Modi Foreign Policy
Modi Foreign Policy
Modi Foreign Policy
(3 Articles)
3 years of Modi's foreign policy: Achievements, obstacles and
more
25 May 2017 | By Anupama Vijayakumar
https://www.newsbytesapp.com/timeline/Politics/7309/43014/3-years-of-modi-
s-foreign-policy-an-evaluation
India also remained absent from China's OBOR summit citing sovereignty
concerns. EU and Sri Lanka had echoed India's concern later, much to
China's frustration.
India has further reached out to Arab countries including UAE, Qatar and
Oman. India has also simultaneously engaged with Israel, managing to boost
'Make in India' in defence.
To attempt a critical appraisal of India’s foreign policy over the last three
years, Brookings India organized a panel discussion on “Deconstructing the
Modi Doctrine: Three Years of Modi’s Foreign Policy.” The discussion
featured Dr. Vijay Chauthaiwale, Dr. Rajiv Kumar, and Dr. Sreeram Chaulia,
and was moderated by Dhruva Jaishankar.
Key Features:
o Prime Minister Modi’s foreign policy is driven to a great extent by
personal ambition. He has been completely unideological about his
foreign policy and treats it as only an instrument of national interest, a
significant departure from the past.
o Prime Minister Modi linking with West Asia for economic prosperity is
indicative of the principle of national interest being paramount. He has
not only given impetus to connecting with major Muslim powers of the
region but also Israel.
o Prime Minister Modi has managed to engage with and visit important
countries that have not witnessed Indian Prime Ministerial visits in
decades. Canada and the UAE being examples of this.
o Connecting with the diaspora in countries around the world has been
an important objective for the government. Engagements with diaspora
have not only raised the stature of Indian diaspora in countries, but
also rendered them a political force to be reckoned with.
Whenever Narendra Modi goes on a foreign trip, his bete noire’s taunted him
for working hard so much to enhance country’s image at the global level. In
fact, Narendra Modi became the first Prime Minister to be criticised for
working hard.
However, people are always curious about Narendra Modi’s visits to foreign
countries but what they couldn’t understand is his (the country’s)
achievements. Here we have listed out ‘Top 10 Achievements’ of Narendra
Modi’s government which have not been highlighted by few foreign-sponsored
Indian media houses:
2. India will build 4 Hydroelectric power stations + Dams in Bhutan only to get
it’s lion’s share in Green energy that will be produced in future from
these projects.
6. Modi could increase Oil Imports from Iran despite the ban by the USA
besides getting a go-ahead to build ‘Chabahar Port’ in Iran encircling
Pakistan. India can now have exclusive access to our Naval ships in this port.
With this, India can checkmate Pak moves.
7. India could get additional supplies of Uranium from Australia for its energy
production.
9. Modi also could make China invest heavily in India to bring down the trade
deficit with China which has committed an investment of $20 billion in India.
That’s nearly Rs.140,000 crores in Indian currency.
10. Modi accorded top priority to country’s security who could tie-up with US,
Israel & Japan to participate in Malabar exercise this time to checkmate Pak
besides succeeding in concluding the import of high-end military drones from
Isreal to use in surgical strikes along the borders.
Article 4 – Gen reading
Three years of Narendra Modi’s foreign policy
The Narendra Modi government has been unabashed in changing India’s
foreign policy trajectory in the three years that it has been in power
http://www.livemint.com/Opinion/2BuQAIK7nndoYIfXX8av0J/Three-years-of-
Narendra-Modis-foreign-policy.html
As the Narendra Modi government completes its three years in office, there is
a big rush to provide a report card on its performance. The government itself
has been highlighting its achievements and the Prime Minister has welcomed
evaluations of his government’s performance, suggesting that “constructive
criticism strengthens our democracy”. But three years is a rather short time to
evaluate any government’s performance, especially one which came to office
with the kind of transformative agenda the Modi government has. This is a
government which wants to reshape the fundamentals of Indian polity, society
and economy, so it is not surprising that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
talks of a two- to three-term Modi government.
Yet the political strategists in the BJP also know that democracy is a fickle
beast and when the trough comes, it comes all of a sudden and stays for a
long time, as the Congress Party is experiencing at the moment. So the need
for regular tom-tomming of the government’s achievements even as the party
prepares for a long haul in government.
Foreign policy is one area where the Modi government has performed
reasonably well. This verdict will not be widely accepted by the government’s
critics at home but travel anywhere in the world and you will find that New
Delhi is now viewed very differently compared to just three years back. Modi
has asserted Indian interests in a way that few had anticipated when he had
assumed office given his lack of experience on the foreign policy front. He has
upped India’s profile in global affairs, something even his critics will have to
give him credit for.
For the initial few months, an argument was being made that while Modi was
pursuing foreign policy with great vigour and enthusiasm, the change was
largely of style, not substance. It is indeed true that the foreign policies of
major powers do not change dramatically with a change in leadership.
Structural factors matter more in shaping their contours. But if we look closely,
we will find that something substantive has changed in Indian foreign policy.
Where in the past Indian diplomacy was responding to the tectonic shifts in
global politics by stealth, the Modi government has been unabashed in
changing India’s foreign policy trajectory. Gone is the diffidence of the past in
articulating the need for robust Indo-US ties. India’s relations with Israel have
finally come out of the closet. And for a change, rather than Beijing
challenging New Delhi, India is standing up to China and challenging its
profile.
Non-alignment has been given a decent burial and major power diplomacy is
being conducted on the basis of strict reciprocity. In the name of non-
alignment, New Delhi had been pandering to Chinese sensitivities, imaginary
or otherwise, for far too long. Now India is building pressure points around the
Chinese periphery and is not hesitant in using powers like the US, Japan and
Australia to stabilize the Indo-Pacific. While sections of the Indian intellectual
establishment still retain reflexive anti-Americanism, Modi has used his
decisive mandate to carve a new partnership with the US to harness its
capital and technology for his domestic development agenda. He is not
ambivalent about positioning India as a challenger to China’s growing regional
might and assertiveness.
This has also meant that India’s adversaries are now facing an unpredictable
Indian foreign policy. Where in the past there was a certain predictability in
New Delhi’s responses to Chinese and Pakistani shenanigans, the Modi
government has introduced some uncertainty into the relationship. This has
given India greater strategic space for manoeuvring. It has climbed the
escalation ladder, which many in the country had been scared of climbing for
a long time, and all that Islamabad has been left with is to deny the Indian
military’s response. For long, it was Pakistan that was testing Indian
boundaries by needling India. Now the shoe is on the other foot. The same
goes for China, where India’s response to the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI)
was a reminder to Beijing that New Delhi too can keep its cards close to its
chest till the last minute, and has many ways to respond to the challenge
being posed by the Beijing-Islamabad collusion on the China-Pakistan
Economic Corridor (Cpec).
There are challenges, for sure. The Modi government is willing to take risks
and there are no cost-free risks. There are also some fundamental changes
shaping the domestic political milieu in the West and the great power
relationships are undergoing a shift which India will have to navigate with
utmost seriousness. The Sino-Russian relationship is acquiring connotations
which can have long-term consequences for Indian interests and Sino-US ties
can also become transactional under Donald Trump.
But these are the challenges that a confident India should be able to manage
if its economic fundamentals remain strong and if it can start getting its
defence policy in shape. For a Prime Minister who was being criticized for
being provincial when he assumed office, the last three years have underlined
that Modi has the potential to gradually but decisively shift Indian foreign
policy in directions which few would have dared to try before. His critics will
continue to disagree but Indian foreign policy will look very different with Modi
at the helm for another few years. For Indian polity’s decisive shift to the
“right” is also a structural change which will have global reverberations.