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What countries are India allies with?

What countries are India allies with?

Strategic partners Though India is not a part of any major military alliance, it has close strategic and military relationship with most of the fellow major powers. Countries considered India’s closest include the Russian Federation, Israel, Afghanistan, France, Bhutan, Bangladesh, and the United States.

Will India ever become superpower?

This will provide India a major economic advantage over the US, China, and the European Union, which will face a decline in there labour force in the next 30 years. India’s PPP is expected to reach $43 trillion and surpass the US by 2050 making it the second-largest economy in the world after China.

Is India going to split in the future?

Yes it will split in future. It had already split-ed in the past. Pakistan and Bangladesh were the part of Indian when it was born as a country. If Western World (especially USA) doesn’t think India as a Union is not worth and few more nations need to be created in the region for their interest,…

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Will India ever stay as one nation?

India will stay as one but it needs work. A special effort has to be made to see it as a rich collection of many nations. These nations are interconnected by history and geography and democratic politics. There has to be a narrative of nationhood which sees India in its diversity rather than imposing a false unity.

Is it possible for India to break away from India?

Without the common bonds of Bharat (the cultural name of India that is over 3000 years old), India would have been in a civil war long time ago. India is among the least policed nations in the world and if people really wanted to break away from India, they would have already done so.

How many times has India been politically united?

People who are citing all those (good) reasons for cohesion and continued unity as a nation state are forgetting that India has been politically united only about 25\% of the time in its history (a hundred odd years each during Mauryan, Gupta, Mughal and British times respectively).