War at the Top of the World

War at the Top of the World

Product ID: 8277

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Author: Eric S Margolis
Publisher: Roli Books
Year: 2001
Language: English
Pages: 250
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8174361642

Description

Fascinating and chilling, this work is a required reading for anyone interested in the current balance of world power.



In 1988, India and Pakistan conducted nuclear tests that shocked the world. In spring 1999, both countries tested medium-range missiles. Recently, both countries have been engaged in heavy fighting over the disputed territory of Kashmir and Ladakh.



It is veteran journalist Eric Margolis contention that the remote province of Kashmir could be the next flashpoint for a possible nuclear war. Both India and Pakistan have claims on the territory and, armed with nuclear-tipped missiles, are locked in an increasingly tense military confrontation. According to the US Central Intelligence Agency, this confrontation is the world’s most dangerous dispute.



The author is a leading specialist on South Asia and his book takes the reader through the geopolitical complexities of this area: the disputes between India and Pakistan; China and India; as well as the rival interests of Russia, the United States, Iran, China, India and Pakistan. His book offers a clear, concise analysis of this complicated, little understood, and neglected part of the world that contains 25 per cent of the world’s population.



Eric Margolis combines vivid first-hand accounts as a war correspondent in Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Kashmir and Tibet, together with an historical and strategic overview of the region. Geopolitical tension is rife in the area and the author believes it will be the prime theatre of world conflict early in this century.



COMMENT:

To read War at the Top of the World is to read tomorrow’s headlines today. In addition to being a good writer, Margolis brings two qualities to this book. One is his sympathy for militant Islam, and the other, his knowledge about it. The reader need not share the first to benefit from the second.
- George Jonas

Contents

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