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Why Narendra Modi may not eat at the White House dinner

Air India??? :wacko: He's sure to get motherly treatment aboard. I mean....the air hostesses on Air India are as old as most mothers in India!! Sheeesh! :fie: :lol:

Its the Indian version of Air Force One.

Considering this is Navratri, Modi ji might just try to think of them as Maa Ambe :P
 
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We're copycats! The US calls their Presidential plane, 'Air Force One'. So we decided to call ours 'Air India One'! :dirol:

Calling it 'Vimana' from the Mahabharat would have been more suitable!! :D
Yhen how about "Vimana pratham " ? :p:
 
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And you would be WRONG. :D

In the past, NaMo had ALWAYS AVOIDED travelling during this period, especially to avoid insulting the host by his abstinence. This time he specifically timed his visit to coincide with the Navratri Fast . :angel:

PM Modi to observe strict fast during US trip, to only consume lemonade, tea

New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi will observe a strict religious fast during his maiden trip to the United States, aides said on Monday, in a test both of the 64-year-old leader's stamina and of protocol in the Obama White House. Throughout a gruelling schedule that features the United Nations General Assembly, a rally of Indian Americans at New York's Madison Square Garden and talks with Obama in Washington, Modi will abstain from food. In keeping with the habits of a lifetime, Modi will restrict himself to a "liquid diet" throughout the Navratri festival, when Hindus worship goddess Durga in all her manifestations. "He will only consume lemonade with some honey and a cup of tea every day," a senior official in Modi's office in New Delhi said. "He has been fasting for the last four decades and does not want to change this pattern even while he is travelling," added the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Navratri, derived from the ancient Sanskrit words 'nine nights', falls this year from September 25 to October 3. The festival spans Modi's first trip to the United States since he triumphed in a general election in May. It culminates on the tenth day, known as Dussehra, which marks the victory of good over evil. Millions of Hindus fast, pray and dance to please the mother goddess during Navratri. Some restrict their diet to fruit and vegetables while spurning meat, onions and garlic. Others, like Modi, a strict vegetarian, do not eat at all. "He wakes up at 4 AM, meditates, prays and carries his own bottle of lemonade with him," :D said another government official who has worked closely with Modi for 12 years. "Doctors had suggested that he should consume fruits and more juices but he has refused to make any dietary additions during the Navratri celebrations," said a senior minister in Gujarat, where Modi served as chief minister for more than a decade. "In the US you will not see him having dinner or lunch with Obama," said the state minister, who is also close to Modi. Another Indian government source said the White House had been informed of Modi's dietary requirements.

The US embassy in New Delhi declined to comment. (LOL) US officials have indicated that President Barack Obama would not treat Modi to a state dinner, as Modi did not hold the rank of head of state. Obama did, however, accord this honour to Modi's predecessor, Manmohan Singh. As a young man, Modi left home to seek enlightenment, finding inspiration from the writings of philosopher-monk Swami Vivekananda, who propagated the Hindu faith at the Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893. Modi's Hindu nationalist credo came under close scrutiny over sectarian rioting in his home state of Gujarat in 2002 in which more than 1,000 people, most of them Muslims, were killed. Modi has denied wrongdoing and was exonerated in a Supreme Court investigation. In 2011, Modi fasted for three days to promote religious harmony in Gujarat, involving several Muslim religious leaders in the event to gain their political support.



NaMo by all indications will not even take a sip of US water during his US visit :angel: .......... like all Indian PM, he will be carrying his own water to the US, not to mention Indian suger and tea leaves :D
That is a good thing.We know how Lal Bahadur Shastri was poisoned and killed in Tashkent.No investigation was done.The motive was to cement Corrupt Nehru family as rulers of India so that foreign policy and Indias policies are always malleable to outside influence.The last time a nationalist like Shastri was murdered.This time we have a nationalist of the same caliber ruling us who might take India to great heights so Modi is doing the right thing by avoiding eating Food and carrying his own lemonade with him in his visit.We should not forget how USA tried "To Get Modi" for past 12 years and his visa refused.Usa even tried their best to turn indian public opinion against electing Modi using their proxies and pseudo secylar media and left wing intellectuals.
So yeah if it was me i wouldnt eat anything in USA.
 
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That is a good thing.We know how Lal Bahadur Shastri was poisoned and killed in Tashkent.No investigation was done.The motive was to cement Corrupt Nehru family as rulers of India so that foreign policy and Indias policies are always malleable to outside influence.The last time a nationalist like Shastri was murdered.This time we have a nationalist of the same caliber ruling us who might take India to great heights so Modi is doing the right thing by avpiding eating Food and carrying his own lemonade with him in his visit.We should not forget how USA tried "To Get Modi" for past 12 years and his visa refused.Usa even tried their best to turn indian public opinion against electing Modi using their proxies and pseudo secylar media and left wing intellectuals.
So yeah if it was me i wouldnt eat anything in USA.

Those were the cold war days, today US needs a Modi to make India strong enough to stand up to China.

Else they will have to deal with China all on their own. :P ....and they are not looking forward to that.
 
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Those were the cold war days, today US needs a Modi to make India strong enough to stand up to China.

Else they will have to deal with China all on their own. :P ....and they are not looking forward to that.
USA doesn't like a Nationalist heading a Nationalist India.It's quite happy with Moun Mohan singh as was the evidence how it tried to scuttle modis rise as PM using its media and proxies.MMS will work fine for USA as congress will listen to USA diktats.With Modi in power it might upset the applecart of USA and their long term goals of using us as a Mercenary army against China.As Modi is not predictable to USA unlike Nehruvian politicians who they comfortable with.
 
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USA doesn't like a Nationalist heading a Nationalist India.It's quite happy with Moun Mohan singh as was the evidence how it tried to scuttle modis rise as PM using its media and proxies.MMS will work fine for USA as congress will listen to USA diktats.With Modi in power it might upset the applecart of USA and their long term goals of using us as a Mercenary army against China.As Modi is not predictable to USA unlike Nehruvian politicians who they comfortable with.

US does not operate on likes or dislikes. They operate on what is best for their self interests.

Right now a strong India is in their self interest, one that is preferably tilted towards them. The Russia China axis is making the rest of the world very nervous.

The problem with weak leadership is there is no guarantee which way they will bend, there is a good chance they will bend towards Russia like we did in the past.

Indian interests are safeguarded by the rise of China :P........ the way Chinese growth was safeguarded due to the Rise of Russia.

After India's rise, it might be pakistan's turn.
 
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can any member give me a video link about some latest american /international media talk show regarding modies visit to USA

as for modi fasting on his US trip well i guess modi is indeed plying his cards rather well
 
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PM Modi to get rock star reception in New York - The Times of India

NEW YORK: It is a rock 'n' roller's dream to "sell out The Garden," but for a foreign politician to pack New York City's most famous sports and entertainment arena is another thing entirely.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on his first trip to New York as leader of the world's most populous democracy, will draw perhaps the largest crowd ever by a foreign leader on US soil when he takes the stage on Sunday in Madison Square Garden before a crowd forecast to total more than 18,000 people.

Thousands more are expected to pack New York's Times Square to watch his address in Hindi on big screens as well as smaller viewing parties around the country and on TV in India.

The Indian diaspora hopes this visit by a leader who was until recently barred from the United States will signify India's importance not only on these shores but in wider the world too.

The event is being emceed by prominent members of the Indian-American community, Nina Davuluri, who has just relinquished her crown as Miss America 2014, and TV journalist Hari Sreenivasan.

"Indian citizens and diaspora over the world are hopeful that this (Modi) administration will cut bureaucracy and focus on people," said Dr Dinesh Patel, chief of arthroscopic surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who arrived in the United States more than 50 years ago.

Patel, who says he was given an award for work in education by Modi, a fellow Gujarati, added: "People are passionate to see the new leader. Another Narendra is coming to this country to let the USA know what India is about."

The first Narendra was Swami Vivekananda, a 19th-century philosopher and monk who propagated the Hindu faith in the United States. Modi often cites a speech by Vivekananda, born Narendra Nath Datta, to the Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893, as a source of inspiration.

"Let us remember the words of Swami Vivekananda and dedicate ourselves to furthering the cause of unity, brotherhood and world peace," Modi wrote Sept. 11 to his 6.5 million followers on Twitter.

India's economy, the third largest in Asia, has struggled to recover from sub-par growth. Modi's general election triumph in May was driven mostly by his entrepreneurial mantra.
On the eve of his US visit, tensions remain between Washington and New Delhi over trade and spying.

The 64-year-old former chief minister of Gujarat was denied a US visa in 2005 over the riots that took place in his state in 2002. Modi, who denies wrongdoing, has been exonerated by the SC.

Washington was late to warm to Modi. Its ambassador to India only met him in February, when opinion polls already put his nationalists on course for a big election win.

Diligent diaspora

India's US diaspora is a highly educated population of nearly 3.2 million, making up about 1 per cent of the US population, according to latest US Census Bureau data.

As a group, they are more likely to be hooked to the internet than their fellow Americans, far more likely to have a college or professional degree and twice as well off with an average household income of more than $100,000.

"Indians are generally very ambitious and entrepreneurs," said Mike Narula, the founder, president and chief executive officer of Long Island, New York-based Reliance Communications, a distributor of mobile telecom devices and accessories.

Narula, who came to the United States 17 years ago, first working in the garment industry, now has his own company with more than, 200 employees. He's part of the host committee for Modi's visit to Washington, where the prime minister will meet with President Barack Obama on Monday and Tuesday.

"We attempted to do business in India. I hope Modi will look into streamlining issues such as VAT, the role of FDI (foreign direct investment) and find a way for American businesses to not have to go through 19 red tape bureaucracies," he said.

While Indian Americans are well represented in America's professional class, they are less visible in the military. Some 0.1 percent serve in the armed forces compared to 0.4 percent of Americans as a whole.

"The diaspora does very well on entrepreneurship, but not as much on the physical sacrifices. It is not just enough to be a citizen and taxpayer," said Raj Bhandari, a 48 year old Mumbai-born banker from New Jersey. "As a larger community I would like it to be more engaged on the front lines."
 
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The U.S. government gave him a visa yet?
:-O,It seems the US has violated the beginning of himself behavior.
This is Modiji strength, this is India's strength!:victory:

请先学好英语,然后写。你自己知道你在写什么?
 
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Modi's India: A View from Washington | Brookings Institution

In this article from the South Asia Hand, Teresita Schaffer looks at why the U.S. considers the relationship with India strategic, and how that relationship fits into India's, and Modi's, global vision. Teresita Schaffer is working on a book called India at the International High Table, co-authored with Howard Schaffer, which will examine how India sees its role in the world—including the different foreign policy visions of different political figures—and how this translates into India’s negotiating style. Modi's early foreign policy blitz and his emphasis on economic "deliverables" suggests that he is rewriting the nationalists' script on what will determine India's power, to include a strong emphasis on economic growth.

This article is adapted from remarks to the International Institute for Strategic Studies, Oslo, September 20, 2014.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Washington gives us an opportunity to look at the reasons the U.S. considers its relations with India strategic, and to reflect on how India-U.S. ties fit into India’s – and Modi’s – vision of India’s role in the world. The two visions still fit together a bit awkwardly, but this is a critical opportunity to continue the quest for better ways to work together.

I've been asked to speak about how Washington looks at Modi's India. We have come a long way from the thin and chilly relationship of the Cold War era to a time when the two countries are developing a real partnership. The new global geopolitics was one reason Delhi's relations with Washington expanded dramatically. At least as important was India's surging economic growth, which put economic success within reach and trade, investment and energy at the heart of India's global interests. A U.S.-India security relationship developed for the first time. The high point of their renewal came in 2005-9, when the U.S.-India agreement on civil nuclear cooperation was being negotiated.

The stasis that followed was perhaps inevitable. Commercial disagreements soured the mood. A restrictive nuclear liability law has thus far prevented U.S. companies from building nuclear power plants in India. Decision-making slowed during the Congress government's second term. The low point was the badly mishandled arrest of an Indian diplomat in New York in 2013.

Modi's surge in the months before India's May 2014 polls posed a special problem for Washington. Modi's U.S. visa had been revoked in 2005 under a just-passed provision of U.S. law that barred visitors who, when in public office, had caused "serious restrictions" of religious freedom. The charge arose from murderous anti-Muslim riots in Gujarat while Modi was chief minister there. Modi's involvement, or at least willingness to turn a blind eye, was widely believed but never proved. The U.S. stopped high level contact with him, and the U.S. ambassador's re-engagement came later than most other major countries'.

The next day’s press showed a picture of a smiling Modi handing U.S. Ambassador Nancy Powell a huge bouquet of red roses, a pretty good metaphor for what happened next. With Modi likely to win, Washington's mood shifted from nervousness to hope for a real re-set in a strategically important relationship. This budding optimism reflected the hope that the economic growth over which Modi presided in Gujarat would recur at the national level, strengthening U.S.-India economic ties that had become so important since the end of the Cold War.

The day the election results were announced, President Obama telephoned his personal congratulations. Both the call and the press release mentioned that he had invited Modi to visit Washington. The U.S. was dramatically putting the visa issue behind it, and Modi's acceptance helped set up the new beginning. Those of you who know Washington may recall that the U.S. government usually goes out of its way to avoid having heads of government pop down from the U.N. General Assembly to Washington. Inviting Modi to do just that was a special gesture for an important visitor.

Rather than predict what happens during the visit, let me talk about how Washington assesses India's strategic importance, and where a Modi government is likely to build it up (or not). I will then reflect on how Modi's early foreign policy blitz fits into India's competing visions of its global role.

India's strategic importance for the U.S. The strategic importance of India for the United States plays out along three main vectors:

First, economic engagement: In sharp contrast to the vulnerable economy of Nehru's and Indira Gandhi's day, India had become a high growth economy before the global financial crisis struck. Trade now accounts for almost half India's GDP - three times the percentage it represented in 1990. Restoring India's 2007-9 growth path would lift millions of Indians out of poverty. It would also provide India with the resources and the international relationships to play a critical role in shaping global economic rules. Indian economic growth has usually gone hand in hand with more productive U.S.-India ties.

Economic growth is at the top of Modi's "to do" list. His priorities about how to achieve it focus heavily on big projects like infrastructure and "smart cities."

His government has sent mixed messages about two other ingredients in moving Indian growth forward. First, domestic policy. The government is moving slowly and carefully on some policies that are a significant problem for business (foreign and domestic), such as local content requirements and retroactive taxation. The end point is not clear.

Second, integrating India more fully into the web of international agreements that expand trade and investment. Two recent actions send quite different signals. On the one hand, the Indian government in July decided to torpedo a WTO agreement on trade facilitation that the previous government had accepted after painstaking negotiations to safeguard India's food security needs. This is troubling to Washington, and left many of India's other friends around the world wondering once again if India is the "country that can't say yes." On the other hand, the new government has now signed an agreement on free trade in services with ASEAN, which signals that the path of trade agreements it embarked on in the past five years is alive and well. India's business-friendliness at home and integration with the international economy have an outsized importance for its relationship with the United States, so there will be many observers trying to read those tea leaves.

The second vector for U.S.-India relations is regional security. Rahul has already spoken about the Modi government's approach to its South Asian neighbors (anything to add here?). But there is another dimension which I consider a success story. For the past decade at least, it has been increasingly apparent that India and the United States have very similar concepts of the drivers of Asian security - meaning the region to India's east. Both want cooperative relations with China; both seek a thick network of relationships with the other significant powers in Southeast and East Asia (Japan, Australia, Korea, the Asean countries); neither wants to see China emerge as the dominant player in the region. I expect this strategic convergence to continue. I do not expect India to "fit in" to U.S. policy - or vice versa. Rather, I think both countries' interests will, generally speaking, push their policies in similar directions. Modi's early, strong opening to Japan and China reinforces this. He is looking to make ties with Japan increasingly strategic, and to intensify the move toward bigger economic ties with China that has been under way for a decade or so, ideally with more balanced trade.

The third dimension is global relationships. This has been a troublesome area for the U.S. and India in the past. Think of our difficulty working together in the United Nations, the WTO, and climate change talks. Will we succeed in finding more scope for global cooperations? There's an interesting contrast here with China: India and China often work together quite well in multilateral settings, and both are members of BRICS. On the other hand, the U.S. and India do best in the bilateral and East Asian setting, where India and China have more trouble.

Modi and India's Global Vision

In concluding, let me take a step back and consider how Indian governments have envisioned their role in the world. There is a broad consensus that India is a "civilizational power," and that the greatness of its ancient civilization should be reflected in its global role. There is also consensus in post-independence India on two more concrete points.

First, Nonalignment, Nehru's signature concept. After the Cold War, the meaning of this term merged, in a way, with the concept of "strategic autonomy," the idea that no outside power should have excessive influence (or even the appearance of influence) on India's policy.

Second, primacy in South Asia and the Indian Ocean. This is a policy commitment India shared with its previous imperial overlords.

Modi shares both these consensus points. The "Nehruvians" in India's policy debate tended to favor diplomacy and, at least theoretically, multilateralism as means of achieving India's goals, whereas the nationalists, the tradition in which Modi has his political home, privileged a strong military.

After the Cold War, a third element was added to these two features of India's global vision: potential economic greatness, and in the short term a commitment to pursue India's trade, investment and energy needs through foreign policy.

The classic nationalist perspective did not place much emphasis on economics as a path to India's desired global role. Modi does, and is clearly giving his economic ambitions a strong nationalist flavor.

This is the perspective in which I look at the foreign policy blitz of Modi's first four months in office. His South Asian outreach was a combination between India's traditional commitment to primacy and his own showmanship, "charm offensive," with one abrupt closing off of talks with Pakistan. The "great power outreach" that followed - visiting Japan and the U.S., the BRICS summit, receiving China's President Xi - was focused on building up India's investible resources to implement Modi's ambitious goals for the national economy, as well as on showing India as playing in the big leagues. Don't expect that the results will be instantaneous, but I would be very surprised if they didn't turn out to be significant.
 
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请先学好英语,然后写。你自己知道你在写什么?
没必要,只要别人知道我要表达的意思就行了。它又不是我的母语,我又不靠它吃饭。hahaaa ha..:woot:
 
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