Developereo
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There's a 350million strong Indian middle class in the urban centres and tows.
350million! That's larger than entire United States population.
Let's come back to reality: http://www.dbresearch.de/PROD/DBR_INTERNET_DE-PROD/PROD0000000000253735.pdf
While there is no official definition of the middle class, estimates range from 30 million to approximately 300 million people.
There are all sorts of 'projections' but in any case, the discussion is not about economics. As I mentioned, American companies do business regardless of political ties.
The point of the original article, and the debate here, is about the political expectations that America has from this relationship. It doesn't matter how Indians try to spin it, the fact is that India has led America on by pretending it shares American concerns and goals about the latter's geopolitical agenda.
That's a free media. They are free to say whatever they want to. They're free to run paid news.
Sorry, when it comes to foreign policy, this song about 'free media' is strictly for the birds. The media and official policy just magically tend to be in perfect alignment most of the time. This is not just in India, but also in Western countries.
In democracies, the relationship between the government and media is complex. On the one hand, the media sets the agenda for foreign policy by controlling the public debate. On the other hand, the media is often used by the government to test out public reaction to proposed policies by 'leaking' trial balloons.
...and the China bashing is for internal consumption. Not for American consumption.
No. My point was that American support has emboldened the Indian media to come open with their China-bashing. This sends a message to the Americans that India is on the same page as them when it comes to China.
Have you ever seen Iran bashing in Indian media for American consumption? Hell NO!
Exactly. India does not share the American policy view on Iran. That is the whole point of this thread: how America will react to this policy difference.
---------- Post added at 05:11 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:10 PM ----------
Amusing you haven't considered the impact of Republicans coming to power on Pakistan, judging the current state of relations between US and Pakistan.
I guess Indo-phobic glee is more comforting than concerns about ones own misery.
Because that's not the subject of this thread. Actually, I think McCain would have been better for Pakistan (and America), but that's a different debate.