Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. India–Soviet Union relations. India and the Soviet Union had cooperative and friendly relations. [1] During the Cold War (1947–1991), India did not choose sides between the Capitalist Bloc and the Communist Bloc and was a leading country of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM). Relations ended in 1991 with the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

  2. Jul 1, 2010 · Abstract. The relationship between the Soviet Union and India was a hallmark of the Cold War. Over nearly forty years, Soviet-Indian relations passed through three distinct periods, coinciding with the ascendance of three extraordinary pairs of leaders, each extraordinary for different reasons—Jawaharlal Nehru and Nikita Khrushchev, Indira Gandhi and Leonid Brezhnev, and Rajiv Gandhi and ...

    • Vojtech Mastny
    • 2010
  3. Nov 19, 2009 · India's Path Was Paved by Soviet Fall. With all the attention being paid this month to the fall of the Berlin Wall, I’ve found myself thinking of how much India has changed over the last 20 ...

  4. The Soviets also affected their economic philosophy. The Soviets goals were to expand diplomatic ties with India. India did not want much to do with America at the time as they supported Pakistan and those two countries were in a war. This affected India the most in the Kashmir region and was very bloody and violent.

  5. Because this was an article of faith rather than a clear guide for action, India’s foreign policy, as Menon admiringly stated, “rested on the intuition of one man, . . . fortunately,” he believed,” based on knowledge.”7 Such deference to the leader was unusual even by Soviet stan-dards.

  6. The concern for South Asian stability, insistently voiced by the Soviets since the Indo-Pakistani war of 1965 and evident in their dealings through-out the rest of the decade with both India and Pakistan, had begun to take a more concrete form during Kosygin's travels in South Asia in the late spring. olf 1969.

  7. People also ask

  8. May 27, 2020 · The cataclysm of India’s Partition left caustic wounds that would inform and shape the patterns of international relations in the region for decades after formal independence had been achieved. The situational difficulties of India between two Pakistans haunted Indian strategic thinkers; these fears had, after all, been twice actualised by wars in 1947 and 1965 over the contested Kashmir region.