... increasingly multipolar world.
1
. Bruno Macaes, The Dawn of Eurasia: On the trail of the New World Order. Penguin, London, 2018.
2
. Uma Purushothamam, and Nandan Unnikrishnan, “A tale of many roads: India’s approach to connectivity projects in Eurasia,”
India Quarterly,
75(1) 69-86, 2019
3
. Nandan Unnikrishnan and Nivedita Kapor, “India and Major Power: Russia,” Observer Reserarch Foundation, August 07, 2019.
https://www.orfonline.org/expert-speak/india-and-major-powers-russia-54183
... journalists speculated about the G20 Summit agenda and many local think tanks hastily released G20-focused reports and policy briefs, the Delhi city center blossomed with colorful posters and billboards carrying G20 logos and slogans.
Dipanjan Roy Chaudhury:
India’s Eurasian Pathway: Towards an Evolving Strategic Partnership
However, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Summit, which India will host on July 4 this year, did not get even a small fraction of this attention. In Delhi they seldom referred to the ...
... era of relations, whereby they sincerely intend to regulate their comprehensive competition more responsibly, with an aim towards eventually clinching a “new détente” that would prospectively consist of a series of mutual compromises all across Eurasia;
India and Turkey continuing to “balance” between the U.S. and Russia so as to ensure their rise as great powers in an increasingly complex world order, which will in turn improve their strategic leverage vis-a-vis China and enable them to expand their ...
... flows, food and energy security, issues of international information exchange and the development of artificial intelligence. It is from the widest possible set of such functional regimes, not from old or new rigid institutional blocs, that the new Eurasian Heartland should be built.
India and China are Arctic Council observer states. As one of the leading members of this organization, Russia could suggest to its partners that they discuss Arctic issues together so that none of them could have any suspicions about Moscow possibly ...
...
Nevertheless, tactical advantages are clearly not enough to seriously increase the Common Destiny’s attractiveness to India. China will have to make significant concessions on issues of importance to India, such as the problem of international terrorism in Eurasia, India's desire for permanent membership in the UN Security Council, and bilateral trade issues among others. It would appear that in one way or another, Beijing will have to recognize the special role of Delhi in South Asia, just as it recognizes Russia's ...
... agreements between Russian oil and gas companies and their Chinese partners, and keen interest displayed by Asian investors in Eurasian economies. This will reinforce the "turn-to-the-East" trend which manifests itself in the heightened intensification ... ... in the EAEU. During the monitoring period (2008–2016), FDI stock originating from 12 Asian countries (China, Japan, Turkey, India, Israel, Mongolia, Republic of Korea, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Iran, Singapore, and Vietnam) has increased from $32 billion ...