Front cover image for The eagle and the peacock : U.S. foreign policy toward India since independence

The eagle and the peacock : U.S. foreign policy toward India since independence

With the end of the Cold War in the 1990s the need for this study is more compelling since the politics of the Cold War had so greatly shaped Indo-American relations from the beginning of modern India's independence.
Print Book, English, 1994
Greenwood Press, Westport, Conn., 1994
pages cm.
9780313276026, 0313276021
221470009
Foreword / Norman A. Graebner
1. Laying the Foundation: Anglo-American Competition and Indian Freedom
2. Confronting Turbulent India: Truman and the Indian Famine of 1946
3. The Quest for Commerce, Peace, and Prosperity: Truman's Point Four, Mutual Security, and the Grain Deal of 1951
4. The Nationalist Challenge: Indian Nonalignment and Indo-American Conflicts
5. The End of Optimism: Cold War Comes to South Asia
6. Confrontation to Collaboration: U.S.-Pakistan Military Alliance, Trade, and Aid to India
7. Promise Fulfilled: The New Frontier, Kennedy, Johnson, and India
8. The Limits of Power: The Nixon and Indira Gandhi Challenges
9. Principled Pragmatism: Carter, Human Rights, and Indo-American Relations
10. Conservative Pragmatism: Reagan and India