تغريدة مثبتة
Chandra D. Bhatta
12.8K posts

Chandra D. Bhatta
@Cdbhatta
Has deep interest in Religion, Dharmasashtra and Political Economy of International Relations. Trained in some parts of अपरा विद्या. All tweets are personal.
Kathmandu. انضم Mayıs 2012
48 يتبع804 المتابعون
Chandra D. Bhatta أُعيد تغريده

Please sign up for the launch of my new eBook @PIIE ❗
🔗…rinternationaleconomics.formtitan.com/ftproject/sing…
Wednesday, April 29, 2026; 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM ET
Peterson Institute for International Economics
1750 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20036
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Chandra D. Bhatta أُعيد تغريده

🚨🇮🇳🇷🇺 India and Russia agree to station up to 3K troops on each other’s territory
Up to 3,000 military personnel could be stationed on each other’s soil at any one time, in a significant boost to defence cooperation between the two long-standing strategic partners.
The arrangement, revealed in an agreement published on Russia’s official legal information portal, also permits the deployment of up to 10 military aircraft and 5 warships simultaneously.
The deal outlines the rules for the reciprocal deployment of military units, naval vessels and aircraft, while also covering logistical, technical and operational support for forces hosted by either country.
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Chandra D. Bhatta أُعيد تغريده
Chandra D. Bhatta أُعيد تغريده

Foreign Affairs just released a podcast interview with me, on how the Iran war is shaping the post-American world. I’m happy to share the following link (my interview with Kanishk Tharoor begins at the 45.48 mark): foreignaffairs.com/podcasts/how-i…
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Chandra D. Bhatta أُعيد تغريده

The Quad is dead.
It is dead because great power competition isn’t centered in the Indo-Pacific anymore. It’s shifting to the Eurasian Heartland, where China and Russia are building a fortress of pipelines, railways, and overland trade routes—beyond the reach of the U.S. Navy.
India may host a BRICS meeting to offset Pakistan’s renewed visibility. But geography is unforgiving: the Himalayas cut India off from China, leaving it peripheral to Beijing’s continental strategy.
That’s the real tragedy—India matters, just not where the game is now being played.
scmp.com/news/china/art…
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Chandra D. Bhatta أُعيد تغريده

I’m teaching a seminar on great power relations this quarter. The full syllabus is now online. I’ll host a virtual discussion at the end of term so stay tuned for more details. Suggestions for future readings also welcome! michaelmcfaul.substack.com/p/great-power-…

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Chandra D. Bhatta أُعيد تغريده

#Nepal | The ancient town of #Madhyapur Thimi, located on the outskirts of #Kathmandu, recently celebrated the vibrant Sindoor Jatra (Vermillion Powder Festival) to welcome the Nepali New Year 2083.
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that's what exactly it is !!!
Sangharsha KC (सचिवालय )@10ghat
"In the past, Nepal was often referred to as a buffer state. But the concept of a buffer state has become outmoded. In the context of the contemporary world, Nepal...can no longer remain a buffer in the old sense of the term..." King Birendra, Feb 25, 1975, Coronation Address
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इन्धन अभावले भारतबाट धमाधम फर्कँदै नेपाली कामदार ekantipur.com/news/2026/04/1…
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Chandra D. Bhatta أُعيد تغريده
Chandra D. Bhatta أُعيد تغريده
Chandra D. Bhatta أُعيد تغريده

I haven’t read the book but these insights from a review of it are worth your time:
“We now see [the Soviet Union] as a period of failure and decline; for many of us it has faded into an abstraction. But for those who lived there, it was the only place they had ever known. Every family had suffered directly or indirectly from Stalin’s murderous policies, and from the poverty and famine that accompanied them. But he had led them to beat the Germans. They were justifiably proud of that. They felt proud, too, as their country rose to challenge the US on land, at sea, in space, and in the hearts and minds of those who lived in what was then called the Third World. Once Stalin was gone most Russians were content to get on with their lives in what seemed like a new normality. [...]
The Soviet Union set out to create a comprehensive education system which by Khrushchev’s time had transformed a largely illiterate people into one of the best educated in the world, even if the work of its brilliant scientists was disproportionately directed to military purposes. Despite its unrelenting demands for orthodoxy, the Soviet Union produced some of the greatest creative artists of the 20th century: writers such as Pasternak, Grossman, and Akhmatova, composers such as Shostakovich, Prokofiev, and Khachaturyan. In one of his lurches towards openness, Khrushchev sanctioned, in 1962, the publication of Solzhenitsyn’s subversive Gulag novella One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich.
In the West many were convinced that the Soviet regime was secure because its people were politically passive, brainwashed into orthodoxy. We make the same mistake about totalitarian regimes today. Soviet people were as capable of thinking for themselves as anyone. They lived in a totalitarian state, so most of them sensibly kept their heads down and got on with their lives. Some discussed in private things which the authorities would have preferred them to leave alone. The bravest challenged the regime in public, but even they were not advocating the adoption of Western liberalism. Andrei Sakharov, the most distinguished of them all, described his views as ‘profoundly socialist’”.

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Government calls Nepal a ‘buffer state’. Foreign policy experts disagree kathmandupost.com/national/2026/… via @kathmandupost
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Balendra Shah Is on the 2026 TIME100 List share.google/xCZa2o7fmnwTua…
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@Cdbhatta: Good Morning Sir 🙏
Balen Shah has made a good impression. This will stand him in good stead.
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China presses Nepal to keep distance from Tibetan and Taiwanese activities kathmandupost.com/national/2026/… via @kathmandupost
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Why China's Veto on Hormuz Is the Smartest Move of This Entire War youtu.be/jgrhbYtW5sk?si… via @YouTube

YouTube
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२७ घण्टामा उथलपुथल र राज्य संयन्त्र उदांगिएको वर्ष shilapatra.com/detail/183455
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