Reimagining Indian Diplomacy in a Fragmented World

India’s foreign policy, once rooted in moral leadership and non-alignment, now faces a turbulent global landscape marked by transactional alliances, declining multilateralism, and regional instability. The editorial critiques India’s diplomatic inertia and calls for a strategic overhaul.

Challenges

Erosion of Multilateralism

    • The global shift toward unilateralism—especially post-Trump era—has weakened collaborative platforms.
    • India’s continued reliance on Nehruvian idealism (non-alignment, moral diplomacy) appears outdated in this new geopolitical reality.

Diminishing Influence in West Asia

    • India was excluded from the Gaza peace process, led by the U.S., Türkiye, Egypt, and Qatar.
    • A low-level delegation to reconciliation events further signaled India’s waning regional clout.

Strategic Myopia in the Neighbourhood

    • India’s passive stance on Taliban resurgence and instability in Pakistan, Nepal, and Sri Lanka reflects a lack of proactive regional engagement.
    • Viewing Taliban attacks on Pakistan as “justice” is seen as dangerously shortsighted.

Fragile Engagement with China

    • Diplomatic gestures mask unresolved border tensions post-Galwan.
    • India’s underestimation of China’s hegemonic ambitions under Xi Jinping risks long-term strategic setbacks.

Way Forward

  • Strategic Renewal: Move beyond rhetorical assertions of autonomy; align economic strength with geopolitical relevance.
  • Pragmatic Diplomacy: Embrace flexibility, regional sensitivity, and realpolitik.
  • Civilisational Confidence: Leverage India’s cultural identity to build soft power and global partnerships.


POSTED ON 22-10-2025 BY ADMIN
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