India Us Relationship: "India-US relations can define the 21st century" - Congress member Ro Khanna

Posted on 3rd Jan 2023 by rohit kumar

Indian-American Congressman Ro Khanna on Monday said that the relationship between India and America could define the 21st century. Along with this, referring to America's daily newspaper 'The New York Times', he said that in one of its articles it was written that after the Ukraine war, the world would see India emerging.

 

the correct statement of confidence

Ro Khanna put out a tweet on Monday, referring to The New York Times article. In this tweet, he wrote, "US-India relations may define the 21st century." Khanna said the leading American daily wrote beautifully about India's growing self-confidence and contradictions and ended on a hopeful note that the pluralism championed by Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru was an indelible part of its vision. Is.

 

Also, quoting Foreign Minister S Jaishankar, it has been written in this article that due to the effect of the war in Ukraine, a world order is being thrown out of existence. This world order, still largely Western, is about to be replaced by a "multiverse world". Countries will select their particular policies, preferences, and interests.

 

It has been written in the newspaper that after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, India rejected the pressure given by the American and European countries to condemn the Russian aggression in the United Nations. With this, India turned Moscow into its biggest oil supplier. Apart from this, India has completely rejected the alleged hypocrisy of the West.

 

Jaishankar told The New York Times, "I would still like to see a more rules-based world. But, when people start pressuring you to give up certain things in the name of a rules-based order I am afraid at that stage, we need to counter it and if need be, we should decide on it.

 

Also Read: Police recruitment exam in Pakistan stadium, 30 thousand candidates: thousands of boys and girls sat in the field and audience, there were only 1167 vacancies

Other news