Popular Articles

generic levitra
Sell-off in BSNL likely soon: Sam Pitroda
The Prime Minister’s information technology advisor Sam Pitroda said the government was not planning to merge BSNL and MTNL, but efforts were on to sell stake in BSNL.

payday loans canada
Sensex trades flat; IT index firm
The Sensex touched a high of 16,943 and is now flat at 16,931, up 18 points.

News of the day

Satyam tanks 13% as CBI doubles scam loss
Shares of Satyam Computer (now Mahindra Satyam) today plunged over 13 per cent on the Bombay Stock Exchange after the CBI said that the loss suffered by investors in the Satyam scam may stretch to a staggering Rs 14,000 crore, nearly double of what it was estimated to be earlier.
Business Ideas

Stop using insurgents as strategic tool, Obama warns Pak

In a stern message to Pakistan, the United States has asked it to shed its policy of "using insurgents" like LeT as a strategic tool and warned that if it cannot deliver against terrorists, the US may be impelled to use "any means" at its disposal. - N-deal: India, US may finalise reprocessing pact in 10-12 days - Sanjaya Baru: Obama seeks to encash nuclear deal IOUs">Sanjaya Baru: Obama seeks to encash nuclear deal IOUs - India, US may finalise reprocessing pact in 10-12 days - Frank Sieren & Andreas Sieren: Two wrestlers">Frank Sieren & Andreas Sieren: Two wrestlers - Krishna, Qureshi to attend CHOGM, but meeting unlikely - Partners, not allies The message, which has been conveyed in a letter from US President Barack Obama to his Pakistani counterpart Asif Ali Zardari, also includes an offer by him to try to "reduce tensions" between India and Pakistan, media reported here. The two-page letter, hand-delivered by National Security Adviser General (Retd) James Jones when he visited Islamabad early this month, offers Pakistan enhancement of strategic partnership if they act as wished by the US, besides additional military and economic aid. In his letter, Obama has also warned Pakistan that its use of insurgent groups for policy goals "cannot continue" and called for closer collaboration against all extremist groups. He named five such groups -- al-Qaeda, the Afghan Taliban, the Haqqani network, Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Tehrik-e-Taliban. "Using vague diplomatic language, he said that ambiguity in Pakistan"s relationship with any of them could no longer be ignored," the Washington Post reported. Jones did some straight-talking with the top Pakistani leadership, the daily said. "If Pakistan cannot deliver, he warned, the US may be impelled to use any means at its disposal to rout insurgents based along Pakistan"s western and southern borders with Afghanistan." The Post said US officials have long referred to Pakistani military and intelligence officers who are sympathetic to or actively support insurgent groups fighting in Afghanistan as "rogue elements". More recently, they have described those relationships as more direct and institutional within a divided military. "For the things that we care about," a US official was quoted as saying, "the real decision-maker is the military. "It has long been hedging its bets in Afghanistan; the military has positioned itself to prevent inroads by India in the event of a US withdrawal, and against a 30-year history of being used and then rejected by shifting US policy aims," it said.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):