If you think "India needs to redo their constitution" then please quote the exact passages of that Indian constitution which you have read and would like to be changed, otherwise, you expose your dogmatic and incomplete understanding of this topic.
I, too, think that India should release Kashmir(so long as Pakistan and China also release it and the U.S. keeps out of it militarily, anything less would be supporting the perpetuation of "terrorism" by inviting it there where, before, things were mainly a sporadic "war").
But if you kept even more up-to-date, davy, you'd see that it would be smarter to talk, in relation to the Indian constitution, about how India should release the state of Manipur(i'll give you some time to go ahead and look that one up).
With all this said, I can confidently tell you the U.S. is being and will be continually phased out of India(only militarily, don't worry too much) more and more as a result of India's growing relations with China.
This was written by a retired brigadier of the Indian army regarding proposals in the Indian government to renew commercial/political relations with china:
"There would seem to be many advantages in working out a rapprochement with China. Firstly, we would have eliminated the Chinese threat from the North and the East. Secondly, as a logical corollary, it would qualitatively reduce the threat from Pakistan, whose utility as a counterweight to India would diminish since there would be no bone of contention left between India and China. Pakistan would perhaps keep getting its armament and equipment from China but this would progressively become a commercial matter. Pakistan may also feel persuaded to pursue a less strident line in regard to Kashmir and terrorism across the border into India. Third, with the gradual scaling down of hostilities between India and Pakistan, there may be a cooling down of Islamic belligerence within India. Shorn of support from Pakistan, the ordinary people, who have nothing to gain by hostility against one another, will start seeing opportunities in business and trade.
China, too, has much to gain from such a rapprochement. Firstly, it will find a huge market for its goods in India. Secondly, it will gain from India’s expertise in software development, which it has been avidly seeking. Thirdly, it would wean India away from the US to support its quest for oil and gas in the South China Sea. This would help China emerge as an equal of the US in the next 25 years." -Brig SS Chandel (Retd)
hey, dave, i'll speak to you with respect for a moment here: do me a favor and do your research on this one before you continue to get into it because it would be real easy for anyone of any kind of knowledge to slaughter you on this topic if you don't know what's really going on over there. consider that you are very far removed living here in the U.S. to know anything about that area especially since India and China, in particular, have managed to boot the u.s. out of that area at their will for quite some time now, so you will need to do double the research. that's my two cents, i will leave it be from there.
|