A new debate has started on the nature of a redefined Indian foreign
policy that takes into account the country’s transformed relations with
the United States of America. The latter is openly seeking a close
political, economic and security relationship with India. The rhetoric
is at times high-flown, calling US ties with India indispensable for the
21st century and describing India as a lynchpin of America’s
‘re-balancing’ towards the Asia-Pacific region.
Some experts would prefer a ‘non-alignment 2.0’ policy for India to
deal with the reconfiguration of geo-politics caused by the relative
decline of the US and the West and the rise of China. While this
nomenclature may arouse misgivings in some quarters because of its
ideological overtones and, more so, its political irrelevance in a world
no longer divided into rival alliances, in reality the authors of this
concept propose issue-based collaboration with diverse partners
depending on the confluence of interests. This seems pragmatic and
non-ideological.
Many advocate a foreign policy of ‘strategic autonomy’ for India. This
implies that India retain its independence in foreign policy making, and
not be obliged to follow any powerful actor or a set of actors in any
course of action that does not conform to its long term national
interest. Rather than be caught in strategic rivalries between countries
that are hurtful to its interests, it should have the freedom to engage
with opposing sides if that is useful.
This debate would suggest that India’s foreign policy remains in a
fluid state and is seeking to discover its moorings, with the
implication that India has not yet come to terms with the radically
altered global situation of today. It carries the nuance that India is
under pressure to tilt towards one side (the US), which India should not
succumb to.
In reality, there should be no need to define Indian foreign policy
in core conceptual terms. Defining it thus does not give it a coherence,
a sense of purpose and clarity that might be otherwise missing. The big
powers do not seem to need to define their foreign policies for
conceptual clarity. They just conduct their foreign affairs, based on
certain broad principles and practical considerations. An analysis of
their positions on a range of international issues would bring out the
prominent features of the policies they pursue, but encapsulating them
in one or two words would hardly be enlightening.
How would one, in any case, define US or Chinese foreign policies? No
single-word definition is possible. US foreign policy, for instance, is
full of contradictions. It is supposedly anchored in the promotion of
democracy worldwide but it supports some of the most anti-democratic
regimes in the world. Military intervention to support human rights in
one country is contradicted by military protection to other countries
that suppress the fundamental human rights of their population.
Religious extremism is fought on the one hand and promoted on the other.
Overdependence on China is coupled with hedging strategies against its
rise that is seen as adversarial.
China claims that its rise is not a threat, that it wants a peaceful
periphery, yet it is developing powerful military capabilities,
asserting extensive land and maritime claims in the South China Sea,
thriving on Japanese investments but has a visceral hatred of Japan, it
is benefiting hugely from its partnership with the US even as in East
Asia it is US power that it principally confronts. In other words, it,
too, manages contradictions.
In this background, only confusion is caused by seeking to define in
political shorthand India’s foreign policy as non-alignment 2.0 or
strategic autonomy. India’s foreign policy can simply be loosely
described as protecting its national interests as effectively as
possible in a globalized world that demands cooperative solutions and a
competitive world that demands management of conflicting interests
without confrontation. This would eliminate the implicit intrusion of
the US factor in explaining the core of our foreign policy objectives.
In a situation where India can, by skilful handling, gain much from its
improved relations with the US, it would be undesirable to frame its
foreign policy objectives in terms of the strategic distance it wants to
maintain from the US.
In actual fact, this debate about strategic autonomy is behind the
times. India’s post Cold War policies testify to its desire to maintain
‘strategic autonomy’ in a situation of strategic shifts in global power
equations. India, for example, has established strategic partnerships
with several countries that include, besides the US, Russia, France, the
United Kingdom, Germany, Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Japan and so on. It
has a strategic dialogue even with China, its principal geo-political
adversary. By establishing such partnerships with countries with key
differences and conflicting interests amongst themselves, India is, in
fact, expanding its strategic room for manoeuvre.
India is member of the Russia-India-China or RIC dialogue, with
member countries opposing regime change policies and interference in the
internal affairs of sovereign countries, and supporting multipolarity.
It is member of BRICS, which, by including Brazil and South Africa,
extends strategic understandings on some basic norms of international
conduct to key countries in South America and Africa. India supports the
US led Community of Democracies, capitalizing on its democratic
credentials, even if the sense of the grouping is directed against
countries like China and even Russia. India has agreed to a trilateral
US-India-Japan dialogue, including naval exercises, with its
anti-Chinese thrust quite clear although officially denied. The
intensive US-India naval exercises in the Indian Ocean have a China
related strategic purpose, even as India is open to maritime cooperation
with China in the Indian Ocean area. India cooperates with China in the
climate change and World Trade Organization negotiations because it
serves a common purpose of countering the US/European attempts to avoid
equity in agreements.
India respects Russia’s special interests in Central Asia but is open
to US strategic moves to promote strategic energy links between Central
Asia and South Asia. It is willing to strengthen its role in the
Shanghai Cooperation Organization even if the US sees it as an
arrangement to limit US influence in Central Asia. India supports an
extended US presence in Afghanistan even though Iran is opposed to it.
India is avoiding getting caught in the Shia (Iran)-Sunni (Saudi Arabia)
conflict building up in the Gulf. It successfully resisted Western
pressures to reduce its engagement with Myanmar.
India’s independent posture explains why it has obtained support for
its Security Council permanent membership from both the West and Russia.
Russia’s position as India’s biggest partner for defence supplies has
not prevented India from now expanding its defence ties with the US. The
US seems reconciled that India will not be an ally and will want to
retain its independence in foreign policy decisions. It will
nevertheless seek to tie India closer to itself in a way that India’s
pragmatic choices will pull India in that direction. If India continues
to have a clear-sighted view of its longer term interests, it will be
able to balance its relationship with all the major players in a
constructive way. But without a domestic defence manufacturing base,
high rates of economic growth and improvement in decision-making, our
independent foreign policy will always have weak foundations.
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