Foreign relations of India Chindia is a neologism that refers to China and India together in general, and their economies in particular. ...more on Wikipedia about "Chindia"
1. The use of nuclear weapons in particular as well as other weapons of mass destruction constitutes the gravest threat to humanity and to peace and stability in the international system. Unlike the other two categories of weapons of mass destruction, biological and chemical weapons which have been outlawed by international treaties, nuclear weapons remain instruments for national and collective security, the possession of which on a selective basis has been sought to be legitimised through permanent extension of the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT) in May 1995. Nuclear weapon states have asserted that they will continue to rely on nuclear weapons with some of them adopting policies to use them even in a non-nuclear context. These developments amount to virtual abandonment of nuclear disarmament. This is a serious setback to the struggle of the international community to abolish weapons of mass destruction. ...more on Wikipedia about "Draft Nuclear Doctrine of India"
Main article: Sino-Indian relations ...more on Wikipedia about "Foreign relations of India"
The Indo-Pak Confederation is a proposed political confederation first proposed by by Indian Deputy Prime Minister LK Advani in early 2004. Advani's comments provoked a response by a high ranking Pakistan Diplomat (see 'Indian Deputy Prime Minister's and Pakistan Diplomat's Opinion on Indo-Pak Union' ** ). ...more on Wikipedia about "Indo-Pak Confederation"
The People's Republic of China (PRC) and India are the two largest states, in terms of both population and land area, in East Asia and South Asia, respectively. Both states may be regarded as developing nations; they are the only two states in the world to have populations exceeding a billion people. Their relationship has undergone times of both war and peace. It has been characterized by both competition to be the premier Asian power (sometimes resulting in military conflict) and by cooperation. ...more on Wikipedia about "Sino-Indian relations"
The South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation, or SAARC, proposed by Ziaur Rahman, the then-president of Bangladesh, was established on December 8, 1985. SAARC is an association of eight countries of South Asia: Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and most recently admitted, Afghanistan. These countries comprise an area of 5,127,500 km2 and a fifth of the world's population. ...more on Wikipedia about "South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation"
UNMOGIP or United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan was set up in 1949 to supervise the ceasefire between India and Pakistan in the State of Jammu and Kashmir. ...more on Wikipedia about "UNMOGIP"
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