News

India and China’s historic border dispute is central to understanding India’s preferences on the Russia-Ukraine war, Manjari Chatterjee Miller and Zoe Jordan write.
The nuclear-armed neighbours reached a pact in October after a four-year military stand-off. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, and Russian President Vladimir Putin enter a hall for talks in the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, June 5, 2019. With Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi walking a ...
This is the first time that India has in an official statement flagged the need for a permanent solution to resolve 'the ...
In 2014, six weeks after Russia invaded the Crimea, Google Maps took a major step, one that the United States, United Nations, and international community still refuse to take: it recognized the ...
India's Chief of Defence Staff, General Anil Chauhan, has called China "the most formidable challenge" for the "foreseeable future." ...
India has told its citizens to evacuate from areas close to the Ukrainian border, as armed confrontations continue to rage ...
As India-Pakistan relations deteriorated into war, Pakistan wanted China, India’s immediate northern adversary and Pakistan’s “all-weather friend”, to open a second front against India. However, the ...