Beyond the Amu Darya lies the\n “crucible of mankind”, inhabited by the Turkmen, the Uzbek, the Kazakh, the\n Tajik and the Khirghiz, the region of Central Asia known to nineteenth\n century European travelogues as Transoxiana, beyond the Oxus. This is the place\n on earth that gave birth to the legendary forces that would build an empire\n in India and knock on the gates of Christendom as far as Vienna. The region's\n rugged geography and harsh rulers prevented many from venturing in. Jaswant\n Singh, travelling without diplomatic privilege or the trappings of\n officialdom, pays tribute to this land of legends and antiquity, the land, he\n says, that “altered the course of our history”.Travels in Transoxiana: In\n Lands Over the Hindu-Kush and Across the Amu Darya deftly etches a picture of\n places whose ancient glory and present search for identity sit uncomfortably\n together. A powerfully detailed historical account that spans centuries from\n the era of Chengez to present times, a narration of kinship, empathy and\n loss, it captures the soul of one of the world's most fascinating regions.
JASWANT SINGH, is one of India's most distinguished and acclaimed politicians, having served eight terms in the Parliament. He was an officer in the Indian Army in the 1960s and an alumnus of the National Defence Academy, Khadakwasta. He has held charge of six ministries including External Affairs, Defence and Finance. Responsible for foreign policy, he dealt with high tensions between India and Pakistan. He was instrumental in the Lahore-Delhi bus initiative in 1999; contributed to the unfreezing of relations and bilateral dialogues with China; helped steer the fifty-day Indo-Pak KargilWar to a conclusion; and effectively and efficiently handled relations with the United States post India's nuclear tests in Pokharan in 1998. As defence minister, he provided an impetus and vigour to India's defence modernisation. During his tenure as finance minister, he stabilised the finance ministry by achieving total recovery, which in time Led to an 8.5 percent growth in its GDP, a strong balance of payments scenario, and a sound accumulation of foreign exchange reserves. Jaswant Singh is a prolific writer, having authored twelve books, including the widely acclaimed Jinnah: India-Partition Independence, and has contributed widely to Indian and foreign magazines, journals on international security, defence and development issues. Singh is a visiting professor at Oxford University, an honorary professor at Warwick University, and a senior fellow at Harvard University. Jaswant Singh is a lover of horses, being a skilled horseman himself, and has been a keen polo player.
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