Sunday, March 14, 2010

Putin's trip in India. Results

After many unofficial commentaries in press it's may be interesting to bring briefly the list of outcomes according to Russia's Government site:

Documents signed:

1) Intergovernmental agreement about cooperation in nuclear sphere.
2) The road map of peaceful nuclear cooperation for 2010.
3) Joint venture for GLONASS equipment - establishment document.
4) Inter-ministerial memorandum about bilateral trade of fertilizers .
5) Framework agreement on fertilizers trade.

Verbal agreements (as resulted from Putin's speech):

1) Two Indian astronauts in 2013.
2) Cooperation in space research and particularly - in Lunar program.
3) Follow cooperation in mil. sphere including 5th gen. fighter program.
4) Russia confirmed literally: 'to not cooperate with Pakistan, taking into consideration India's concerns'.
5) Joint fighting terrorism.
6) Students exchange activation.
7) Mutual recognition of university certificates.

Early signed:
1) + 29 MiG-29K/KUB's for Vikramaditya carrier.
2) Additional agreement on Vikramaditya price.

Early declared:
1) + 42 Su-30MKI agreement in negotiation, will be signed till 2010 end.

Don't I miss something?

15 comments:

  1. guess what best thing is recognition of
    education otherwise if someone with degree from russia india china goes to US,UK,AUS,CANADA his/her education isn't recognized means his degree holds no value in these countries

    ReplyDelete
  2. where is INS Vikramaditya?

    ReplyDelete
  3. indians especially do not have a sense of security for motherland. who in the world, would study in topnotch institutes like IIT & IIM, more eager to work for american companies than our own companies. the money students pay for american universities, is directly or indirectly with the blessing of Mr.Pure(obama) is going to fallin pakistani basket as so called AID money.we are sponsoring our enemies. i myself a physician from south indian state of andhra pradesh, have a passion for security matters. In UK, the GMC, general medical council bought brand new buildings with fee payed by indian students, so do the US.

    think when, the entire scenario is reversed.all the indian students going to russia ??? US & UK will be torn into pieces. praying for that happening.....

    Jai Hind.

    PS- comments are always welcome.

    ReplyDelete
  4. that despite all the pride that indians foolishly take in their english medium education-the very enlgish speaking countires do nto recognise the indian degrees and look down upon and exploit indians.
    uk and anglosaxon universities are getting money form the very third world which they look down upon. the enlite of this third world is really traitor to their own country. the indian elites were sendint their children to america and uk when thse countries were actively sabotaging india during 60, 70s and 80s, and when Russia was and is the only true freind of India. india doesnot desrev freind like Russia.

    ReplyDelete
  5. @ anon March 15, 2010 6:34 PM
    postcard from pakistan ?

    ReplyDelete
  6. no mr. that was not a post card from paskistan but from india-i am an indian and i know indians inside out that is why i am saying that indians are a looser class-vebeing run by an unelelcted american agent called manmphan singh who was imposed on india without permission of vote of indian public-how far down can you go?

    ReplyDelete
  7. janaury,2007

    Indian anglophile class -especially indian english language media -is a race of Coolies and traitors.
    the same class of indians who are doing propaganda agasinty china today are the same people who forced rajiv gandhi in 1987 to make friendship with china(and recognise tibet as part of china) why-? because the usa had ben friend with china since 1984 and wanted india tobe friend too as opposed to russia.-therefore the indian parasite class foll=made the Indian foreign policy viz china not to suit india but to suit american interests-it is doing the same but in revere direction this time because their anglo-american masters want them to do so.the same indian elite class (for example the president of ranbaxy one MR. Singh,, chairman of FICCi at the time in 80s was vehemently opposing any defence increase or of of buying of defence equioments while asking for freidnship with china as desired by usa ain 80s). the same FICCi is making propaganda agasint DRDo and(with 6% of defence budget) and indian scintisits saying it has not kept the develpopmnet of innovations and kept the 50 yurs old mig 21 not in shape!.) These same indian traitors want india to buy 40 yrs old arms (like junk f16 and f-18) from america knowing fully well that it comes with a heavy conditions unlike almost condition free and better arms(new mig-35) from russia.-but then thse elites are agents of angnlo american interests -so no surprise here-it is high time that thse elites are killed or kicked out of india-these are allwais(iraqi traitor) of india.• Russia is already supplying India with the Sukhoi-30MKI, an advanced "fourth generation" warplane that consistently defeats its Western counterparts, such as the frontline US fighters, the F-15C and F-16. Versions of the Su-30 are also being sold to China, Venezuela, and Malaysia.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Igorr,

    Thanks for the update but what happened to the PAKFA and MTA agreements?

    ReplyDelete
  9. to anon March 18, 2010 10:34 AM:

    they were not signed yet. still in working, need to think...

    ReplyDelete
  10. upd: MTA agreement will be signed in April after additional tech harmonization - Irkut's chief promised....

    ReplyDelete
  11. http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/LC23Df03.html

    ""
    A spy unsettles US-India ties
    By M K Bhadrakumar

    News that the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) had reached a plea bargain with David Coleman Headley, who played a key role in the planning of the terrorist strike in Mumbai in November 2008 in which 166 people were killed, has caused an uproar in India.

    The deal enables the US government to hold back from formally producing any evidence against Headley in a court of law that might have included details of his links with US intelligence or oblige any cross-examination of Headley by the prosecution.

    Nor can the families of the 166 victims be represented by a lawyer to question Headley during his trial commencing in Chicago. Headley's links with the US intelligence will now remain classified
    A foreign policy in shambles
    All said, however, the Americans seem to count on their skill to manipulate the Indian elite. Robert Blake, the US assistant secretary of state for South Asia who used to be the deputy head of the US Embassy, visited Delhi last week on a damage-control exercise. He huddled with the Indian corporate sector, which is hugely influential with the political class.

    However, will the strategy of leveraging the pro-US lobby in Delhi work this time to ease the strain in the US-India “partnership”? The Mumbai terror attack left deep scars in the Indian public psyche. For the first time in recent years, the Indian public has closed ranks with prevalent opinion in Pakistan that sees the US as a diabolic, self-centered power, which double-crosses its partners, friends and allies in single-minded pursuit of its interests.

    This perception has consequences for the democratically elected government in Delhi. The big question is whether the ruling party in India can any longer afford to be seen sharing Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's robust enthusiasm for a US-centric foreign policy.

    It has been a devastating blow to Manmohan's personal prestige that the FBI's plea bargain deal unfolded in the week he had earmarked for the tabling of legislation in parliament that would facilitate the entry of American companies into the Indian market for nuclear commerce.

    Manmohan's visit to Washington to attend a nuclear summit hosted by Obama on April 12 was expected to give a fillip to US-India ties, but Headley haunts the ambience surrounding that visit.
    The Headley case exposes the fallacies underlying India's foreign policy ever since Manmohan assumed office as prime minister in 2004 - that "strategic partnership" with the US could be central insofar as contacts with Pakistan were best conducted under the US watch and Delhi's interests as an emerging power lay in harmonizing with US regional policies. "

    ReplyDelete
  12. @avatar singh: Is this your real name dude? If this is found to be true, probably everything you say about our pm also would also be true... But launching a tirade against him on web (especially on such a blog) won't do all that good will it?

    ReplyDelete
  13. of some relvance to Russia and India -role of paksitan in attack against Russians and Indians.
    our ulelected harami Pm -an american agent is deliberately sleep walking India into disaster.
    "
    South Asia
    Mar 24, 2010

    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/LC24Df03.html


    'Strategic depth' at heart of Taliban arrests
    By Shibil Siddiqi

    Pakistan has recently arrested a number of top Taliban leaders, including the second in command, Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, and many of the Quetta shura. It also killed in a drone attack Mohammad Haqqani, a leader of the powerful Haqqani network that Pakistan had been loath to target. Many commentators, including influential think-tanks such as the Carnegie Endowment, have struggled to explain Pakistan's motivations behind the arrests and have hoped they embody a volte-face in its policies towards Afghanistan.

    In actuality the arrests are far from representing a paradigm shift in Pakistani thinking. Pakistan's approach to Afghanistan can be boiled down to two words: "strategic depth", the holy grail of the nation 's strategic policy for more than two decades. Strategic depth remains the central pillar in Pakistan's relations with Afghanistan. However, the concept itself is being reinterpreted by



    Pakistan's security establishment as a consequence of the sliding balance of opportunities and threats, both foreign and domestic.

    Strategic depth
    The military concept of strategic depth refers to the distance between actual or potential frontlines and key centers of population, logistics and industrial and military production. Having such depth allows a country to withstand initial offensives and enables it to regroup to mount a counter-offensive.

    Pakistan's geographic narrowness and the presence of key heartlands and communications networks near its borders with its mortal enemy India means that lack of strategic depth has long haunted its military planners. It was identified as a grave concern by General Arthur F Smith, the chief of general staff in India, as early as 1946 when an independent Pakistan existed only on the Imperial drawing board. The possibility of a friendly - or better yet, a pliant - Afghanistan providing this much vaunted depth in relation to India has long been a mantra for the unimaginative Pakistani generals that have long controlled the country's defense and foreign policy direction.

    However, Pakistan's early years, marked by nearly constant internal crises, international isolation, foreign policy disarray and military weakness, meant that this remained a pipe-dream. The language of a "common defense posture" cropped up in the late 1950s and 1960s, couched in both strategic and ideological, ethno-religious terms. But Afghanistan remained both strongly allied to India and within the Soviet Union's sphere of influence.

    The opportunity to furnish a friendly government in Kabul remained elusive until the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 and the seemingly imminent mujahideen victory in the late 1980s. It was then that strategic depth through a client government in Kabul was adopted as official military doctrine. This fueled the vicious Afghan civil war in the 1990s and drove Pakistan to help install the Taliban in power in 1996.

    The Taliban victory was seen in Islamabad as a strategic coup. Pakistan had managed to install a friendly government while excising nearly all remnants of Indian and Russian influence from most of the country. Afghanistan also became an important center for Pakistan's proxy war against India in the disputed territory of Kashmir. At last, Pakistan had seemingly attained the conception of strategic depth that had animated its Afghanistan policy for nearly two decades. "

    ReplyDelete
  14. to sujit. yes mine is the real name. and yes what i wrote and others have written-quoted by me-are all true.
    manmohan singh has been working only for the benefit of the american and british to the detriment of india and its freinds-and he does it deliberately.in any other country traitor like manmohan singh would have been lynched to death-he is yelstsin of india in fact worse than that.

    ReplyDelete
  15. despite what Putin gave to India the indian leadership under unllected traitor pm manmohan singh is still hesitating-that is why Russia shoudl be wary of India.manmohan singh msut be brutally killed.


    http://forums.bharat-rakshak.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=3689&start=1000


    Russia offers N-fuel fabrication, uranium JV, India reluctant
    Quote:
    With the Indo-US reprocessing pact in its last lap and the Prime Minister readying to travel to Washington DC to attend US President Barack Obama’s nuclear summit, Delhi perhaps felt the time was not ripe to publicise nuclear cooperation with the Russians.

    In fact, at the Putin visit, agreements on the fifth-generation fighter aircraft, the multi-role transport aircraft also did not see the light of day. And when Russia offered that Glonass, the Russian global positioning system, be extended to military signals for Indian use, Delhi demurred. That deal was not signed either, although the Indian side promised to do so later.

    ReplyDelete