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''India, realizing that its boycott of Israel was tactically wrong, accepted the help offer. For India and Israel, the common potential enemy was Pakistan, a Muslim nation committed to helping the Arab countries of the Middle East.'' ''India, realizing that its boycott of Israel was tactically wrong, accepted the help offer. For India and Israel, the common potential enemy was Pakistan, a Muslim nation committed to helping the Arab countries of the Middle East.''


is just POV, as references 6 and 7 refer to www.saag.org, a partisan website. There are other examples in the article. Reference 4 is not serious, and comes from a propagandist forum. Many references point to westerdefence.com or frontline which are extremely partisan (the case of ''frontline'' is notoriously known). Just a bunch of examples. is just POV, as references 6 and 7 refer to www.saag.org, a partisan website. There are other examples in the article. Reference 4 is not serious, and comes from a propagandist forum. Many references point to westerdefence.com or others which are extremely partisan.


The article is missourced and displays non-referenced personnal opinions (one of the main contributors of this article has been indefinitely banned from Misplaced Pages). The article is missourced and displays non-referenced personnal opinions (one of the main contributors of this article has been indefinitely banned from Misplaced Pages).
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Another point: Hindus are not supporting zionism in their majority, as opposed to what is said here. Just a part of them do. So, clean up ? Another point: Hindus are not supporting zionism in their majority, as opposed to what is said here. Just a part of them do. So, clean up ?


This article raises a major question: is it representative or does it merely reflect the thoughts of its forever-banned primary author ?





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Neutral Point of View

This article does not seem to have a neutral point of view and projects as if India has always been a supporter of Israel and anti-Palestine. It can be verified from a number of sources that this is not the case. The biggest evidence is that India recognized the state of Palestine before as soon as it was created in 1988 but established diplomatic relations with Israel only in 1992. In fact India recognized Palestine even before Pakistan did! Also I also not know on what basis it is being said that hindus are generally pro-israel. That view is held by the sangh parivar but they do not represent the majority. Anyway sources should be added. In the coming days I will do so. Shahab 14:58, 9 November 2006 (UTC)

Yes but presently the entire center right coalition is pro-Israel, not just the Sangh Parivar, so that's a substantial section. I have refs that indicate that the urban middle classes are increasingly pro-Irael, thank G-d.Plus, let's not forget the fact that even the left wing cooperated with Israel during the SI wars etc.Hkelkar 20:17, 9 November 2006 (UTC)
In fact, the only sources where attacks are made on Jews and Israel in India are Muslim news sources like milligazette and imc.Hkelkar 20:26, 9 November 2006 (UTC)
Where are the sources that India has ever taken an anti Palestine view? If there is any such source then it should be added. My view is that India is pro Israel but does not support its stand on Palestine. Otherwise why would India wait for so long to recognize Israel. The argument that India wanted to appease indian muslims does not seem right. If that was the case then India would never condemn Pakistan. Anyway all I want, is that reliable sources should be added. Cheers.Shahab 10:33, 10 November 2006 (UTC)
We have been. I have sources that attest that recent Palestinian intransigence has been condemned in India.The suicidal Congress party did take a pro-Palestine position but that, thankfully, is slowly changing once they have realized that they are rooting for the wrong side.Hkelkar 11:12, 10 November 2006 (UTC)
Where are such sources. If you have any then add them. It is not my intention to make this article show that India is antipathetic to Israel (as you seem to think). All I want is that the article should cite its sources and be unbiased.

You say that Palestine intransigence has been condemned in India. I do not doubt it. But this sentence does not occur anywhere in the article and so this remains just a view.

  1. The fact that India and Israel were on the opposite side in the cold war has been mentioned. Yet the sections on pre-1992 period gives the indication that the Indian govt was pro-Israel. This seems rather strange. If the "greedy" (this word indicates opinion and anyway should be removed) Congress party supported Palestine for muslims votes(no source) then it can be said that BJP supported Israel for Hindutva votes. Any way the Jan Sangh supported Israel less out of love for the country than antipathy for the Arabs.. Meanwhile the same source states the on Israel
  • The Non-Aligned Movement is quiescent.
  • The BJP regime is all admiration for Israel, as a role model for repression.

One further point. During the 1960's and 1970's muslim votes and that kind of polarisation was just not there. The congress was the only major party anyway. There was no BJP. It was only in the late 1970's that a non congress was formed and that had absolutely nothing to do with religion. So the statement that "The stubborn opposition to establish diplomatic relations with Israel during the 1960s and 1970s arose due to the left-wing Congress Party's greed for Muslim votes." should be removed. If you have reliable sources then put them.

    1. The post 1992 section has the following unsourced statements:
  • India retaliated to the anti-India stance taken by the OIC by reducing its support for the Arab cause. (How India diluted its stand also needs to be mentioned.)
  • Muslims in India too felt betrayed by the stance taken by the OIC countries and support for Arabs among all sections of the Indian populace began declining.

Besides this the last line in this section should actually be the second or third line going by the timeline.

In fact looking at the big picture with historically based facts and not simply by picking and choosing opinions out of context (most of the sources are opinions or comments) there is still little factual evidence that India is interested in Israel for buying anything other then military stuff at all. No Indian head of state or Prime Minister has ever visited Israel and no such event is in the pipeline. India has never involved itself in finding a solution to the midlle east dispute. I think politically and socially speaking this relationship has still a long way to go. That may or may not true but anyway either the sources in this article should be added or it should be tagged.Shahab 16:39, 11 November 2006 (UTC)

Please read this article by Dr. Subhash Kapila, a well-known strategic analyst. --Incman|वार्ता 19:30, 11 November 2006 (UTC)
Shahab is wrong on several counts. One obvious flaw is his claim that no Indian politician visited Israel. There was an entire Indian delegation to Israel in the late 90's. Jaswant Sinha visited Tel Aviv and went to the Temple Mount.Other flaws will be revealed shortly. Plus, Arik Sharon's visit to India was widely reported (and,of course, condemned by muslims).Hkelkar 21:48, 11 November 2006 (UTC)

Hkelkar you say that I claim no Indian politician visited Israel. You are imagining things if you think that I claimed so. I claimed that No Indian head of state or Prime Minister has ever visited Israel and no such event is in the pipeline. Please supply the source against this. As for your other things please note that

  • I am not entirely opposed to your views. I think for example I agree that Palestine intransigence has been condemned in India. and that India and Israel have a strategic relationship. What I really object to is your use of unqualified adjectives such as 'suicidal' congress and lack of RELIABLE sources for the sentences mentioned above which is clearly against wikipedia's policy .. This article projects that due to progressing Indo-Israel relations, India has become against Palestine which is not verified by any source.
  • The article talks the talk, (lots of opinion) but in reality there is no evidence of some big economic relationship or social relationship or political relationship. (India's main trade partners are the United States, the United Arab Emirates and China.).

Hkelkar please understand that my intention is that this article should contain reliable sources for what it states. You keep saying that you have the sources but either you don'e supply them and if you do then they are usually opionated articles written in some magazine. In this way even similarly opinionated articles written in indian muslim magazines would become sources (Also please remember these muslims are as much indian as much is the sangh parivar.) What we should have are reliable sources (newspaper reports in a reputed newspaper for example.)Shahab 07:21, 12 November 2006 (UTC)

What? What manner of obscurantist rubbish is this anyway? We have been citing D.S.T. reports, well-sourced articles from rediff etc, and any refs that may be op/eds are solidly backed up by facts. Read the SAAG paper and the JINSA articles. All their assertions are backed up by their sources only. An India head of state may not have visited Israel, but an ISRAELI head of state DID visit India, and Indian politicians have visite Israel.That, together with an obvious benefit of cooperating militarily towards the goal of reigning the whack-jobs in (also, a well-sourced assertion) and the RAW_MOSSAD alliance clearly indicates that India attackes a special importance to building relations with the Jewish State, more so than with other countries I should say (and about bloody time too).Hkelkar 07:56, 12 November 2006 (UTC)

Hkelkar 07:56, 12 November 2006 (UTC)

You are choosing to pick sources that suit you. Show me the source where it states specifically that India has now become anti palestine. Show me the source where it states that during the 60's congress supported palestine to appease indian muslims. If you can do that then I will be satisfied. That is my whole point anyway from the start. I am not looking for a debate, rather for sources.

As for your other assertions that India attaches a special importance to Israel etc, I have never said that this is wrong and do not question it. Shahab 13:42, 12 November 2006 (UTC)

Does the article say that India is "anti-Palestine" (what a laughable claim ,as there is no such thing as "Palestine" anyway, thank G-d)? The SAAG paper is good enough to address your other concerns. Besides, this sort of disgusting vote bank politics is in perfect keeping with Congress's cowardly and suicidal tactics, and, with the grace of G-d, India will be rid of them soon, and be better off for it.Hkelkar 13:58, 12 November 2006 (UTC)

Gandhi did not support israel

it says here that Gandhi supported the creation of israel. this is false he said that palestine was for the palestinians and that zionist settlement was wrong. read up his essay on the jewish question and it says there plainly. also, israeli participation in Suez invasion alienated Nehru from supporting israel, regarding it as colonialist puppet. Sohrab Irani 02:48, 21 October 2006 (UTC)

Yes Gandhi did not support Israel's creation. However, several Hindu politicians, such as Vinayak Savarkar, Gowalkar and others supported Israel's creation. That needs to be added.Hkelkar 03:20, 29 October 2006 (UTC)
Specifically pertaining to this ref:

http://www.nhsf.org.uk/images/stories/HinduDharma/Interfaith/hinduzion.pdf

Hkelkar 03:21, 29 October 2006 (UTC)

Well, even I thought that Gandhi didn't support the creation of Israel. However, fact remains that Gandhi actually supported the idea of creating a Zionist state but was not very happy with the partition of the Palestinian mandate. In his view, European powers should have sought an internal solution to the problem rather than splitting Palestine into two halves: one for Jews and one for Muslims even though the population of the former Palestine mandate was overwhelmingly Muslim. He saw it being unfair to Muslims. But that doesn't mean he was against creation of a Zionist state. Another point, by publicly taking a pro-Jew stance, Gandhi didn't want to create a controversy within the newly-independent but fragile India. --Incman|वार्ता 19:22, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
Gandhi was widely criticized for his views against Israel. I think there was a critique by a Rabbi that was particularly important. I will look for it. In the meantime, one must note that quite a few Hindus supported the creation of Israel, such as Savarkar and Gowalkar, both of whom praised the efforts to create Medinat Israel.Hkelkar 21:19, 7 November 2006 (UTC)

Expansion

The article does not do justice to the topic as yet and I was wondering if we could work together to add more information to it. I have some refs cited in J.F.R. Jacob that may pertain to the subject (since Raphaelji is a strong supporter of India-Israel relations). Further, I have some op/eds from internationalopinion.com that I put in "External Links" on India-Israel relations on which I would like to expand. I have mainly been focussing on Indian/Indian-American news sources and was wondering if you could focus on Israeli/American news sources (Haaretz/Jerusalem Post etc.) regarding this topic so that they are both equally represented.Specifically, I would like to expand on:

  1. RAW-MOSSAD alliance
  2. Purchase of military hardware and technologies like newer RADAR technologies, Arrow Missiles etc.
  3. Academic/scientific cooperation
  4. Increased support for Zionism from the Hindu political parties
  5. Support for Israel from sections of the Urban Classes in India
  6. Mutual problems with Jihadis
  7. The Bnei Menashe issue
  8. Visit of Arik Sharon to India
  9. Visit of Jaswant Singh to Israel

Hkelkar 03:16, 29 October 2006 (UTC)

More refs

  1. http://www.jerusalemsummit.org/eng/news.php?news=108
  2. http://www.thebulletin.org/article.php?art_ofn=jf01withington (before the US sanctions against India were lifted)
  3. http://www.fas.org/news/india/2000/000703-israel1.htm

Hkelkar 22:16, 11 November 2006 (UTC)

Islamic Terrorism / Islamic Militancy

Since Hkelkar won't stop reverting my edits, why does this page insist on going by the loaded terms of the past and writing "Islamic terrorism" and "Islamic militancy"? Any educated person should know that Islam is a religion, and the militants fighting in these two countries are both fighting for nationalist causes. Think of Kashmir in 1900: There were Hindus and Muslims living with one another. There were no wars being fought. Then, after the partion, which created nations, there suddenly was a militancy problem. Same exact scenario in Israel. Thus, these insurgencies or resistances or whatever you want to call them can not be claimed to be Islamic, when these two regions clearly had Islamic culture and Muslims from hundreds of years prior without terrorists.Mustaqbal 02:58, 14 November 2006 (UTC)

Read about Lashkar-e-Toiba. They clearly plan to establish Sharia law in India (their stated goal). Same with Hamas and Israel. You're right that JKLF in kashmir and PLO in palestine were originally nationalistic and not Islamic, but they have dissolved. PLO broke up and Hamas/Fatah were formed (both Islamist) and JKLF broke up and LeT, Hizbul Mujahiddeen were formed (again, Islamist). The threat is Islamism, not nationalist terrorism. It is the common threat that India and Israel face. Too bad Israel is doing a better job of crushing them than India, but, by the grace of g-d, that will change.
Also, read WP:Verifiability. I have provied sources (in the bulk of the article) that notable personalities in India and Israel have stated that the problem is "ISLAMIC terrorism" , not just "terrorism".Mye edits are within the norms of wikipedia policy. Your's are not since your contention is not verifiable and thus is original research on your part.Now, please read WP:NOR Hkelkar 03:11, 14 November 2006 (UTC)
Here. Read this. These people are not "nationalists" but Osamaist Islamofascist whack-jobs who want to drag India back into the 7th century. This is ISLAMIC terrorism (or Islamist terrorism, if you like). Hkelkar 03:13, 14 November 2006 (UTC)
I agree. Lashkar-e-Toiba's main objective is to establish "Islamic" rule all over South Asia. --Incman|वार्ता 03:33, 14 November 2006 (UTC)

You people don't know whether Islam is spelled with a seen or a saad and yet you want to pass judgement on it. This is why no one will ever take wikipedia seriously. "Osamaist Islamofascist whack-jobs"... ?!?! Go back to Fox News.. اور مر جا Mustaqbal 15:32, 17 November 2006 (UTC)

Neutrality and citations

This article is not neutral. One single example:

India, realizing that its boycott of Israel was tactically wrong, accepted the help offer. For India and Israel, the common potential enemy was Pakistan, a Muslim nation committed to helping the Arab countries of the Middle East.

is just POV, as references 6 and 7 refer to www.saag.org, a partisan website. There are other examples in the article. Reference 4 is not serious, and comes from a propagandist forum. Many references point to westerdefence.com or others which are extremely partisan.

The article is missourced and displays non-referenced personnal opinions (one of the main contributors of this article has been indefinitely banned from Misplaced Pages).

Example:

A top foreign policy priority of the BJP-led Indian government was to establish close and strategic ties with Israel. This was due to the fact that both nations suffered from Islamic terrorism and shared several common interests.

As a matter of fact, the move operated by the BJP does not come from the mentionned reason but from other, political and ideological reasons, and also due to pressions foreign to India.

Reference www.rupee.us is a blog. This is not allowed according do wikipedia NPOV.

The references and citations of this article reflect quite an extremist and bizarre point of view. Exemple: in the "external links" section, there is a link to a note by F. Gauthier, a notorious extremist propagandist and french journalist who embraces, for unknown reasons, extremist views about India. In Gauthier's text, we can read this:

That the Israelis turned their back on their avatar and crucified him, may account for their sufferings for two thousand years

Is that intented to be serious ? Has the subject been less dramatical, I would have exploded in laughs (in particular, notice the purported confusion between Israelis, in the modern sense, and Jews in the anciant meaning referred to by the historical context).

There is also a global pertinence problem with the citations. Example:

The various Jewish communities in India expressed satisfaction at Sharon's visit, though some regretted that Sharon could not visit them in person.

Well, reference 38 talks about a group of 10 people or so. What is the value of that, from a "représentative" point of view ?

Another point: Hindus are not supporting zionism in their majority, as opposed to what is said here. Just a part of them do. So, clean up ?

This article raises a major question: is it representative or does it merely reflect the thoughts of its forever-banned primary author ?


TwoHorned 22:02, 6 March 2007 (UTC)

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