What's new

Russian nod for India’s bid to link south with central Asia

:lol:

Geography is not at all a difficult subject to learn.

Yet you suck at it? :coffee:

As if pakistan will provide us with best security ;)

Didn't I say "Approval of Pakistan's Powerful Military"?

Pakistan's Northern Areas are safe, but the problem for india is political...

That Afghan/Iran/Sea route wont work atleast for next 10 years.

Even you know it.
 
Yet you suck at it? :coffee:

Who knows?? :coffee:



Didn't I say "Approval of Pakistan's Powerful Military"?

Didn't you know that pakistan's powerful Military is at war with Taliban?

Pakistan's Northern Areas are safe, but the problem for india is political...

It is better to have a much safer route without ANT POLITICAL problems...

That Afghan/Iran/Sea route wont work atleast for next 10 years.

Who is in a hurry?
 
India can run between Putin and Obama and between Pakistan and Iran, none of these are fesible now. Iran option would be more expansive and may not make business sense.considering central asian resource India has very little choice but depend on gulf.
 
India can run between Putin and Obama and between Pakistan and Iran, none of these are fesible now. Iran option would be more expansive and may not make business sense.considering central asian resource India has very little choice but depend on gulf.

India is not running to anybody, India is choosing its future strategic allies, Iran is a good option contrary to what you are thinking.

If India -china comes to some trade agreement there is a chance of transit through China which will make India to trade with Central Asia more cheaply.
 
NEW DELHI: India's pet project to link south with central Asia got support from Russian president Vladimir Putin. During their talks in New Delhi last week, Singh and Putin agreed to unfreeze the north-south corridor through Iran within the next year. India has taken the lead role in pushing for the completion of this project.

Indian officials said they would push for the completion of the corridor and were willing to step in, if Iran found it difficult to accomplish the task. The corridor is, by and large complete, they said, except for a section inside Iran between Qazvin-Rasht-Astara. The corridor is useless unless the Iranian section is completed. Although the agreement was inked by India, Iran, Russia and Oman in 2001, Tehran has dragged its feet on the project.

Now, the urgency for completion of the project is due to the imminent drawdown of NATO forces from Afghanistan in 2014. New Delhi figures that this project will be a game-changer for its trade and open Indian economy to the rising economies in central Asia, by connecting India with Afghanistan and beyond, bypassing Pakistan. :lol:

India's aims in the region is coalescing with Russia, which is paying greater attention to it's "near abroad". Russia is concerned about the rise of Islamic extremism in its southern periphery and one of the ways of countering this is to open these landlocked nations to trade and connectivity with India.

Another reason for both Russia and India to concentrate on central Asia is the growing influence and presence of China in this region, which has raised concerns in Moscow and New Delhi. China is far ahead of both Russia and India in establishing connectivity with the central Asian countries — China's aims being to stabilize its own western periphery, with the restive province of Xinjiang as the focus. Beijing has already built an intricate set of oil and gas pipelines to Kazakhstan, and a Turkmenistan-Uzbekistan-Kazakhstan-China gas pipeline. In 2011, the trade turnover between China and the five central Asian countries reached $16.98 billion. Beijing is currently working on a rail link to Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan. China's progress, frankly, puts India's sluggish initiatives in the shade.

India has recently received help from other quarters. Turkey has stepped in, offering itself as a more viable transit route for the corridor, given its already-developed connections with central Asian nations and Russia. On the other hand, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan have both asked Indian leaders to consider connecting them to the corridor.

The Northern Distribution Network (NDN), which is being used by the US to transport supplies and weapons to its forces in Afghanistan by steering clear of Pakistan, is on offer for trade and connectivity in the post-2014 environment, said sources. Tajikistan has offered to connect itself to the Zaranj-Delaram road and Afghanistan's garland highway, which will give it access to Iran's Chahbahar port.

All of this is certain to raise Iran's geo-political profile that India and Russia support. Iran, however, has been tardy in putting its own infrastructure in order. However, Iranian diplomats have recently gone on record to say that they have completed "70% of works on construction of Qazvin-Rasht-Astara railroad within the framework of North-South Transport Corridor project."

Iran, India and Afghanistan have recently started to coordinate work on the Chahbahar port project. Again, here, the delay is on the Iranian side. India has offered to undertake the development of the port in Iran — over $5 billion of India's oil payments to Iran are sitting in Indian banks in Indian currency, and the idea is that this could be used in the port's development.

The Chahbahar port would be a lifeline for landlocked Afghanistan, by reducing its dependence on Pakistan. It would also act as a bridge to connect central Asia with India. Ultimately, it promises to open up vast markets in Eurasian countries to Indian goods and services, cutting travel and freight time and cost.

Uzbek and Kazakh leaders have pressed India to complete the project because it would open up the Indian energy market to these countries. Kazakhstan has offered the Satpayev block to India and is slated to become a key uranium supplier to India's civilian nuclear sector. But lack of connectivity is a serious deterrent at present, said officials. In fact, its cheaper to bring goods to India through China from these countries!

But the focus is to complete the missing section in Iran. Of the 375-km-long Qazvin-Astara-Rasht route, around 300 km is located in Iran. While, 8.5km of railways will be built in Azerbaijan.


Russian nod for India’s bid to link south with central Asia - The Times of India


tumblr_m3kzyoB1zm1qitkkto1_400.gif

all the pieces of this puzzle were waiting for that nod, now happy happy everywhere
 
all the pieces of this puzzle were waiting for that nod, now happy happy everywhere

Looks like it, Russia is key to Central Asia - bo way this would have happened without Russian consent, but India knew this was always on the cards and bound to come through.
 
Yet you suck at it? :coffee:

Didn't I say "Approval of Pakistan's Powerful Military"?

Pakistan's Northern Areas are safe, but the problem for india is political...

That Afghan/Iran/Sea route wont work atleast for next 10 years.

Even you know it.


Rail & road is Afghanistan is already being built with Aid money.

Port in Iran will be useful for India to buy oil even if the link with central asia is delayed.

pakistan military suck. The only reason they are still safe is cause china gave them nukes.

Bypassing paksitan is a very good strategy that will have approval of all nations concerned. That is a lot of nations for it and only pakistan against it. Work out the odds of pakistan attempting to piss of all these nations.
 
The map you've given me is a disaster. Just like this thread.

You need Northern Pakistan , and the approval of Pakistan's Powerful Military, to access Central Asia.

This is the ONLY "viable" route india can use for the foreseeable future.

I would imagine that simple high school education in the US would make you see the ignorance of your statements. Hilarious that you get so confused by an obvious map and route that perhaps even a 3rd grader in the US could to read it plainly. The viability of this route is obvious and not in question, albeit your insistence of it not being so, rather when it happens remains to be seen.
 
The obvious loser in this is Pakistan ( economically speaking). Imagine the fees Pakistan could not only make, but also how they could piggy back off the massive trade routes if this went through pakistan. Not to say access for industries to the massive Indian markets where more of its products , because of cultural similarities, could flourish in the huge Indian market vs. say China only. Your spices , garments,commodities,cross cultural items have a greater market in India than any country.
 
Nod is one thing, but actually doing it is another. India has big plans that fail 90% of the time. I will believe it when I see the project ACTUALLY COMPLETED. Until then, all this is just hot air.
 
Nod is one thing, but actually doing it is another. India has big plans that fail 90% of the time. I will believe it when I see the project ACTUALLY COMPLETED. Until then, all this is just hot air.

Welcome back :lol:

Delay is from iranian side not from india.Even india asked iran to complete the project on its behalf
 
Nod is one thing, but actually doing it is another. India has big plans that fail 90% of the time. I will believe it when I see the project ACTUALLY COMPLETED. Until then, all this is just hot air.

you mean they should fudge like you Chinese , proclaim a casino ship as a full fledged aircraft carrier? you are 25 years behind US tech, tech of course that you don't steal. Or when claiming some outer shell of an aircraft as the greatest new stealth aircraft?
 
Rail & road is Afghanistan is already being built with Aid money.

Port in Iran will be useful for India to buy oil even if the link with central asia is delayed.

pakistan military suck. The only reason they are still safe is cause china gave them nukes.

Bypassing paksitan is a very good strategy that will have approval of all nations concerned. That is a lot of nations for it and only pakistan against it. Work out the odds of pakistan attempting to piss of all these nations.

:lol:

Ok my indian child.

Keep ranting....
 
Back
Top Bottom