In fact, the Cold War itself was a self-contradictory term, indicating that while wars were no longer possible, it persisted as an instrument of national power in the minds of decision-makers. It could, nevertheless, be cold.
2.
PannikarK.M., Asia and Western Dominance (London: Allen & Unwin. 1055).
3.
BurtonJ.W., International Relations: A General Theory (London, CUP, 1967).
4.
EdvardKardelj, Yugoslavia in International Relations and in the Nonaligned Movement (Beograd, Socialist Thought & Practice, 1979). See specially the second section entitled Points of Departure fur Socialist and Democratic Policy in International Relations.
5.
Nehru was greatly moved by two books of Western dissident Journalists, Reginald Thompson, Cry Korea (London, 1951) and StoneI.F., The Hidden History of the Korean War (New York, 1951).
6.
HerberG. Nicholas, United Nations As A Political Institution (London, OUP, 23 ff.
7.
In fact, more than 100.
8.
GopalS. (ed.). Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru (New Delhi, 1934), Second Series, 1, 492f.
9.
Quoted in NormanD. Palmer, Indian Political System (London, Allen & Unwin, 1961), 243 p.
EarnestB. Haas “Types of Collective Security,” American Political Science Review1955.
13.
PeterLyon, Neutralism (London, 1956).
14.
MalekBennabi, L'Afro-Aslatisme (Cairo, 1956).
15.
FayezSayegh, Dynamics of Arab Neutrality (New York, 1955).
16.
Nehru, n. 3, 80 p.
17.
Ibid, 2 p.
18.
HansJ Morgenthau, Politics Among Nations; Struggle for Power and Order (Calcutta, Scientific, 1962).
19.
Although there arc several treatises on ancient Indian political ideas, this issue has not been a subject of systematic investigation. However, for saptanga theory seeAltekarA.K. State and Government in Ancient India (Delhi, 1962), 44 f. and SharmaR.S.Aspects of Ideas and Institutions in Ancient India (Delhi, 1959). 14 ff.
20.
See Krishna RaoM.V., Studies in Kautilya (Delhi, 1958) 135 ff.
21.
Satchlndananda MurtyK., Indian Foreign Policy (Calcutta. 1964), 1 ff.
22.
PannikarK.M., The Foundation of New India (London. 1963).
23.
JawaharlalNehru, The Discovery of India (New Delhi, 1989).
24.
JawaharlalNehru, Climpses of the World History (New Delhi, 1989).
25.
MurtyD.S., Nehru's Foreign Policy (New Delhi, 1953), 19 f.
26.
The Congress resolutions arc compiled in RajkumarN.V. (ed.), The Background of India's Foreign Policy (New Delhi, 1952).
27.
Ibid.
28.
Nehru, n. 15, 364 p.
29.
ZaheerM. Quraishi, Liberal Nationalist in Egypt. Rise and Fall of the Wafd Party (Allahabad, 1967).
30.
Nehru, n. 15, 366 p.
31.
JawaharlalNehru, Autobiography (New Delhi).
32.
YevgeniChelyshevAlexeiLitman. Tradition of Great Friendship (Moscow, Progress).
33.
JawaharlalNehru, Eighteen Months in India 1936–37 (Allahabad. 1938).
34.
Ibid.
35.
Asian Relations (New Delhi, Asian Relations Organization, 1918), 21 p.
36.
Ibid, 68 p.
37.
Ibid, 176 p.
38.
YuriNaseko. Jawaharlal Nehru and India's Foreign Policy (New Delhi. Sterling. 1976) 66 ff.
39.
Ibid409 p.
40.
Quoted in JansenG.H., Afro-Asia and Nonalignment (London, Faber & Faber, 1906) 411.
41.
LeoMales, Non-management, Theory and Current Policy (Beograd, 1972), 239271 p.
42.
Haas, n. 12.
43.
DavidKimche, Afro-Asian Movement (Jerusalem, 1980).
44.
SisirGupta, India and Regional Integration in Asia (New York, 1964).
45.
RikhtJaipal, Nonalignment (New Delhi, 1983), 8 p.
46.
For an extensive discussion on the subject see ZaheerM. Quraishi, “Qaddhafi's Harare Speech” in The Indian Journal of Political Studies, XIII (December, 1989).
47.
For the text of his speech, see GoyalD.R., From Belgrade to Harare (New Delhi, 21st Century, 1986). 222 ff.
48.
This was reported byPannikarK.M.In a lecture at the Indian School of International Studies. New Delhi.