
Tanvi Madan
Articles
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3 days ago |
aei.org | Sadanand Dhume |Peter J. Wallison |Tanvi Madan
Press Discussing why the US should not Morally Equivocate between India and Pakistan: Rubin on India Today Multimedia Discussing India’s Operation Sindoor Against Pakistan: Dhume on the John Batchelor Show Press Discussing the Aftermath of the India-Pakistan Ceasefire: Rubin on News18 Op-Ed Rawalpindi goes Hezbollah: India must push to label Pakistan a terror state Press Discussing Pakistan’s Need to Deconflict: Rubin on NDTV Press Discussing Pakistan as a State Sponsor of Terror: Rubin on...
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2 weeks ago |
lawfaremedia.org | Daniel Byman |Tanvi Madan |Jen Patja
Published by The Lawfare Institute in Cooperation With For today's episode, Lawfare Foreign Policy Editor Daniel Byman interviewed Tanvi Madan, a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution, to discuss the April 22 terrorist attack in Kashmir. Madan explains how the crisis has evolved, the escalation options available to India, and the limited influence of the United States, China, and other powers to contain the crisis.
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Jan 8, 2025 |
brookings.edu | Robert Einhorn |Tanvi Madan |Suzanne Maloney |Ted Piccone
As the nation lays to rest the 39th president of the United States, James Earl Carter Jr., Brookings scholars reflect on the consequential legacy of his presidency for American foreign policy. In June 1994, the United States and North Korea were on the brink of war, according to many observers at the time. Bilateral negotiations on Pyongyang’s nuclear program were at an impasse.
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Jan 7, 2025 |
gmfus.org | Tanvi Madan
IntroductionIn June 2020, Indian and Chinese forces engaged in a deadly clash along their disputed border in the Ladakh region. It was the deadliest confrontation since the 1962 war. Subsequently, bilateral ties between India and China deteriorated to their lowest level in decades. In recent months, however, China-India ties have begun to thaw. Last October, India and China struck a border patrol deal .
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Dec 5, 2024 |
foreignaffairs.com | Tanvi Madan
There are not many things that the presidencies of Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden have had in common. One exception is that, under all five presidents, the U.S. partnership with India has deepened. Every one of them has left U.S. ties with India in a better state than they found them. It is because of this quarter-century of upward-trending relations that New Delhi is less concerned about a second Trump term than many other U.S. allies and partners.
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