Saturday, January 16, 2021
AUTHOR INTERVIEW: Sanjay Upadhya Speaks About His New Book ‘Backfire in Nepal: How India Lost the Plot to China’
Thursday, December 24, 2020
Synergism vs. Single-mindedness
The Chinese, for their part, could act purely upon their present and projected national interests.
New Delhi: Vitasta, 2021 (forthcoming), Rs. 495
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Backfire in Nepal: How India Lost the Plot to China
Nepalese Maoists, being communists first, were trained to denounce Indian ‘expansionism’ before American ‘imperialism’. Experience may have impelled the senior leadership to make practical compromises. It was a leap of faith for New Delhi to trust the leadership to rein in their cadres’ radicalism.
More broadly, since India had also enlisted Western democracies, it needed to address their often-contradictory concerns throughout Nepal’s turbulent transition. The Chinese could act purely on their national interests. India continues to misread how Beijing sees Nepal – both in terms of China’s visions of the past and the future. This complicates the core trilateral challenge: ensuring that Nepal is not sucked deeper into the Sino-Indian vortex, only to be scorned for aggravating the Asian giants’ rivalry.
By Sanjay Upadhya
New Delhi: Vitasta, 2021 (forthcoming), Rs. 495