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Editorial Topic

India’s Strategic Autonomy in a Multipolar World

Brief Context

The concept of strategic autonomy is shaping India’s foreign policy decisions amid rising global turbulence, as the global order shifts from unipolar dominance to multipolar complexity.

Source Content

Syllabus: GS2/International Relation

Context

  • The concept of strategic autonomy is shaping India’s foreign policy decisions amid rising global turbulence, as the global order shifts from unipolar dominance to multipolar complexity.

What Is Strategic Autonomy?

  • Strategic autonomy is not isolationism or neutrality. It is the ability to make sovereign decisions in foreign policy and defence free from external pressures.
  • Historically rooted in India’s colonial experience and Nehru’s non-alignment, the concept has evolved under successive governments into today’s ‘multi-alignment’ approach — flexible, pragmatic, and guided by national interest.

India’s Pursuit of Strategic Autonomy

  • US–China Rivalry and Indo-Pacific Tensions: As tensions escalate between the United States and China, India is under increasing pressure to pick sides, and it continues to walk a diplomatic tightrope:
    • India is a key member of the QUAD, I2U2, and IMEC aimed at countering China’s influence. Simultaneously, India engages with China through BRICS & SCO and maintains dialogue on border disputes.
    • China remains a top trading partner and key regional actor.
  • Russia’s Isolation and India’s Leverage: Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, many Western nations imposed sanctions.
    • India, however continued importing Russian oil and defense equipment, and avoided condemning Russia at the UN, citing national interest.
    • It has increased India’s leverage with Russia, allowing it to play a more influential role in global diplomacy—without compromising its ties with the West.
  • Defense and Technology Partnerships: India’s strategic autonomy is visible in its diversified defense procurement:
    • It buys S-400 missile systems from Russia.
    • It co-develops jet engines and drones with the US.
    • It invests in indigenous platforms like Tejas fighter jets and INS Vikrant.
  • Middle East Diplomacy and Global South Leadership: India’s nuanced positions on conflicts like Gaza and Ukraine show its desire to lead with principle and pragmatism:
    • It supports a two-state solution in Palestine but maintains strong ties with Israel.
    • It champions the Global South at forums like G20 and BRICS, advocating for equitable development and climate justice.
  • Global South and India’s Voice: India positioned itself as a voice of the Global South, during its G20 presidency in 2023.
    • India emphasizes partnerships driven by interests, not inherited bias, that resonates with many nations seeking agency over alignment, reinforcing India’s image as a plural, sovereign pole in global politics.

Redefining Autonomy in a Connected World

  • True strategic autonomy in modern times goes beyond defence and diplomacy. It requires:
    • Economic resilience and technological self-reliance.
    • Data sovereignty and digital security in the face of cyber and AI threats.
    • Supply chain diversification and critical mineral security.
    • Domestic political coherence and institutional strength are equally vital for sustaining independent decision-making.

Conclusion

  • Strategic autonomy, for India, means partnering without dependence, deterring without provoking, and engaging without surrendering agency.
  • India walks a delicate tightrope in navigating ties with the US, China, and Russia.
  • But in doing so, it reclaims its space as a civilisational power — standing not alone, but tall, resilient, and self-assured in a turbulent world.
Daily Mains Practice Question
[Q] In the context of a rapidly evolving multipolar world, to what extent can India maintain its strategic autonomy without compromising its global influence and national interests?

Source: TH

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