Home Premium Content

Premium Content

Support us by contributing to StratNewsGlobal on the following UPI ID

ultramodern@hdfcbank

Strategic affairs is our game, South Asia and beyond our playground. Put together by an experienced team led by Nitin A. Gokhale. Our focus is on strategic affairs, foreign policy and international relations, with higher quality reportage, analysis and commentary with new tie-ups across the South Asian region.

You can support our endeavours. Visit us at www.stratnewsglobal.com and follow us on YouTube, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

र 500 per month
र 1000 per month
र 5000 per year
र 10000 per year
Donate an amount of your choice
र 500 per month

Donate र 500 per month


र 1000 per month

Donate र 1000 per month


र 5000 per year

Donate र 5,000 per year


र 10000 per year

Donate र 10,000 per year


Donate an amount of your choice

Donate an amount of your choice


Premium Content

NEW DELHI: With an elbow bump and broad smiles, ‘iron brothers’ China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi and his Pakistani counterpart
NEW DELHI: Pakistan's outburst against Saudi Arabia is part domestic compulsion, part unwillingness to recognise global realities, Aparna Pande says
NEW DELHI: Home to over 20 percent of the world’s oil trade, the Strait of Hormuz has been the world’s
NEW DELHI: There were three former US presidents – Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama who addressed the Democratic
NEW DELHI: Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla referred to India's “special and close relations with Bangladesh” when he called on
NEW DELHI: The Chinese dictatorship's "bargain with its people to give up personal liberties and rights for ever greater economic
NEW DELHI: Concerns about Iran and its nuclear weapons are not the main drivers of the UAE's decision to sign
NEW DELHI: A corrupt man being held to account? Or was former Bangladesh Chief Justice SK Sinha the victim of a
NEW DELHI: The current standoff in Ladakh between Indian and Chinese troops should not be looked at in isolation just
NEW DELHI: The fourth generation telephony focused mainly on urban areas, with coverage of the countryside being incidental, says Prof.