was registered in 2015-16, the total number of commuters using the service is gradually picking up. The uptick in passenger count is attributed to the improved efficiency and increased rakes that have now been deployed on the route.The monorail was envisaged as a lightweight transport system. Planners believed that its manoeuvrability and nimbleness to navigate tight turns and narrow corridors would make it ideal for urban congested corridors of Mumbai.The plan to construct a monorail line across the city was first mooted in 2005 with the appointment of a committee of bureaucrats and experts to identify routes.The idea was to create an alternative transport system which would weave through some of the most dense and congested parts of Mumbai leading to the construction of the19-km-long monorail that runs from Chembur-Wadala to Sant Gadge Maharaj Chowk in Mumbai Central.While the first phase of the monorail commenced in 2014, the transportation service received a severe setback with the downturn in the economic fortunes of the Malaysian-based Scomi group, which constructed the monorail. A global downturn in the company’s fortunes coupled with its conflict with the MMRDA on financial matters, including cost escalations, saw a severe deterioration in monorail services which were frequently disrupted due to power outages and technical glitches.In November 2017, two coaches of the monorail were completely gutted and the service remained shut for a period of 10 months. Services subsequently resumed in September 2018. However, by that time commuters seemed to have lost patience for the service with many complaining that they usually had to wait for over 30 to 40 minutes for the next monorail service to arrive.The decision by the MMRDA to take over day-to-day operations, however, led to an improvement in service. Starting 2019 when the MMRDA took over the monorail, the service was running with three operational rakes. 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Mumbai monorail, once an infrastructure white elephant, turns the corner
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The Indian Express | 4 days ago | 25-03-2023 | 12:45 pm
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4 days ago | 25-03-2023 | 12:45 pm

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to inaugurate a 13.71 km stretch of the Bengaluru Metro Phase II project in poll-bound Karnataka on Saturday.Inaugurating the stretch from the Whitefield (Kadugodi) Metro to Krishnarajapura (KR Puram) Metro Line of the Reach-1 extension project will be inaugurated at Whitefield (Kadugodi) Metro Station around 1 pm, Modi will also undertake a ride in the train.Modi, who is scheduled to arrive in Bengaluru Saturday morning, will first travel to Chikkaballapura for the inauguration of the Sri Madhusudan Sai Institute of Medical Sciences and Research (SMSIMSR) at 10.45 am. The SMSIMSR, which will start functioning this year, will provide medical education and quality medical care free of cost.Built at a cost of around Rs 4,250 crores. the KR Puram-Whitefield line is aimed at reducing the travel time to 24 minutes, which otherwise would take over an hour by road. The stretch, which includes 12 stations, will also have direct walkway access to the ITPL campus at Pattandur Agrahara Metro station and is likely to benefit 3 lakh passengers.It is the part of the much-awaited 15.81 km stretch of the Bengaluru Metro from Baiyappanahalli to Whitefield on the Purple Line. Around 2.1 km stretch on this line is yet to be completed. The stretch has two reaches – R1A, an 8.67 km stretch from Baiyappanahalli to Seetharama Palya (on the K R Puram stretch), and R1B, a 7.14 km stretch from Seetharama Palya to Whitefield.Benniganahalli, K R Puram, Mahadevapura, Garudacharpalya, Hoodi Junction, Seetharama Palya, Kundalahalli, Nallurhalli, Sri Sathya Sai Hospital, Pattandur Agrahara (ITPL), Kadugodi, and Channasandra are the twelve stops on the stretch. While the KR Puram-Whitefield stretch is set to open this weekend, the Baiyappanahalli-KR Puram link is likely to open by June.Meanwhile, the Karnataka Congress has raised questions over the ruling BJP government’s move to get PM Modi to inaugurate the metro line despite unfinished work between Baiyapanahalli and K R Puram.Speaking a Bengaluru on March 21, Congress national general secretary Randeep Surjewala said, “Why is PM Modi inaugurating the Purple Metro Line without the construction of the mandatory metro link between Baiyappanahalli Metro Station and KR Puram Metro Station? Is it not correct that this missing Metro Link, which crosses over an electrified railway line, will take at least 6 months more to be completed”.The party’s move is seen as an effort taken by the BJP to showcase its infrastructure push ahead of the state polls scheduled in May.

PM Modi to inaugurate 13.71-km Metro line in Bengaluru
Martina Navratilova: Superwoman beats cancer again, adds another glorious epithet to her remarkable life
The Indian Express | 4 days ago | 25-03-2023 | 12:45 pm
The Indian Express
4 days ago | 25-03-2023 | 12:45 pm

In January this year, Martina Navratilova’s oncologist delivered her the bad news. It was far worse than she had imagined. Scans of an enlarged lymph node in her neck had revealed that she had throat and breast cancer. Having battled, and defeated, the disease 13 years back, she knew what was in store for her. Back then she was diagnosed cancer-free after rounds of radiation, this time the treatment would involve chemo and proton therapy.“It’s going to stink for a while but I’ll fight with all I have got,” she would say. This was her reflex action to every crisis.All through her tumultuously eventful life, the 66-year-old iconic tennis champion, cultural pioneer and supporter of diverse causes, has fought with all she’s got.She wasn’t even 10, when her parents decided to part ways and later her father committed suicide. In her teens she threw rocks at the Russian tanks rolling in Prague and eventually defected to the US when the Communists restricted her travel. At the peak of her career, the media would ‘out’ her, judge her for being gay and boo her even as her partners sat in stands.No childhood trauma, adolescent angst or even adult life diabolical tirade could impact her feisty serve-and-volley game. Many times she would sweep every title on offer – singles, doubles and mixed. This never-seen-before skill superiority would see her take home 59 Grand Slams trophies, the last one coming her way when she was 50. Double whammyCancer, though, is not a racket sport. It’s a different beast. Compared to last time, the ‘double whammy’, as she called her dual cancer, was tougher to deal with. According to Sunday Times, if not for the proton therapy, the doctors would have had to remove part of her tongue through robotic surgery. Nonetheless, a 7-8 mm tumour in the right breast had to be knifed out. According to Navratilova, she lost 7 kgs, sense of taste, felt drained and on days couldn’t open her mouth full to let out a yawn. The ordeal ended last week. The unbreakable superstar would ring the ceremonial bell at Manhattan’s Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, the farewell ritual that patients dream of.Sporting icon Martina Navratilova says experience as a tennis champion helped her battle and overcome a double cancer diagnosis."You definitely have that mentality that I'm not quitting until the match point is finished."@piersmorgan | @Martina | #PMU | @TalkTV pic.twitter.com/vTSQUBEYI7— Piers Morgan Uncensored (@PiersUncensored) March 21, 2023In her interview to Piers Morgan, interrupted by sudden silence and stifled sniffs, Martina announced she was cancer-free. What was it that made her survive the storm? “You get into tennis mode . . . that’s where having been a champion athlete comes in pretty handy,” she would answer.Legendary tennis player Martina Navratilova reveals to Piers Morgan that she is cancer free, but "definitely will not be missing any check-ups.""As far as they know, I'm cancer free."@piersmorgan | @Martina | @TalkTV | #PMU pic.twitter.com/soogKlKE6l— Piers Morgan Uncensored (@PiersUncensored) March 21, 2023The making of Super Woman began in the mountains of Karkonosze, in erstwhile Czechoslovakia where Martina’s parents ran a lodge. In BBC Radio’s Desert Island Discs podcast, she recounts days of skiing, running endlessly and swimming in the river. She reveals she was always a tomboy, preferred short hair and hated wearing skirts when not playing tennis. “In a skirt you can’t run fast, catch a train or tram or ride a bicycle,” she would say. A delightful anecdote from her school days answers the often-asked question: How could Martina be physically so superior to her rivals? What was the secret of her raised veins and toned muscles? When in Grade III, the teacher wanted to explain to the children how the biceps worked. She would look around the class and ask little Martina to step forward. She would proudly flaunt the tiny bulge on her arm. “I had more defined muscles than even the boys, so go figure it out,” she would quip.Tennis legend Martina Navratilova reveals that she smuggled her dog into hospital during cancer treatments."Lulu was with me through every treatment… I didn't want to ask in case they said no."@piersmorgan | @Martina | #PMU | @TalkTV pic.twitter.com/PwG4PxwgQp— Piers Morgan Uncensored (@PiersUncensored) March 21, 2023This was the time Martina’s parents parted ways and her father would drop by once or twice a year. After a point, those annual visits became infrequent and Martina’s questions to her mother increased. The loving mom would give vague answers, till the time it was no longer possible to deflect the unrelenting queries. Finally, Martina was told her father had died.It would be tennis that would change the lives of a widowed mother and her sporty girl. Martina met a coach at the club who was fond of her. In the spring, he fixed the clay courts. Martina waited for the coach to push the empty wheel-barrow to the pile of clay and fill it again. This was when the ever-smiling ultra-active girl got a wheel-barrow ride. As time passed, the coach inquired about her mother and soon the three became a family.Martina forged a bond with her stepfather, who had predicted that the teenager would win Wimbledon. When he was planning to leave her homeland for good and defect to US, she confided in him. The mother was too soft, she couldn’t have taken her decision to defect well. When she turned 21, Martina, persona non-grata in the country of her birth and not yet a US citizen, was in the Wimbledon final. The coach-turned-stepfather wanted to be by the court-side. It was not to be.The 59 Grand Slam titles winner Martina Navratilova tells Piers Morgan that she lost 15 pounds in weight during her cancer treatment."The radiation, the proton therapy, affects your throat and mouth… it started closing, I couldn't even yawn."@piersmorgan | @Martina | #PMU pic.twitter.com/03yYEmT4C7— Piers Morgan Uncensored (@PiersUncensored) March 21, 2023Deepest woundThe Czech government didn’t allow Martina’s parents to travel to England, fearing they would not return and join her in the US. With Martina blacklisted, Czechoslovakia blocked the Wimbledon final television coverage. The parents had to travel to the German border to catch the telecast of her winning the first Grand Slam, a collective dream. On her big day, Martina was stateless and all alone. Her royal box didn’t have the faces she wanted to see. She was happy to win but still hurt. The wound was deep, time’s overrated healing powers had failed.Three decades later, Martina would watch Petra Kvitova win the Wimbledon. On spotting the Czech star’s family in the Royal box, those disturbing memories from the past came flooding.On the podcast, Martina recalls speaking to her parents on the phone, a couple of hours after the win. “It’s about being with the family, to be with those who you love … that’s what I will never forgive the communists for they destroyed so many lives,” she would say.Married to former Miss USSR, a mother of two, Martina has rebuilt her life. She has settled in her adopted country but not co-opted. “When I see something that I don’t like, I’m going to speak out because you can do that here,” she once said.Vibrant on social media, she has taken on several POTUS and shredded their policies. She has commented on Indian politics and slanged matches on social media. She raised questions when Magic Johnson said he got AIDS through sex with women. Why do gay people with AIDS not get similar sympathy? What would the world say if it was a woman in a similar situation? “They’d call her a whore and a slut, and the corporations would drop her like a lead balloon,” she predicted.Martina was once asked why the present generation of tennis players got frequently injured. She would end her detailed answer with a laugh, “Maybe, they don’t make them like they used to”. They certainly don’t, like the Little Martina with the bicep bulge who grew up to be a survivor who fights with all she has got.

Martina Navratilova: Superwoman beats cancer again, adds another glorious epithet to her remarkable life