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India and China – David M Malone at ANU, 20 April 2010

India and China – David M Malone

at ANU, 20 April 2010

 

India and China: Can two tigers share a mountain? Lecture at The Australian National University by David M Malone, 20 April 2010. To outsiders, India and Chi…

India and China: Can two tigers impart a mountain? Address at The Australian National University by David M Malone, 20 April 2010.

To outcasts, India and China demonstrate to some striking similitudes. Both are old civic establishments resurrected as advanced republics in the mid twentieth century, and are currently climbing forces. Both have atomic weapons, expanding economies, extending military plan and extensive stores of labor, and appear to be vying for impact in the Indian Ocean, the Persian Gulf, Africa, Central Asia and East Asia. Yet little consideration is paid to the connections between them. (From India and China: Conflict and Cooperation by David M Malone and Rohan Mukherjee, Survival, 2010)

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David M Malone is the President of the Canadian International Development Research Center. Mr. Malone served as Canadas High Commissioner to India and non-inhabitant Ambassador to Bhutan and Nepal. Different positions he has held include: Assistant Deputy Minister (Global Issues) in Canadas Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade; President, International Peace Academy, New York; and as a Canadian Ambassador to the United Nations in New York.

India and China – David M Malone at ANU, 20 April 2010

9 thoughts on “India and China – David M Malone at ANU, 20 April 2010”

  1. Welcome to the 21st century my friend, cause you still seem to be living
    with old 20th century views. That is pretty much what Winston Churchill
    said about India 60 yrs ago – "India is no more a country than the equator"
    and predicted that it will break apart. But 60 years later he stands proven
    utterly wrong. Because we all identify ourselves as indians first and then
    as whatever else. That is our biggest strength – unity in diversity. Don’t
    be jealous. U r doing far better in economics though.

  2. @stephentsang2000 India’s a country where a Christian woman stepped aside
    for a Sikh to become Prime Minister , who was administered his oath by a
    Muslim President for a Country of more than 80 % Hindus. Unity in Diversity
    is India’s greatest strength, not its weakness. here’s something for you :
    Hindu I sm Jai N ism Bud D hism Sikh I sm Isl A m Christia N ity See !?

  3. India is composed of separate people with separate languages, and the word
    Indian is simply a political and geographical denotation of these separate
    people living in the Indian peninsula. It is absolutely wrong to equate
    India’s potential rise with China’s absolute rise, cuz 92% of the
    population in China are homogenously Han Chinese.

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