[The book is dedicated to the Victims for the cause of discarding “Sovereign United Bengal” by Dr Shyama Prasad Mukherjee in the Movement of the Partition of Bengal] It is about India and Sacrificing Indians and about Dr Shyama Prasad Mukherjee, the destroyer of Bengal and the Bengalis by the destruction of the design of “Sovereign United Bengal”, a dream land of Bengalis above religion to form a country like United Kingdom.
The Half –naked Fakir Dress of Gandhi fooled the Hindu Bengalis into thinking of him as a “HINDU GOD” as he started the “Non-Violence” in Bengal but it is astonishing to see how the people of the millions of Indians of India accepted him as the FATHER of the Nation instead of Maniram Dewan, a national of hero of ASSAM who first sacrificed his life to fight against the British and in spite of the thousands of Hindu Bengalis in CALCUTTA KILLING and millions of Bengalis and Punjabis displaced as Refugees by the division of Bengal and Punjab who were compelled to left their ancestral homes for the safety of their lives.
The Half –naked Fakir Dress of Gandhi fooled the Hindu Bengalis into thinking of him as a “HINDU GOD” as he started the “Non-Violence” in Bengal but it is astonishing to see how the people of the millions of Indians of India accepted him as the FATHER of the Nation in spite of the thousands of Hindu Bengalis in CALCUTTA KILLING and millions of Bengalis and Punjabis displaced as Refugees by the division of Bengal and Punjab who were compelled to left their ancestral homes for the safety of their lives
The Half –naked Fakir Dress of Gandhi fooled the Hindu Bengalis into thinking of him as a “HINDU GOD” as he started the “Non-Violence” in Bengal but it is astonishing to see how the people of the millions of Indians of India accepted him as the FATHER of the Nation instead of Maniram Dewan, a national of hero of ASSAM who first sacrificed his life to fight against the British and in spite of the thousands of Hindu Bengalis in CALCUTTA KILLING and millions of Bengalis and Punjabis displaced as Refugees by the division of Bengal and Punjab who were compelled to left their ancestral homes for the safety of their lives.
Yes, the Half–naked FAKIR Dress of Gandhi fooled the Hindu Bengalis into thinking of him as a “HINDU-GOD” but it is astonishing to see how the political stalwarts of the United Nations closed their eyes to see the slaughter of millions with Gandhi’s ethics of “Non-Violence” in Calcutta and Punjab to bring Division in India and accepted him in the UN as a man of peace of mankind.
The book is dedicated to my beloved Bengali Hindu mother and Bengali Muslim mother who sacrificed their lives to build the futures of their children during the Hindu-Muslim turmoil that was happening during the partition of the country under the leadership of Gandhi. They were facing the onslaught of famine and the constant fear of losing their lives under the prevailing situation of rioting in the country in the event of gaining independence of India through the falsehood of non-violence.
It is a learning lesson for all political leaders of the World to see and learn how a villainous person can make fool the countrymen by having a Dress of half-naked FAKIR (in the words of Winston Churchill) with his ethics of “Non-Violence” bringing division, destruction, slaughter in millions and then the mankind with “Non-Violence” when United Nations Secretary commented a person is a man of peace of mankind.
This book examines India’s naval strategy within the context of Asian regional security. Amidst the intensifying geopolitical contestation in the waters of Asia, this book investigates the growing strategic salience of the Indian Navy. Delhi’s expanding economic and military strength has generated a widespread debate on India’s prospects for shaping the balance of power in Asia. This volume provides much needed texture to the abstract debate on India’s rise by focusing on the changing nature of India’s maritime orientation, the recent evolution of its naval strategy, and its emerging defence diplomacy. In tracing the drift of the Navy from the margins of Delhi’s national security consciousness to a central position, analysing the tension between its maritime possibilities and the continentalist mind set, and in examining the gap between the growing external demands for its security contributions and internal ambivalence, this volume offers rare insights into India’s strategic direction at a critical moment in the nation’s evolution. By examining the internal and external dimensions of the Indian naval future, both of which are in dynamic flux, the essays here help a deeper understanding of India’s changing international possibilities and its impact on Asian and global security. This book will be of much interest to students of naval strategy, Asian politics, security studies and IR, in general.
The Indian Navy has gradually emerged as an indispensable tool of Indian diplomacy in recent years, making it imperative for Indian policy-makers and naval thinkers to think anew the role of the nation’s naval forces in Indian strategy. There is a long tradition in India of viewing the maritime dimension of security as central to the nation’s strategic priorities. With India's economic rise, India is trying to bring that focus back, making its navy integral to national grand strategy. This volume is the first full-length examination of the myriad issues that have emerged out of the recent rise of Indian naval power.