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India, Pakistan delegations in Washington DC, India-US ties very strong: US Commerce Secretary

India, Pakistan delegations in Washington DC, India-US ties very strong: US Commerce Secretary

India Today2 days ago

The World Today discusses India and Pakistan's global outreach following the Pahalgam terror attack. Indian and Pakistani delegations are in Washington DC to engage US lawmakers and policymakers. The programme also covers Ukraine's recent attacks on Russian airfields and the Crimean bridge, escalating tensions in the ongoing conflict. US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick's optimism about an India-US trade deal and Kumar Mangalam Birla's $4.1 billion investment in Alabama are highlighted as signs of strengthening India-US economic ties.

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A new paradigm in Russia-Ukraine war
A new paradigm in Russia-Ukraine war

Hindustan Times

time22 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

A new paradigm in Russia-Ukraine war

On Sunday, Ukraine executed one of the most extraordinary asymmetric operations in modern military history. Using domestically built first-person-view (FPV) drones deployed from deep inside Russian territory, Kyiv launched a coordinated assault against several military airbases as far as eastern Siberia, the border with Mongolia, and the Arctic. Known as Operation Spiderweb, the attacks destroyed or severely damaged as many as 20 strategic aircraft, including nuclear-capable bombers and early-warning planes; Kyiv claims the true toll could reach 41. Only two days later, on Tuesday, the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) struck again – this time detonating underwater explosives and damaging the Kerch Bridge, the critical rail and road artery connecting Russia to occupied Crimea. The combined message from Kyiv could not have been clearer: We may be far smaller and — on paper at least — weaker, but we can strike hard and reach far into Russia. Using drones produced indigenously for less than the cost of an iPhone, Ukraine took out strategic bombers worth upward of $100 million each — many of which are nearly impossible to replace due to sanctions and Russia's degraded industrial base. At a 300,000-to-one return on investment, this is the kind of asymmetric operation that can upend the rules of modern warfare. Just as significant as the material damage is what the attacks revealed: That a small but determined and innovative nation can deploy cheap, scalable, and decentralised tech to challenge a much larger, conventionally superior foe – and even degrade elements of a nuclear superpower's second-strike capacity. The lessons will reverberate globally, from Taipei to Islamabad. Perhaps the biggest impact of Ukraine's battlefield coup may be to challenge the core strategic presumption that has guided Vladimir Putin's thinking for over three years — that time is on his side. Since the invasion began, Putin has bet on outlasting Ukraine — grinding down its defences, draining Western support, and waiting for the political winds in Washington and Europe to shift. That assumption has underpinned his refusal to negotiate seriously. But the success of Ukraine's drone and sabotage operations challenges that theory of victory. It shows that Ukraine is not simply holding the line or surviving a war of attrition; it is shifting the battlefield and expanding the costs of continued war for Russia in ways the Kremlin has not anticipated. That shift matters, especially in the diplomatic context. The timing of the drone campaign — just 24 hours before a direct round of talks between Russian and Ukrainian officials in Istanbul — was hardly coincidental. Kyiv's actions were designed to signal that Ukraine is not negotiating from a position of weakness and won't be coerced into a bad deal. Though the Istanbul meeting itself was predictably fruitless — lasting just over an hour and reinforcing the irreconcilability of the two sides' positions— the fact that the Kremlin showed up fresh off such a high-profile embarrassment suggests it may be starting to realise that Ukraine has cards to play and continuing the war carries risks for Russia. This may not be enough to bring Russia to the negotiating table in good faith, but it could make it more open to limited agreements. To be sure, a permanent peace settlement remains as distant as ever. Kyiv continues to push for an unconditional ceasefire that Russia rejects out of hand. In Istanbul, Moscow proposed two equally unacceptable alternatives: Either Kyiv retreats from Russian-claimed territories or accepts limits on its ability to rearm, including a halt to Western military aid. But the right kind of pressure from the US, coordinated with European allies, could now stand a better chance of extracting a first-phase deal — whether that's a 30-day ceasefire, a humanitarian corridor, or a prisoner swap — that could then potentially turn into something bigger and more durable. At the same time, Ukraine's gains increase the tail risks of dangerous escalation. Russia's deterrent posture has been eroded. Putin's red lines – on Nato enlargement, Western weapons use, attacks inside Russia – have been crossed repeatedly without serious consequence. That makes him look weak but also increases the risk that he will feel compelled to escalate the conflict more dramatically to restore his credibility at home and abroad. Russia's immediate response to the recent attacks will be more of the same: heavier indiscriminate bombing of Ukrainian cities and infrastructure. But a darker possibility is that, boxed in and humiliated, Putin might consider a tactical nuclear strike. The threshold for such an extreme step is high — not least because China, Russia's most important global partner, strongly opposes nuclear use. That scenario remains unlikely, but less so than before June 1. And Putin is emboldened by the belief that the West — particularly Donald Trump's US — fears direct military confrontation more than anything. If he assesses that Russia's position in the war is becoming untenable or its conventional deterrence is crumbling, his calculus could change. Ukraine has just reminded the Kremlin — and the world — that it can shape events, not just react to them. This doesn't put it on a path to victory or bring the war to an end. But by showing that it has leverage and that Moscow has more to lose than it thought, Ukraine has altered the strategic equation and opened a narrow window for diplomacy — even if the endgame remains as elusive as ever. The alternative is a deeper and more unpredictable conflict that grows more dangerous the longer it drags on. Ian Bremmer is the founder and board president of Eurasia Group Foundation. The views expressed.

Mahua Moitra marries ex- BJD MP Pinaki Misra: Who is firebrand TMC leader's husband?
Mahua Moitra marries ex- BJD MP Pinaki Misra: Who is firebrand TMC leader's husband?

Mint

time23 minutes ago

  • Mint

Mahua Moitra marries ex- BJD MP Pinaki Misra: Who is firebrand TMC leader's husband?

It's official now. Trinamool Congress Member of Parliament (MP) Mahua Moitra has married senior Biju Janata Dal (BJD) leader Pinaki Misra. The wedding reportedly took place on May 3 in Germany. Moitra confirmed the wedding in a post on X thanking people for 'love and wishes' Born in 1959, Misra is a known politician who has been an MP four times. He was elected to Lok Sabha from Puri in Odisha for the first time in 1996 when he defeated defeating then-Union Minister Braja Kishore Tripathy. Misra was re-elected again in 2009, 2014 and 2019. A senior Advocate in the Supreme Court of India, Misra has had an illustrious political and legal career spanning nearly three decades. Misra, 65, holds BA(Hons) History from St Stephen's College, Delhi and LLB from Faculty of Law, University of Delhi. Moitra is his second wife. He was earlier married to Sangita Misra and has one daughter and one son. Moitra is his second wife. Misra has been member of the Parliamentary Committee on External Affairs, subordinate legislation and Civil Aviation. Misra specialises in Corporate Law, Foreign Exchange, Customs and Excise Laws, Mining related Laws, Company Laws, Environmental Laws and Constitutional Laws. Misra played soccer, hockey and cricket during school and college days and was captain of St Stephen`s College Football Team. Misra has travelled to over 30 countries so far. In 2013, he travelled to Sri Lanka as part of the Indian Parliamentary delegation led by the Lok Sabha speaker at the Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference. The same year he was in Austria as part of the Indian Parliamentary delegation. The Misra family controled companies including Ocean Grand Resorts and Hotels Pvt. Ltd, Jupiter Estates Pvt. Ltd, White Lily Estates Pvt. Ltd and Janpath Properties Pvt. Ltd. Misra had stakes in Brady Telesoft Pvt. Ltd and WH Brady and Co. Ltd. too. Moitra, a former investment banker, is TMC from Kirshnanagar in West Bengal. Before becoming MP, Moitra served as an MLA from Karimpur before winning the Krishnanagar Lok Sabha seat in 2019 as a TMC candidate. Though expelled from Parliament in 2023 over a controversy, she made a strong comeback by winning again in 2024. Known widely for her viral 'early signs of fascism' speech, Moitra has also held key roles in the party and was previously married to Danish financier Lars Brorson. She later dated advocate Jai Anant Dehadrai. TMC MP Saayoni Ghosh also wished the newly-wed couple. 'Congratulations Mm & Pm… Wishing you a lifetime of love and laughter,' she said.

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