No, Mr President

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Is George W Bush embarks on a state visit to India and Pakistan, it would be instructive to analyse the evolving role of the US in Southasia. Washington DC has always been an active political participant in the region – supporting India against China in 1962, sponsoring military regimes in Pakistan, fighting wars in Afghanistan, having interventionist ambassadors in Nepal, castigating the LTTE in Sri Lanka, and pushing for specific economic policies in all of these countries. The 'war on terror' has ensured that the US not only has a diplomatic presence in the region, but a powerful military force, placed in Afghanistan and Pakistan, to back it up as well.

Considering that the US is the global hegemon, this active role in the Subcontinent is hardly surprising. But it is clearly undesirable. The United States has ignited intra- and inter-state conflicts, supported dictatorships, and directly and indirectly engineered anti-people policies. Such actions overwhelm the well-intentioned activities of the past, including support of scholarships, assistance through USAID, and placement of Peace Corps volunteers. In recent days, Washington has sought to actively project its power in a manner that will be extremely detrimental for the people of the region.

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