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Policy | Indian foreign policy’s changing calculus

Indian foreign policy is changing and will continue to evolve not only because the global environment is changing more rapidly than ever, but also because India is changing.

May 10, 2020 / 18:33 IST
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It’s very rare for an external affairs minister to deliver a speech which is intellectually stimulating and forces us to think beyond clichés. It is difficult to think of any speech by a former external affairs minister or Prime Minister (since foreign policy has traditionally been the PM’s domain), that is conceptually as granular and politically as candid as the one recently delivered by External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar during a memorial lecture in New Delhi on the theme ‘Beyond the Delhi Dogma: Indian foreign policy in a changing world’.

Declaring that “the real obstacle to the rise of India is not anymore the barriers of the world, but the dogmas of Delhi”, his speech provided “an unsentimental audit of Indian foreign policy.” Jaishankar argued that “a nation that has the aspiration to become a leading power someday cannot continue with unsettled borders, an un-integrated region and under-exploited opportunities. Above all, it cannot be dogmatic in approaching a visibly changing world order.”

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In many ways, Jaishankar’s speech has become the central document through which Indian foreign policy will be assessed in the coming years. His conceptualisation of the various phases of foreign policy and his critique of policymaking will reverberate through the corridors of polity. For a strategic community that continues to tell the world about the consistency in Indian foreign policy and how effective that has been in the pursuit of Indian interests, Jaishankar’s speech stands as a profound corrective. When he says that “the balance sheet for India’s foreign policy after seven decades presents a mixed picture,” he is underlining the fact that consistency can be overrated in foreign policy.

His assessment of the changing global environment is apt and its impact on Indian foreign policy is already visible. But while Jaishankar dissects the challenges for diplomacy in a candid and sophisticated manner, there still seems an inherent reluctance to fully follow through the logic of his own arguments. In some ways it is understandable. For a good politician, it is imperative to recognise the political challenges and constraints in shaping a policy response.