{"id":247682,"date":"2026-06-12T03:27:38","date_gmt":"2026-06-11T21:57:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/?p=247682"},"modified":"2026-06-22T00:05:27","modified_gmt":"2026-06-21T18:35:27","slug":"india-strategic-ambiguity-unravels-in-west-asia","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/index.php\/india-strategic-ambiguity-unravels-in-west-asia\/","title":{"rendered":"India: Strategic Ambiguity Unravels In West Asia"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>By <a href=\"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/?s=Sachithanandam+Sathananthan\">Sachithanandam Sathananthan<\/a> &#8211;<\/strong><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_202551\" style=\"width: 160px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-202551\" class=\"size-thumbnail wp-image-202551\" src=\"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/06\/Dr.-Sachithanandam-Sathananthan-150x150.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"150\" height=\"150\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/06\/Dr.-Sachithanandam-Sathananthan-150x150.jpg 150w, https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/06\/Dr.-Sachithanandam-Sathananthan-45x45.jpg 45w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-202551\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Dr. Sachithanandam Sathananthan<\/p><\/div>\n<p><strong>Strategic ambiguity dribbles into the Arabian sand<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>India\u2019s subservience to the United States became all too clear, if not earlier, certainly when New Delhi joined and supported US Imperialism\u2019s brainchild, the India-Middle East-Europe-Economic corridor (IMEC) at the 2023 G20 Summit. New Delhi loyally complied as Washington manoeuvred to pit the IMEC as a political challenge to, and a strategic alternative for, China\u2019s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).<\/p>\n<p>New Delhi may be convinced that its actions are in accordance with India\u2019s national interests. They include also its participation in US Imperialism\u2019s anti-China 2007 Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad), rebooted in 2017, supposedly to ensure \u201cfree and open\u201d Indo-Pacific maritime routes. In return New Delhi anticipated the US would side with India as a critical counterweight to China\u2019s growing might in the Indian Ocean<\/p>\n<p>India\u2019s strategy planners masked the consequent self-inflicted geopolitical vulnerability with the slogan Strategic Ambiguity. However they perhaps ought to have paid heed to Russian General and geopolitical theorist Aleksei Vandam\u2019s 1912 aphorism about the perfidious Anglo-Saxons: &#8220;It is bad to have an Anglo-Saxon as an enemy, but God forbid to have him as a friend!&#8221; Henry Kissinger paraphrased it for the United States.<\/p>\n<p>Washington used Trump Administration\u2019s tariffs to bludgeon New Delhi into acceding to the February 2026 preliminary Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA). The <a href=\"https:\/\/in.usembassy.gov\/fact-sheet-the-united-states-and-india-announce-historic-trade-deal\/\">initial terms<\/a> of the lopsided BTA committed India to, among others, \u201cstop purchasing Russian Federation oil\u201d and \u201celiminate or reduce tariffs on all U.S. industrial goods and a wide range of U.S. food and agricultural products\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>The near catastrophic damage the BTA would inflict on India\u2019s manufacturing sector is obvious; it is equally clear the concessions the US extracted for its agricultural sector threatens the livelihood of almost 50 per cent of the India\u2019s population, engaged in agriculture. Belated <a href=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/watch\/?v=903252452771407\">breast beating<\/a> by nationalist Indians is unlikely to arrest what many bemoan as the gradual re-colonization of India.<\/p>\n<p>Although India is a Founder Member of BRICS, New Delhi\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/www.koreatimes.co.kr\/world\/20250312\/brics-nations-divide-on-us-dollar-replacement-with-india-declaring-no-interest\">declaration<\/a> in early March that it has \u201cabsolutely no interest\u201d in the Organisation\u2019s de-dollarization policy is one more reason for the growing suspicion among the Global Majority that India is a US mole within the BRICS. Consequently India\u2019s positions in the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) \u2013 a counter to NATO \u2013 too have come under a cloud, especially since both organisations are strongly backed by China and Russia.<\/p>\n<p>The recent <a href=\"https:\/\/www.rt.com\/india\/640957-west-has-single-power-dominance\/\">double speak<\/a> by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) spokesperson, that \u201c(i)f India is part of Quad, India is equally a partner in BRICS\u201d, convinces at best the party\u2019s diehards. India descends to glib justifications at its peril.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Islamabad steals a march on New Delhi <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Pakistan apparently took advantage of the weakening trust in India to score a stunning feat of diplomacy when both Washington and Tehran in late March accepted Islamabad as the main Interlocutor in the on going \u201ctalks\u201d on resolving the war triggered by the US-Israeli attack on Iran on 28 February. Islamabad, as Mediator, negotiated the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.japantimes.co.jp\/commentary\/2026\/04\/13\/world\/islamabad-accord-saves-trump\/\">Islamabad Accord<\/a>, a two-week ceasefire on 8 April with the full backing of Beijing and Moscow and assisted by Muscat; evidently largely due to a significant degree of trust Washington and Tehran have reposed in Islamabad.<\/p>\n<p>Pakistan\u2019s diplomatic coup came as a body blow to India\u2019s long asserted claim to be, in effect, the singular representative of the Global South. Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar strove to minimise the political fallout; he <a href=\"https:\/\/theprint.in\/politics\/not-dalal-like-pakistan-india-wont-interfere-in-iran-us-conflict-govt-tells-all-party-meeting\/2888775\/\">brushed aside<\/a> Islamabad\u2019s landmark achievement: \u201cWe aren\u2019t like Pakistan,\u201d he disdained; \u201cwe aren\u2019t a\u00a0<em>dalal<\/em>\u201d. <em>Dalal<\/em> (broker) or not, both Washington and Tehran trusted <strong>not<\/strong> India, the self-proclaimed <em>Vishwaguru<\/em> (Universal Educator), but Pakistan. Islamabad is widely seen to be acting on behalf of the Global Majority\u2019s elites in general in the unfolding historic power struggle in West Asia.<\/p>\n<p>New Delhi\u2019s Strategic Ambiguity, in the Indian context, is arguably the myopic tactic of sitting-on-the-fence; it\u2019s little more than village cunning, so to speak, writ large on inter-State relations. The advantages are obvious; less obvious are the costs of the resulting emasculation of political integrity, of being distrusted by almost all sides. Washington cannot but view India\u2019s presence in the SCO with caution while Tehran is unlikely to be pleased after Prime Minister Narendra Modi <a href=\"https:\/\/m.dailyhunt.in\/news\/india\/english\/opindia+english-epaper-opinden\/we+feel+your+pain+we+share+your+grief+pm+modi+calls+out+terrorism+and+killing+of+civilians+by+hamas+reaffirms+indias+support+to+israel-newsid-n702380081\">assured<\/a> the Israeli Knesset: \u201cwe feel your pain, we share your grief\u201d. What\u2019s worse, he condemned Hamas\u2019 resistance and not Israel\u2019s genocide in Gaza two days before the US-Israeli unprovoked and illegal February attacked on Iran, an attack he unconvincingly claimed was unaware of.<\/p>\n<p>The foreign policy mandarins in New Delhi seemingly believe India\u2019s Strategic Ambiguity involves being friends with all countries; India\u2019s prominent role in the Non-Aligned Movement infused the stance with an element of credibility, which, however, wore off after the Cold War ended in 1990-91. Most among the Global Majority are not impressed by the foreign policy posture, as evidenced by the limited support India received, from the US, UK, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE and EU, for its 2025 Operation Sindoor against Pakistan.<\/p>\n<p>India\u2019s collaboration with US Imperialism and NATO\u2019s brutal colonial invasion and occupation of Afghanistan (2001 to 2021) also tainted its geopolitical standing. New Delhi chose to be a <a href=\"https:\/\/www.mea.gov.in\/uploads\/publicationdocs\/176_india-and-afghanistan-a-development-partnership.pdf\">Development Partner<\/a>, implementing a wide range of infrastructure and capacity building projects, costing more than $3 billion, it plausibly claimed to have \u201chumanitarian\u201d outcomes including a taste for Bollywood movies distributed to enhance India\u2019s soft power.<\/p>\n<p>However, New Delhi stood with US Imperialism and on the wrong side of history in Afghanistan. The Global Majority in general cannot but interpret India\u2019s interventions as designed to prop up, to \u201cstabilise\u201d, the US colonial regime in Kabul.<\/p>\n<p>Unsurprisingly, the fiercely nationalistic Afghan people, whose country has been the Graveyard of Empires, and many a Muslim-majority country could not have forgotten India\u2019s dreadful bid to buttress the US Occupation. That deepened India\u2019s political isolation.<\/p>\n<p>New Delhi palpably hoped to worm its way back into Afghan hearts by aligning with Kabul against Islamabad in the recent <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/4\/2\/pakistan-afghanistan-hold-talks-in-china-to-end-months-of-conflict\">skirmishes<\/a> between the two nations. The ploy proved essentially futile since the April Kabul-Islamabad <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/4\/7\/afghanistan-brands-china-peace-talks-with-pakistan-useful\">peace talks<\/a> were held in Beijing \u2013 <strong>not<\/strong> in New Delhi!<\/p>\n<p><strong>Washington\u2019s <em>demarche<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Strategic Ambiguity suffered a further setback. The visiting US Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau delivered his government\u2019s <em>demarche<\/em> to the Indian foreign policy establishment at the Raisina Dialogue on 5 March 2026, about a week into the US-Israeli aggression on Iran. He <a href=\"https:\/\/www.state.gov\/releases\/office-of-the-spokesperson\/2026\/03\/deputy-secretary-of-state-christopher-landau-at-the-raisina-dialogue\">reminded<\/a> New Delhi of its role as a subordinate ally: \u201cIndia should understand that we are not going to make the same mistakes with India that we made with China 20 years ago in terms of saying, we are going to let you develop all these markets, and then, the next thing we know, you are beating us in a lot of commercial things.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar\u2019s tepid <a href=\"https:\/\/www.deccanherald.com\/india\/indias-rise-is-unstoppable-and-it-alone-will-determine-trajectory-of-its-growth-jaishankar-3923235\">response<\/a>, the \u201crise of India\u2026will be determined by our strength, not by the mistakes of others\u201d, dodged directly challenging Washington. The Opposition Congress Party <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nationalheraldindia.com\/politics\/congress-slams-landaus-remark-on-limiting-indias-market-blames-compromised-pm-modi\">pounced<\/a> on the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party\u2019s timidity.<\/p>\n<p>Landau insinuated the US is not fooled by India\u2019s amorphous foreign policy position, which would not dissuade Washington from undermining, directly or indirectly, the country\u2019s economy if that ever remotely challenged US global hegemony (as China has done successfully). Is it a mere coincidence that about a week after the US <em>demarche<\/em>, Indian security forces arrested six Ukrainian nationals and one US citizen in Mizoram and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.aljazeera.com\/news\/2026\/3\/24\/why-has-india-arrested-us-ukrainian-nationals-under-anti-terror-laws\">charged<\/a> them with training \u201cinsurgents\u201d and supplying them weapons in the India-Myanmar border areas?<\/p>\n<p>The Clinton administration did not make \u201cmistakes\u201d, as Landau claimed. They supported China\u2019s accession to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in 1999, a White House <a href=\"https:\/\/clintonwhitehouse4.archives.gov\/WH\/New\/html\/20000301_3.html\">press statement<\/a> explained, to \u201cenable Chinese businesses and consumers to connect with the global economy and advance China\u2019s integration into that economy\u2026This cannot help but promote the right kind of change in China.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Reading between the lines, inviting China into the WTO is a counter-revolutionary strategy. Washington schemed that China\u2019s private sector manufacturing and high technology entrepreneurial class, once integrated into the \u201cglobal [capitalist] economy\u201d, would grow stronger. The emboldened class could then, if necessary nudged to, challenge the Chinese Communist Party\u2019s Socialism with Chinese Characteristics and gradually \u201cpromote the right kind of change\u201d, towards a US-style capitalist system.<\/p>\n<p>The subterfuge ignominiously failed because Beijing took advantage of Washington\u2019s ignorance of China\u2019s economic model and artfully dodged the trap. They exploited the expanded access to global markets through the WTO to accelerate China\u2019s State-planned market economy and boost its own meteoric economic rise during the three post-Cold War decades (1991-2020).<\/p>\n<p><strong>Strategic Ambiguity: Gandhi\u2019s legacy<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Strategic Ambiguity approach, arguably, is partially rooted in Mohandas K. Gandhi\u2019s politics of non-violent resistance, predominantly through self-deprivation, against British colonial rule in India (1920 -1942). Though cloaked in the lofty concept of <em>Satyagraha<\/em> (truth as strength), most Indian housewives would readily recognise the tactic; for they routinely threaten to touch not a morsel of food, a drop of water (fasting) till the abusive husband changes his ways (if at all, and not for long). It\u2019s a weapon of the weak.<\/p>\n<p>Gandhi\u2019s <em>Satyagraha<\/em> technique claims to not coerce but to persuade and transform the violator by the force of reason. The suffering of the oppressed is said to purify the sufferers and appeal to the soul of the oppressor. The theme is cinematically exploited by countless Indian movies (<em>Devdas<\/em>) to almost deify the sacrificial wife\/lover and Hollywood (<em>The Beauty and the Beast)<\/em> popularised it globally.<\/p>\n<p>No convincing historical or contemporary evidence could be found to support the contention that a victim\u2019s suffering purified the soul of either the oppressed or the oppressor. Moreover, the practice of <em>Satyagraha<\/em> severely retards the growth of adversarial political teeth, essential to effectively interact in power-driven <em>realpolitik<\/em>. What\u2019s worse, it avoided challenging the legitimacy of the British colonial regime.<\/p>\n<p>Consequently <strong>individuals<\/strong> committed to <em>Satyagraha<\/em> internalised the causes of oppression embedded in the structure of the colonial State; they compensated their powerlessness by claiming an elusive moral high ground, even superiority, by eschewing violence in their asymmetric, largely losing struggles against the <strong>systemic<\/strong> forces of political oppression and military domination.<\/p>\n<p>Trained as a lawyer, Gandhi understandably was unaware that political violence is structural. In Apartheid South Africa, where he first experimented with <em>Satyagraha<\/em>, he seemingly failed to recognise violence was not embedded in the law but was integral to the colonial system, impelled by the dominant colonising classes in pursuit of their rapacious interests. Perhaps he believed, as many in his fraternity mistakenly do, that reality follows law.<\/p>\n<p>Consequently, he reduced historical processes to the individual who is an intrinsic part of, and largely constrained by, the same forces; his ahistorical approach missed the wood for the trees. Gandhi\u2019s (and his followers\u2019) obsession with the trees \u2013 an admittedly inspirational &#8220;be the change you wish to see in the world&#8221; \u2013 failed to grasp the historical task of inflicting a military defeat upon the colonial power.<\/p>\n<p>The anti-colonial revolutions led by Mao Zedong, Ho Chi Ming, Ahmed Ben Bella, Agostinho Neto, Samora Machel, Fidel Castro and Ernesto \u201cChe\u201d Guevara, Augusto C\u00e9sar Sandino and many others resolutely followed the ancient Tradition of the Warrior: that national character is forged in the Crucible of the Sword by vanquishing the gratuitous violator of one\u2019s world.<\/p>\n<p>Frantz Fanon\u2019s formulation in his <em>The Wretched of the Earth<\/em> sharply underlines that the victory of armed revolutionary force and attendant sacrifices made during an anti-colonial war are essential to reconstitute, to decolonise, the colonised mind savaged by the coloniser.<\/p>\n<p>Crucially, neither Gandhi nor his followers were physically and psychologically equipped for armed revolutionary tasks.<\/p>\n<p>So, <em>Satyagraha<\/em> spurned that hallowed revolutionary tradition. It papered over the consequent ideological timidity and organisational weakness by invoking the moral superiority of <em>Ahimsa<\/em> (not inflicting suffering).<\/p>\n<p><strong>Political logic of <em>Satyagraha<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The preference for non-violence, despite its moralistic garb, assumes that the colonised people are too weak to directly challenge the colonial State\u2019s armed power wielded by the white master, in whose Empire the sun was said never to set. Gandhi very likely imbibed these formative perceptions of unassailable British military power during his stints with the\u00a0Natal Indian Volunteer Ambulance Corps in the Second Boer War (1899) and the Indian Stretcher Bearer Corps during the destruction of the Zulu Resistance (1906).<\/p>\n<p>He organised the two Corps as the Empire\u2019s loyal Subject, duty-bound to buttress its colonial wars. He attempted a short-sighted transactional ploy believing that the imputed beneficence of alleged British fair play, perhaps internalised during his legal training as Barrister-at-Law at London\u2019s Inner Temple (1891), would reciprocate Indians\u2019 collaboration by granting a few more rights than those allowed to South Africa\u2019s black population. The Apartheid regime tossed a separate, third door for Indians to enter the post office to chew on, and not much more.<\/p>\n<p>If, as alleged, the counter-revolutionary brutality Gandhi witnessed, especially during the repression of the Zulus, transformed him from the disillusioned Subject into a hopeful rebel, the butchery also overawed the Gandhi. It is fair to surmise that, rather than confront what he saw as devastating British military power and risk a repetition of the terrifying slaughter he had witnessed, Gandhi creatively reached deep into Indian philosophical traditions of non-violence to take refuge in the morally plausible passive resistance or non-cooperation \u2013 a sort of State-level trade union action against the British Indian regime.<\/p>\n<p>The political diffidence inherited from the practice of <em>Satyagraha<\/em> against colonialism was clearly evident when Nehru invited Lord Mountbatten \u2013 the arch Imperialist \u2013 to assume the historic role of the first Governor General of India in 1947. It was in full display again in the new Indian Army\u2019s tear-jerking <a href=\"https:\/\/www.livehistoryindia.com\/story\/eras\/british-withdrawal\">farewell<\/a> to the last departing British contingent, the 1st Battalion of the Somerset Light Infantry. The units of the newly formed Indian Army provided the guard of honour and the Indian government gifted an oil painting, the Indian tricolour and a miniature silver replica of the Gateway of India, all presumably in appreciation of the East India Company\u2019s pillage and British Crown\u2019s brutal colonial rule over about two centuries.<\/p>\n<p>One cannot help but contrast the historic defeat of Imperialism\u2019s satrap Chiang Kai-shek in China and the humiliating retreat of the French and US colonial rulers with their armies as they fled Vietnam.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Eisenhower administration\u2019s China trap <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Premier Zhou En-lai exchanged letters in 1959 over the India-China border issue. In the one dated 7 November Zhou <a href=\"https:\/\/www.marxists.org\/subject\/india\/sino-india-boundary-question\/ch04.htm\">implied<\/a> neither New Delhi nor Beijing had a hand in delineating the colonial border and both sides should logically have no stake in it and, therefore, ought to reach a workable compromise.<\/p>\n<p>A May 1959 note, apparently drafted by Mao Zedong, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.hindustantimes.com\/analysis\/when-china-wanted-to-make-peace-with-india\/story-znFcztwvbq1QvKYM4dBUjI.html\">reportedly assured<\/a>: \u201cour principal enemy is US imperialism&#8230;China will not be so foolish as to antagonize India in the west.\u201d Foreign minister Chen Yi reportedly added: \u201cOur dispute with India is very small&#8230;We are in a serious situation and need your friendship\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>At the April 1960 Nehru-Zhou summit, Zhou reportedly suggested a \u201cBarter\u201d to settle the border disputes: China would recognise the McMahon Line and India\u2019s sovereignty over Arunachal Pradesh provided Nehru recognised China\u2019s sovereignty over Aksai Chin. Nehru\u2019s formative political grooming in Gandhi\u2019s <em>Satyagraha<\/em> movement had not sharpened his adversarial teeth to confidently explore Zhou\u2019s offer.<\/p>\n<p>Nehru <a href=\"https:\/\/www.hindustantimes.com\/analysis\/when-china-wanted-to-make-peace-with-india\/story-znFcztwvbq1QvKYM4dBUjI.html\">rebuffed<\/a> Zhou\u2019s proposed swap reportedly citing constitutional grounds and dismissed it as \u201chorse trading.\u201d He perhaps was emboldened by the Dwight Eisenhower administration\u2019s <a href=\"https:\/\/theprint.in\/opinion\/nehrus-forward-policy-remains-a-puzzle-but-he-had-confidence-in-strong-allies-soft-power\/1185054\/?utm_source=izooto&amp;utm_medium=push_notification&amp;utm_campaign=ThePrint\">leanings<\/a> towards India in the backdrop of US Imperialism\u2019s aggression against China in the east (Korea) and rising Cold War tensions.<\/p>\n<p>New Delhi proudly and with misplaced confidence apparently assumed that the country\u2019s moral defence of China\u2019s right to the UNSC seat occupied by the Republic of China (Taiwan) might compensate for aligning with Washington against Beijing.<\/p>\n<p>However, with the US effectively in their corner and given the deteriorating Sino-Soviet relations, the emboldened Nehru and senior Congress Party leaders adopted a firm, even unyielding, stance against the independently confident revolutionary leadership of China; though formally legal, they yet unwisely clung to British India\u2019s Imperial <a href=\"https:\/\/theprint.in\/opinion\/nehrus-forward-policy-remains-a-puzzle-but-he-had-confidence-in-strong-allies-soft-power\/1185054\/?utm_source=izooto&amp;utm_medium=push_notification&amp;utm_campaign=ThePrint\">Forward Policy<\/a> and the British-drawn flawed border. By digging its heels in, New Delhi played into Washington\u2019s hands.<\/p>\n<p>Evidently Nehru failed to recognise the trap set by Eisenhower; it was in Washington\u2019s geostrategic interest to block a rapprochement between New Delhi and Beijing and, if possible, fan flames of conflict. The legacy of the unresolved Sino-Indian conflict has favoured Washington, which has manipulated New Delhi\u2019s vulnerability arising from its avoidable, hostile opposition to Beijing to this day, demonstrated by New Delhi\u2019s involuntary involvement in the Quad and IMEC and the unsteady role in BRICS.<\/p>\n<p>The credibility of Gandhi\u2019s <em>Satyagraha<\/em> is based on the so far largely unquestioned and unproven belief that the non-violent agitation either terrified British Imperialism into retreat or reformed Imperial rulers or both to engineer a transfer of power to India. On other hand, the <a href=\"https:\/\/ia801303.us.archive.org\/16\/items\/forgottenarmyind00pete\/forgottenarmyind00pete.pdf\">Red Fort Trials<\/a> of captured patriotic Indian soldiers of Subhas Chandra Bose\u2019s revolutionary Indian National Army catalysed a widespread nationalist upsurge, challenged the legitimacy of the British Indian Regime, struck a deep sympathetic cord among the majority Indian troops in the British Indian Army and arguably played a greater role to stampede the British rulers to transfer power.<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>*The author is a Sri Lankan independent researcher who read Political Economy for the Ph.D. degree at the University of Cambridge Wolfson College. He was Assistant Director, International Studies at The Marga Institute, Colombo; Visiting Research Scholar at the Jawaharlal Nehru University School of International Studies; and has taught World History at Karachi University\u2019s Institute of Business Administration. <\/em><em>In his Youtube channel @DrSSathananthan discusses history and politics in the current context.\u00a0 <\/em><em>He is an award-winning filmmaker. <\/em><em>email: commentaries.ss@gmail.com <\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":470,"featured_media":246039,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[3,46,8],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-247682","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-colombotelegraph","category-constitutional-reforms","category-editorial"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v26.3 - 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