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India is facing a complex and rapidly changing international landscape. From shifts in U.S. foreign policy and rising Chinese assertiveness to the growing instability in West Asia, the editorial argues that India must re-evaluate its foreign policy approach, adopt clarity in its strategic choices, and prepare for a more unpredictable, multipolar world.

Key Strategic Developments

1. Post-Trump Global Order & Strategic Vacuum

  • The Trump administration’s ‘America First’ policy altered many long-standing alliances and destabilized traditional foreign policy assumptions.
  • President Biden’s effort to recalibrate American diplomacy has not reversed all these trends.
  • India’s past dependence on U.S. strategic continuity needs reassessment.

2. China’s Strategic Posture & Dual Front Challenge

  • Chinese military assertiveness is expanding – across Taiwan, South China Sea, and along India’s LAC.
  • China’s military cooperation with Pakistan and continued border tensions challenge India’s two-front security doctrine.
  • India must read the signals from China’s 2023 White Paper on National Security, which hints at a robust new doctrine integrating development and deterrence.

3. West Asia & the “H” Word

  • West Asia’s geopolitical terrain is shifting. India’s long-standing policy of ‘neutrality’ and ‘strategic friendship’ is no longer a viable shield.
  • The taboo on ‘war’ is fading: With the use of GBUs in Israel-Hamas conflict and normalization of preemptive strikes (e.g., Iran’s facility bombings), restraint is losing currency.
  • India must re-evaluate its assumptions around peace dividends and non-alignment in the region.

Policy Shifts Required

1. From Ambiguity to Strategic Clarity

  • India needs to move beyond passive diplomacy.
  • Ambiguity in dealing with conflicts such as Israel-Palestine or China-Taiwan could leave India geopolitically isolated.

2. Recalibrating Non-Alignment & Neutrality

  • Non-alignment in its traditional form is outdated.
  • India must transition towards ‘strategic autonomy’ guided by realpolitik – supporting allies where national interest dictates.

3. Defence Readiness and Strategic Infrastructure

  • Need for:
    • Increased investment in precision-guided weapons.
    • Development of electromagnetic warfare, space capabilities, cyber warfare.
    • Stronger command and control mechanisms.
  • India must not only avoid war but be prepared for limited high-intensity conflict in multiple theatres.

What India Must Do Now

DomainRecommendation
Foreign PolicyAdopt calibrated clarity in alliances; avoid fence-sitting on global conflicts
DefenceEnhance deterrence capabilities across land, sea, air, cyber, and space domains
West AsiaMove from neutrality to issue-based alignment
China-PakistanPrepare for a sustained two-front posture
Technology & IntelligenceInvest in AI, missile defense, quantum communications, and space-based ISR
DiplomacyBolster ties with like-minded democracies but avoid overdependence on any single power

Conclusion


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