No Strings Attached?

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India made non-alignment the cornerstone of its foreign policy and opted for a self-reliant model of development whereby external financing was meant to play a marginal role. This uncompromising political credo, which resisted foreign interference, however, had to face harsh economic realities leading to a growing recourse to foreign aid, as well as to military assistance when threats to security began to escalate in the region. This book discusses the repercussions on India’s policies that the dependence on foreign aid might have had at the behest of a donor state. It also focuses on the factors that have motivated the United States and the Soviet Union in their aid policy to a country whose geo-strategic importance and whose human and natural resources constituted an important component of the cold War. It also considers the reactions that these motivations gave rise to in India. This study relies extensively upon primary sources, offering a first hand insight into the decision-making process, with archival material drawn from American, British and French diplomatic records.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR Gilles Boquerat

Gilles Boquerat holds a Ph.D. in History from the University of Sorbonne. He is currently Head of Department of International Relations at the Centre de Sciences Humaines, New Delhi. He is also a member of the Centre d’Etudes de I’Inde et de I’Asie du Sud (Centre for Indian and South Asian Studies), Paris. Dr. Boquerat has published a number of articles on India’s foreign policy in international journals as well as edited volumes. He is the co-editor of India in the Mirror of Foreign Diplomatic Archives (Manohar, 2003).

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Bibliographic information

Title
No Strings Attached?
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
8173045135
Length
431p., Tables; Notes; Appendices; Abbreviations; Bibliography; Index; 23cm.
Subjects