India, June 3 -- When Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal, who continues to use his Maoist revolutionary era name Prachanda, first visited India as Prime Minister (PM) in 2008, he had just emerged from an underground violent insurgency and won his first election. Weeks earlier, Nepal had elected its first Constituent Assembly. India was deeply enmeshed in facilitating Nepal's peace process, which entailed Maoists giving up their coercive structures. And Mr Dahal had chosen to first go to Beijing, before coming to New Delhi. Fifteen years later, as Mr Dahal stood alongside PM Narendra Modi during his fourth bilateral visit to India on Thursday, the context was radically different. The name Prachanda had stayed but the revolutionary zeal had dissipated. The Maoists have now participated in four elections. The Maoist coercive structure has dissolved. Mr Dahal skipped a visit to China to make Delhi his first port of call. And India-Nepal bilateral relations have moved from merely revolving around New Delhi's role in Kathmandu's politics to making substantive progress on the infrastructure of the future....