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Foreign Policy | Replacing dogma with more dogma

If the conduct of Indian foreign policy in the past seven decades shows us anything, it is that it has seldom relied on creative thinking from outside the four walls of the government.

November 27, 2019 / 15:26 IST
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Jabin T Jacob

Minister for External Affairs S Jaishankar’s Ramnath Goenka lecture earlier this month has been hailed widely as something of a master class in the directions and principles of India’s foreign policy in the Narendra Modi era. It could well be that; but it is equally a masterful papering over the shortcomings of Indian foreign policymaking that neither the country’s political class nor its bureaucracy has managed to fix so far.

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It is noteworthy that of the “five baskets of issues” which Jaishankar referred to as offering lessons about India’s past performance, there is no reference to the problems of lack of capacity within the government. It is something of a paradox that for the second-most populous country in the world, India has one of the smallest civil services anywhere and that it prefers to keep it that way alongside a general lack of interest in taking on ideas from outside the four walls of the government.

Jaishankar appears to accuse others outside of government when saying that ‘[d]iligence and debate have not been as rigorous as they should be for an aspiring player’. It was during his tenure as foreign secretary that he cut funding to the Institute of Chinese Studies (ICS), the country’s oldest and most important research institute devoted to China and East Asia. It was bad enough that the funding had been limited to a paltry Rs 1 crore annually for several years despite the ICS’ growing work and profile, but it was also evident that the MEA did not like the institute’s less than complete backing for the government’s absolute opposition to China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) or its publicly-articulated views of the government’s China policy and that it did not see the value of work on China that went beyond the narrow confines of foreign and security policy studies to cover labour, public health or history.