See Edy Kaufmann, The Super Powers and their Spheres of Influence: the US and the Soviet Union in Eastern Europe and Latin America (New York1977), p. 10.
2.
SurendraChopra, “US Strategy in South Asia,” Patriot (New Delhi), 4 May 1984.
3.
FredGreene, “The United States and Asia in 1981,” Asian Survey (Berkeley), Vol. 22, No. 1, 1982, p. 1.
4.
4 See HeimsathH. C., “Non-Alignment Reassessed: The Experience of India,” in RogerHilsmanRobertC. Good (Eds.), Foreign Policies in the Sixties (Baltimore, 1985).
5.
It has been discussed in detail in Peter Lyon, Neutralism, 1964. Also see ns. 8, 9, 10, Infra.
6.
PeterWillets, The Non-Aligned Movement: The Origins of a Third World Alliance (Bombay, 1978), p. 19.
7.
HansJ.Morgenthau “Neutrality and Neutralism”, Year Book of World Affairs, (London, 1957), Vol. II, pp. 154–155.
8.
MartinL. W. (Ed.), Neutralism and Non-Alignment: The New States in World Affairs.
9.
SayeshF. A., The Dynamics of Neutralism in the Arab World (San Francisco, 1964).
10.
10 For details, see OppenheimL., International Law, Vol. II, 7th edition (London), pp. 154–155.
11.
JawaharlalNehru, India's Foreign Policy. Government of India, New Delhi, 1949 p. 3.
12.
The term non-alignment was claimed to have been used by V. K. Krishna Menon in 1953-54 in the United Nations, MichaelBrecher, India and World Politics: Krishna Menon's View of the World (London, 1968), p. 3.
13.
BojanaTadic, A Yugoslav scholar examined this point at length in her oral presentation at the conference on “Bandung (1955-85): Transformation of the World,” held in Cairo, 24-28 April, 1985.
14.
MohammedEI-Sayed Salim, “The Political Economy of Non-alignment,” in MohammedEI-Sayed Salim (Ed.), Non-Alignment in a Changing World (Cairo1983), p. 85.
15.
See Government of India, Economic Declaration: Seventh Non-aligned Summit, Ministry of External Affairs, New Delhi, March 1983, p. 56.
16.
KhilnaniN. M., Realities of India, 1984.
17.
KhilnaniN. M., Four Diamonds of Anand Bhavan, 1987.