Sunday, August 12th., 2018
"...The
terrorism and civil wars engulfing Central Asia, the Middle East and
North Africa seriously affect India's strategic interests in these
regions, international affairs observers Amrita Dhillon and Amit Sinha
told Sputnik, explaining how the armed struggles in Syria, Libya, and
Afghanistan had hurt India and why New Delhi is supporting Damascus...."
This miasma-tic concoction of the US, UN, NATO, Military-Industrialist Complex, i.e. Global Deep State , heinous Handlers of Humanity and their handlers' Handlers, have reached the climax of their ill-doings!
India admits being hurt by their abominable, unstoppable, belligerent conniving, finally finding the courage to recognise her historic existence throughout ages and stand up to her Human Values Inheritance . (Hopefully free from the Rothschilds too... )
And is there anyone by now in True-US, Greece , Italy, Spain, France, Portugal, Germany, Belgium, Ukraine, etc., that feels unhurt and non attacked? Un-infected, un-infested, unpolluted? Psychologically, economically, socially, culturally?
(Of course there are but very-very few exemptions:Tsipras, Macron, Merkel, Obama, H.R.Clinton, etc., but who really pays any attention to them any more! In the aethereal realm, they already are transmuted to heavy, black, nuclear dust, un-obstructively travelling towards the Central Galactic Sun…)
Good Riddance indeed!
Time to start celebrating our Free, Harmonious Tomorrow, TODAY!
Maria L. Pelekanaki
Analysts on How US Invasion of Afghanistan, Libya and Syria Misfired on India
The
terrorism and civil wars engulfing Central Asia, the Middle East and
North Africa seriously affect India's strategic interests in these
regions, international affairs observers Amrita Dhillon and Amit Sinha
told Sputnik, explaining how the armed struggles in Syria, Libya, and
Afghanistan had hurt India and why New Delhi is supporting Damascus.
The
recent talks between US diplomats and the Taliban* "completely go
against Washington's policy of not negotiating with the terrorists,"
opined Amit Sinha, an expert on the Middle East crisis and former
consultant to the UN Migration Agency.
"Talking to the representative of Taliban will
be another disaster in regard to their Afghanistan policy," Sinha told
Sputnik. "India stands with the legitimate Kabul government and is
concerned about Islamabad's interference in Kabul's internal policies.
The Taliban is Pakistan's only ally among Afghanistan's political
actors."
On July 25, The Wall Street Journal broke that Alice Wells, deputy
assistant secretary for South and Central Asia at the US State
Department,
had met with the representatives of the Afghan Taliban in Qatar.
©
AP Photo / Allauddin Khan
The Afghan Taliban has not been included in Washington's
list of Foreign
Terrorist Organizations so far, although the US State Department
designated its offspring, Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP), as a
terrorist organization in 2010. Earlier, a 2002 executive order had
labeled the Taliban as a "Specially Designated Global Terrorist Entity."
The Indian expert noted that
Pakistan continues to provide safe havens for the Taliban and its Haqqani branch in Pakistan.
"Islamabad has granted direct intelligence and military aid to both
groups, resulting in the deaths of US and Afghan soldiers, and
above all, the civilians, destabilizing entire Afghanistan," the former
UN consultant pointed out. "The US needs to challenge Islamabad if they
want to eradicate Pakistan-sponsored terror outfits and bring an end
to the longstanding war in the region."
©
AP Photo / Allauddin Khan
Members
of a breakaway faction of the Taliban fighters guard during a patrol in
Shindand district of Herat province, Afghanistan (File)
New Delhi casts a wary eye on Washington's diplomatic maneuvers
in Afghanistan and with good reason: Over the last 17 years the US and
its NATO allies created nothing less than a "belt of instability"
stretching from Central Asia — India's immediate neighborhood — to the
Middle East and North Africa, the so-called MENA region.
According to Sinha, New Delhi attaches great importance to the MENA
region; however, the destabilization of the Middle East and North Africa
had also affected India.
"First, New Delhi's national interest lies
in its citizen's interests," the expert explained. "The huge Indian
diaspora makes the Middle East and North African region an additional
state of India… The Middle East and North Africa is a region where the
Indian diasporas were flourishing. Overseas Indians were (conducting)
trade, but the turmoil in Libya and Syria took away many jobs."
©
REUTERS / Hani Amara
Fighters
of Libyan forces allied with the U.N.-backed government take position
near the front line of fighting with Islamic State militants in Ghiza
Bahriya district in Sirte, Libya November 22, 2016.
©
Sputnik / Alexei Druzhinin
He pointed out that Tripoli and New Delhi had long maintained political and economic ties.
"If we look at the figures then even during the global recession, two
economies (India and Libya) witnessed a five-fold increase in trade,
from $221 million in 2006-07 to $ 1.1 billion in 2010-11, but this
crisis pushed it back to $130 million trade FY 2015-16," Sinha
emphasized.
The Indian expert highlighted that the US sanctions imposed on "undesired" governments usually hit ordinary citizens and expats.
"Second, India's national security aspirations
are rising in what it observes as its extended neighborhood including
the Indian Ocean," he stressed. "The Middle East is strategically
interrelated to South Asia and India in particular.
There is another reason for New Delhi to keep an eye on Middle Eastern affairs: energy security.
"Energy is one of the key issues for India
in the Middle East. Taking oil as an example, New Delhi's net oil
imports as a percentage of demand grew from 42 percent in 1990 to an
estimated 71 percent in 2012. It induces New Delhi to increase its own
influence and avoid China having leverage over its energy security
in the region," the former UN consultant underscored. "From the current
government's proactive approach, India's 'Link West' policy has evolved
into 'Think West.'"
At the same time, India continues to wage a sovereign foreign policy,
independent from the foreign strategy of Western powers: "Despite US
sanctions, India preferred not to bow down; instead, it has shown a
brave example and continued its business with Syria," Sinha remarked.
©
AP Photo / Gabriel Chaim
(File) This Thursday, Oct. 19, 2017 frame grab made from drone video shows damaged buildings in Raqqa, Syria
India is Ready to Help Damascus Rebuild Syria
Amrita Dhillon, a foreign policy analyst and founding editor of the
Indian online magazine The Kootneeti, echoes Sinha: She highlighted that
India and Syria are "closely connected and no external force could move
India from its determination
to wage its sovereign policies in the Middle East or anywhere."
"India is against any kind of foreign
intervention in Syria, and fully supports the Syrian motive to rebuild
the country and stands with the Syrian community," she told Sputnik.
"Recently, Indian Prime Minister Modi announced 1,000 scholarships
for Syrian nationals. In the upcoming 60th Damascus Trade Fair, India is
one of the leading members to send a high-level government and business
delegation. India is eager to rebuild Syria."
©
Sputnik / Alexei Malgavko
Dhillon
recalled that on August 1, in an address to Indian media, Syrian
Ambassador to India H.E. Riad Kamel Abbas "lauded the enthusiastic
Indian approach towards the rebuilding of Syria."
"There is a long list of Indian companies from both government and
the private sector which will assist in rebuilding Syria. Some of them
include BHEL, ONGC Videsh," the analyst pointed out.
The Syrian unrest, part of the broader Arab Spring, kicked off in
2011 and escalated into a civil war involving regional and external
players as well as various non-state actors and terrorist organizations.
The US meddled in the Syrian conflict in 2014, receiving no official
approval by the legitimate government of Syria or the UN. In September
2015, Russia stepped in at the request of Damascus and became a
game-changer in the longstanding conflict.
Earlier, in 2011, Libya had fallen prey to internal turmoil, accompanied by a NATO invasion. The country
has ended up as a failed state with two rival governments and terrorists operating on the ground.
The US 2001 invasion of Afghanistan has turned into the longest war
in American history. The Afghan government is still struggling
to establish peace and order in the country, which is being torn
by various terrorist groups including the Taliban*, al-Qaeda*, Daesh
(ISIS/ISIL)* and their affiliates.
*Daesh (ISIS/ISIL/IS/Islamic State), al-Qaeda, Taliban — are terrorist organizations banned in Russia.
The views and opinions expressed by the contributors do not necessarily reflect those of Sputnik.
Amrita Dhillon is a Foreign Policy Analyst and also the Founding
Editor of The Kootneeti, a New Delhi headquartered multilingual
publication on International Relations & Diplomacy.
Amit Sinha is an expert on the Middle East crisis. He is also a former Consultant to the UN Migration Agency.