Ironically, the best answer is probably to take a view that is the polar opposite.
The official in the prime minister's office said Mr. Singh has yet to take a view on that issue.
But if the three outsiders are to do that, they will need to take a view on what really happened in the closing stages of the war.
"The governing body is a hung parliament and it isn't able to take a view, as the interests of the Premier League, sadly, predominate at the FA, " he added.
"It will be for Ms Crail in the first instance to review the matter as it stands, and to take a view as to the most appropriate process for taking things forward, " said a spokesperson for the council.
Mr. Gates has also suggested that his review will take a dim view of the Marines as a "second land army" - the sort of role it has reluctantly taken on in recent years due to the fact that the Nation's "first" one, the U.S. Army, is too small to perform all that is being asked of it.
Lottery Commission chairman Lord Burns was asked on Tuesday to take a fresh view of the bidding, after a process in which Camelot won a High Court battle claiming its bid had not been fairly treated.
Critics take a harsher view, saying Mr Karzai is worried about a more hostile parliament dominated by an enlarged block of opposition MPs.
You see, the Catholic church simply must take a universal view, while still ministering quietly to people on a local level.
At the same time, 60% take a darker view: 50% said that things are tough and will be for a while, while 10% believe the worst is still ahead.
He also hopes employees will take a softer view of their own boss after reading the book, which portrays Mr. Jobs as a brilliant but mercurial leader.
Others - including its chief economist, Olivier Blanchard - might well take a different view.
Until the credit squeeze, Europeans could afford to take a relaxed view of an American slowdown.
"But wise commentators will always take a nuanced view of someone's death, " he says.
BBC: Margaret Thatcher and the taboo of speaking ill of the dead
But others will take a different view, citing the other major report this week.
There are other reasons for markets to take a negative view of the British economy.
Justice Scott will presumably take a dim view of the impartiality of Fiji's courts.
Crocker, meanwhile, is expected to take a positive view of political progress in Iraq.
In fact, East European converts to the free market take a dim view of Austria altogether.
Or perhaps it's polls showing most Americans take a dim view of the partisan gridlock in Washington.
Also, I figured the TSA would take a dim view of bear spray on my flight home.
MICs that take a different view of the trade-off between greenery and growth, and hence borrow elsewhere.
But the emphasis on long-term investing had helped investors take a calm view of the current crises.
First, perform thousands of fatigue tests in the laboratory and then take a probabilistic view of things.
If its rescuers show so little faith in Greece, why should private capital take a different view?
"If the price is right the club will have to take a calculated view, " said Cardiff manager Jones.
Mr Bush is less likely than some of his predecessors to take a relaxed view of such talk.
ECONOMIST: Latin America and the United States: End of an affair? | The
As the leader in mobile phones, Nokia now has to take a broader view of the market, he believes.
But Red Bulls coaches, team officials and league executives take a different view.
Gore's opponents take a cynical view of his new, more public emphasis on religion in the aftermath of Littleton.
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