India Needs To Rework on Neighborhood Policy
Context: Shifting trajectory of India’s neighborhood
policy.
Background: Over the past few years, there have been many
strains in ties with neighbors, for instance, with Nepal over its Constitution
in 2015 and now over the newely launched map, and with Bangladesh over the
Citizenship Amendment Act. But, the recent visits by the Foreign Secretary and
the National Security Adviser of India to countries in the region appear to
show energetic enthusiasm and new zeal in India’s neighborhood policy.
In
Detail
India
was seen as a natural rising power in South Asia and the Indian Ocean Region.
Infect, it was the de-facto leader of the South Asian Association for Regional
Cooperation (SAARC). India has historical and cultural ties with Nepal. It
enjoyed traditional goodwill and influence in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.
India
had made investments worth billions of dollars in Afghanistan and cultivated
vibrant ties with the post-Taliban stakeholders in Kabul. It had committed
itself to multilateralism and the Central Asian connectivity project, with Iran
being its gateway. It was competing and cooperating with China at the same
time, while the long border between the two countries remained largely
peaceful.
But
in the present time, India is facing violent clashes along the LAC, leading to
fatalities for the first time in 45 years. SAARC is in cold storage. Nepal has
turned hostile having adopted a new map and revived border disputes with India.
Sri
Lanka has tilted towards China, which is undertaking massive infrastructure
projects in the Indian Ocean island. Bangladesh is clearly miffed at the
Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019.
The
Afghanistan is undergoing a major transition, India is out of the multi-party
talks. Iran has inaugurated a railway link project connecting the Chabahar
port, on the Gulf of Oman, to Zahedan, which India was to have constructed, but
now is going without India.
With
focus attention, three problems can be found which are more or less linked to
this decline, that are a closer alignment of policy with the U.S. line,
coupling of foreign policy with domestic politics and hubris.
Exploring
New Diplomatic Dimensions
The
foreign policy should not be episodic or event oriented, but it should be
process-oriented. A well focused prepration of plan for continuous engagement
at various levels. Sometimes, domestic events also needs to address to balance
the relations, in foreign policy, like the recent protest on CAA issue. But,
priority needs to be set at policy making step and try to make balancing
approach on domestic factors over foreign policy issues.
This
is particularly important in terms of India's neighbourhood policy. India
should fashion its diplomacy in a manner which does not give rise to feelings
to small neighbouring countries of being slighted or marginalised.
If
the main objective of India’s neighbourhood policy is to connect and have
closer links with immediate neighbours, which has been stated by various Indian
Prime Ministers over the last 20 years, then it would certainly come back on
the right track.
In
the present time India needs to be make clarity in its foreign policy approach.
It is very easy to accuse any of India’s neighbouring countries of being too
close to China. But it’s very difficult to set out the exact terms of what they
should or shouldn’t do with China.
Sometimes,
neighbors' relations with China, defining India's relations with them, need to
change this outlook. As at the present time each nation wants to modernize in
all areas, for which they need to broaden the basket of allies.
Naturally
all these countries in India’s neighbourhood will try to balance. They will
always be anxious about India, which is the de facto giant in this geography.
The only way to really solve all this is to focus on creating interdependence
in this region that will give India strategic leverage.
Competition
With China
All
countries in India’s neighbourhood that used to depend and rely much more on
India in the past are adopting a first come, first served policy. They have an
open door policy and they don’t care if it is Chinese ventilators or Indian
ventilators that are reaching their capitals first.
Hence,
the various connectivity initiatives that India has taken over the last few
years in the neighbourhood, in terms of energy, interdependence,
infrastructural connectivity, grants and loans, the numbers have been going up.
And that is not just because India’s feeling more generous towards its
neighbours, but, essentially because India is facing competition from China.
Conclusion
Specific
reasons can be found for these setbacks. Also, foreign policy need not be
static. There will be ups and downs depending on the changes in policy as well
as the changes in global politics.
To
address the current crises, India has to reconsider its foreign policy
trajectory. It is a big power with one of the world’s biggest militaries. It is
a natural naval force in the Indian Ocean.
But
what makes the current downturn serious is that there is a relative decline in
India’s smart power, especially in the neighborhood and the extended
neighbourhood, which demands a deeper perusal of the foreign policy trajectory
itself.
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