India Today

From the Editor-in-Chief

The more things change, the more they stay the same. This maxim seems to rule India-Pakistan relations. A glance at the 16 Pakistan-themed India Today covers in the past five years suggests Prime Minister Narendra Modi's experience has been no different from that of his predecessors Manmohan Singh and Atal Bihari Vajpayee. The build-up is the samea promising start, great personal equations and then, violence, mostly from Pakistan-based terrorists, or, in the case of PM Vajpayee two decades ago, military action to evict the Pakistan army from the Kargil heights.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from India Today

India Today6 min read
A Singham In Saffron
FORMER INDIAN POLICE SERVICE officer Kuppuswamy Annamalai is just four years into his avatar as a politician but is already looking like a pro. At Palladam, on the outskirts of Coimbatore, the Lok Sabha constituency he is contesting from, bursting cr
India Today3 min read
Kshatriyas Declare War on Rupala
A careless comment from the Union minister of fisheries, animal husbandry and dairying, Parshottam Rupala, is threatening to put the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in a spot in a state that it has held for nearly three decades—Gujarat. Rupala’s transgr
India Today4 min read
Advantage Congress
FOR A STATE THAT HAS BEEN IN EXISTENCE only for 10 years and is therefore the country’s youngest, Telangana is fast becoming the new battleground for hard-fought electoral contests. Just five months ago, it saw the end of the decade-long rule of the

Related Books & Audiobooks