000 02365nam a2200181Ia 4500
999 _c2866
_d2866
005 20220403161145.0
008 200202s9999 xx 000 0 und d
082 _a327.54073 PAL
100 _aPalmer, Norman D.
245 0 _aSouth Asia and United States policy
260 _aBoston
260 _bHoughton Mifflin Company
260 _c1966
300 _ax, 332p.
520 _aTHE ENCOUNTER BETWEEN ASIA AND THE WEST is increasing in scope and in depth. But it is still far too limited and superficial to provide the basis for a viable relationship between countries and peoples with such a different cultural heritage and historical experience, as well as such different outlook and interests, separated by more than geographical distance but at the same time united by the forces that make for interdependence in the modern world. "The central drama of our age," wrote Walter Lippmann in September 1965, "is how the Western nations and Asian peoples are to find a tolerable basis of coexistence. Today we do not have even the rudiments of an under standing by which Europeans and Americans, Russians and Chinese, Indians and Pakistanis, would be willing to live and let live." This observation underscores the importance of developing what Lippmann has called "a new order of human relationship between the Asian world and the West em world." "In Asia," he pointed out, "the margin of safety is very thin; there is not even the beginning of a meeting of minds, and a catastrophe is possible." In the growing encounter between Asia and the West, South Asia is obvi ously an area of special significance. It is today a major center of world attention and concern, but it is still a relatively unknown area, and there is a great deal of confusion and misunderstanding about the internal situation and the external orientation of even the major countries of the area, India and Pakistan. There is perhaps no major part of the world that presents more complex problems to United States foreign policy than the Indian subcontinent. As a direct ally of the United States, Pakistan is of special importance to Amer ican policy, political, strategic, and economic. India's prospects, as the lead ing nation in non-Communist mainland Asia, are crucial to the future bal ance of power.
650 _aSouth Asia foreign relations United States
942 _cB
_2ddc