Plight of Hindus in Bangladesh Continues to Deteriorate
July 12, 2019 4 min. read

A recent report in the Times of India claimed that up to 2,447 members of minority communities in Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan were recently granted Indian citizenship.  One of the major reasons why India expedited the process of granting these refugees Indian citizenship is because the plight of minorities in these three countries is horrendous.  […]

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Muslim Refugees and a Muslim (Host) Nation in South Asia
February 7, 2017 4 min. read

Bangladesh—a Muslim majority state—is planning to send refugee Rohingyas from Myanmar to a low-lying island in the Bay of Bengal that critics say is ‘unlivable’.

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‘Eastward Ho’ for India-led South Asia?
December 30, 2016 6 min. read

Trade blocs are often instruments of geopolitics. India’s cooperation with the South Asian nations east of Pakistan plays witness to this age-old truism.

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The Tattered Mirage of a South Asian Union is Dying Fast – Pt. 2
September 29, 2016 7 min. read

The Indian subcontinent is chequered with a history of border disputes and issues regarding transnational ethnic and religious groups.

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Sri Lanka : Nationalism & Indian Free Trade
February 8, 2016 4 min. read

Sri Lanka is expanding its free trade agreement with India. Nationalism is acting against, as usual. But the state regulatory structure is the real issue.

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Repatriation Still a Far Cry in Bhutan, Says Exiled Journalist
September 12, 2013 8 min. read

Evicted from Bhutan at the age of 11, Vidhyapati Mishra spent two decades in U.N.-funded Bhutanese refugee camp in eastern Nepal before resettling in the United States. Just a week before his departure from Nepal to Charlotte of North Carolina, self-learned journalist Mishra also featured in the New York Times with his powerful narrative story […]

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The Problem With “42 Allies”
October 23, 2012 5 min. read

You might think most foreign policy wonks were looking forward to last night’s presidential debate but most I know were actually dreading it. It was well known that the difficult and pressing questions on foreign policy would not be asked, and to be honest, foreign policy requires far more nuance and complexity than can fit […]

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South Asia in 2011: A Concise Account (I)
December 25, 2011 7 min. read

Part 1 – Many Barrels of a Gun South Asia is often described as the most dangerous place on earth and the most promising emerging market – both in the same breath. The year 2011 illustrated in ample measure the implausible irony. The biggest international story of the year, according to The Associated Press’ annual […]

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Divergence: The US-Pakistan Dichotomy & Radical Alternatives (Part II)
May 27, 2011 4 min. read

If we are able to recognize that US foreign policy in respect to instability in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India is irrational due to the absence of a ‘necessary but not sufficient’ condition – bolstering of Pakistan’s strategic advantages over India – then the easy part is done.  Crafting a foreign policy that addresses this contingent […]

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Divergence: The US-Pakistan Dichotomy & Radical Alternatives (Part I)
May 23, 2011 2 min. read

Nicholas Kristof’s recent op-ed in the New York Times highlighted Richard Holbrooke’s concern for the declining relationship between the US and Pakistan and, essentially, pronounced the need for America not to forsake Pakistan, as tumultuous as relations may be. Pakistan, without question, is grappling with a litany of issues: rampant poverty and natural disasters; protection of minorities […]

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America's Next Top (Conflict) Model: Affecting Decision-Making Processes
May 14, 2011 3 min. read

The game theory modeling world can be academically exclusive, full of rivalry, and especially abstract, but I believe it can provide a very real, significant push in moving from war and instability to peace and hope. To put my argument up front, if America wishes to take a real step towards furthering peace, writ large, it […]

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