The new power configuration that emerged in the regions of South and East Asia in the wake of World War II and the following decolonization process introduced new players to the game of international politics; the roles played by them were orten inherited from the actors of the previous era. it was the general framework of the bipolar world system and the Cold War that represented a new element in traditional rivalries, and which had the capacity to exacerbate problems that had previously lain dormant. The genesis and escalation of the India-china border dispute, interconnected with the status of Tibet, which was viewed by China as part of her own territory and contemplated by India as a semi-independent buffer state, serves as a classic example. On the Indian side, the problem was further aggravated by the inability of the government to coordinate and fully control the activities of its iontelligence. The article follows the gradual development of the ambiguous approach of Indian foreign policy toward its northern neighbour and the silent Indian acquiescence of the involvement of the United States in the Tibetan issue up to the first bloody border clashes in 1959., Jaroslav Strnad., and Obsahuje bibliografii
Indonesian has played a crucial role in the history of Indonesia as a vital political state-making instrument. Upon Indonesian´s gaining independence, the revolutionary language of Sukarno and his circle was to inspire Indonesians to buidl the young republic and to resist its enemies – namely the West and the newly created Malaysia. With the establishment of General Suharto´s regime in 1965-1966 a change in foreign and domestic policy occurred, the consequence of which was a shift in the political use of Indonesian: from the language of revolution to the language of Pancasila – Indonesian´s state ideology. The result was a sort of „officialese“, full of bizzare neologisms and acronyms, made up to serve the regime. Acronyms have long been an Indonesian obsession in the field of politics and public administration and gradually have become part of the everyday language. Thus, even now, in the post-Suharto era, to understand Indonesian media and politicians, it takes not only a good command of Indonesian but also a thorough knowledge of the Indonesian political system and institutions., Tomáš Petrů., and Obsahuje seznam literatury