The Shifting Trajectory of India’s Foreign Policy

The Hindu     2nd November 2020     Save    
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Context: The Third India-U.S. 2+2 Ministerial Dialogue between the Foreign and Defence Ministers of India and the U.S. Secretaries of State and Defence highlights the shifting of India’s foreign policy.

Advantages of 2+2 Ministerial Dialogue

  • Technology Sharing: With the signing of the Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement (BECA) for Geo-Spatial Cooperation, India is now a signatory to all U.S.­ related foundational military agreements.
    • Other agreements include Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA), in 2016, and the Communications, Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCASA), in 2018. 
  • Bilateral cooperation to a new level: including ‘military to military cooperation, secure communication systems and information sharing, defence trade and industrial issues’ 

Challenges with rising Indo-US partnership

  • Impact on India’s strategic autonomy: The two-way exchange of information inbuilt in the foundational agreements might affect the strategic autonomy of India. 
  • India not at the centre of partnership: The primary push for getting India to sign the foundational agreements was the threat posed by China, inviting India to an anti-China ‘coalition of willing’.
  • Neutrality abandoned: The previous policy of neutrality and of maintaining equidistance from power blocs is being abandoned while an ideologically agnostic attitude is better suited to the prevailing circumstances of today.
    • Detached outlook towards the Non-Aligned Movement has led to increasing distance with the African and Latin American group in terms of policy prescription.
  • Increased conflicts with China: India’s waving of its objection in relation to QUAD and invitation to Australia for Malabar exercise will further deteriorate relation with China.
  • Impact on regional ties: Both China and the U.S are making inroads and enlarging their influence in India’s regional space.
    • For, E.g. The Maldives has chosen to enter into a military pact with the U.S. to counter Chinese expansionism in the Indian Ocean region. 
    • The latest Israel-U.A.E linkage may adversely affect India’s interest in the region.
    • India-Iran ties have already been affected due to U.S sanctions.
    • U.S’s withdrawal from Afghanistan and promotion of Taliban militates against India long-held policy of anti-Taliban and support to Northern Alliance in Afghanistan.
  • Impact on Indo-Russian links: India-Russia relations in recent years have not been as robust as in the pre-2014 period.
    • Russia-China partnership has vastly expanded, and a strategic congruence exists between the two countries. 

Conclusion: While India has been described and the ‘most consequential partner’, challenges in the foreign policy due to increased Indo-US partnership requires deft handling of diplomatic skills.

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