Originally posted by notyoueither
Wrong answer. FDR didn't sign the Atlantic Charter with Hitler in Italian waters.
Wrong answer. FDR didn't sign the Atlantic Charter with Hitler in Italian waters.
Suspended due to military take over of government.
Back in 2004 baby. Ally in the War on Terror and that ****.
Probably wouldn't win points towards the CW doing nothing about the single party Chinese beating the hell out of a democratic India.
Oh, I am sure condemnation would flow. Of course I doubt most Commonwealth me,bers would do anything to piss of China, especially the African ones.
The issue is China (single party, totalitarian state even if they are investigating capitalism)-India (democratic member of the CW).
The issue is biog country [China] at war with big country [India]. Those are the types of wars most other states stay out off.
Hindi is the most common language as a first language, from what I read. Then there are more people that know English than any of the other 22 first languages. English is recognized in the constitution 'for official purposes' like government, commerce, lingua Franca...
And that still does not mean even 30% of people in India speak English...
The offer was there. The Brits failed to pick it up because they were certain they needed no help to take out the Argentines on the Falklands. Turned out they needed some and the US was more than happy to provide the stuff to neutralise the exocets.p
Except there was no such thing at the time, and the exocet threat remained. What happened is that the French and Germans agreed to halt any weapons transfers to Argentina, so Argentina's arsenal could not be replenished during the war. Same for the US. All this counts as NATO allies sticking to one of their own.
As you pointed out, Pakistan was a member in good standing and India is not a country the CW would likely be against, rather for, except for some of their Cold War flirting with ideas of Communism and neutralism.
Don't mistake lack of involvment between Pakistan and India with an inability and unwillingness to support a sister state when push comes to shove.
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