Posts

4399 Days: What Narendra Modi Has Done to India and What India Has Done to Him

Image
✍️ Written by Saket Suman I have been a journalist for most of my adult life and this country has become my beat, my burden and perhaps my greatest blessing. This journey has led me to cover India from its plains and its hills, from the coaching centres and the press conferences, from literary festivals, from the front lines of protests to the inside and outside of its policy corridors. I have watched promises made at election rallies dissolve in the unforgiving heat of governance. I have seen individuals become symbols and symbols become power and power become something so sinister that I will leave it unnamed here. I write of these things to establish a vantage point as essential context because what follows is written from the inside, from the ground, with the accumulated scepticism of someone who has seen some bit of this republic to resist, on this particular day, both the celebration and the denunciation that today's milestone will produ...

How India Manages Climate Diplomacy

Image
India's climate diplomacy is shaped by a fundamental tension: India is the world's third-largest greenhouse gas emitter (behind China and the US) and the third-largest coal producer/consumer; simultaneously, India's 1.4 billion people have per capita emissions of approximately 2 tons CO2 per year (compared to 15 tons for the US, 8 tons for China), meaning India's historical contribution to atmospheric carbon is disproportionately small relative to its population size.  This creates India's core climate negotiating position: India will pursue development (which requires energy, which historically means coal) while contributing to climate solutions (renewable energy, efficiency, adaptation) but will not accept emissions caps that lock India into energy poverty while developed countries maintain higher consumption standards. India's slogan is "Common But Differentiated Responsibilities" (CBDR) — all nations bear responsibility for climate change but devel...

How India Navigates the Indo-Pacific Strategy

Image
India's Indo-Pacific strategy — framing the Indian Ocean and Pacific as a single strategic theatre rather than two separate regions — is simultaneously India's most explicitly articulated strategic framework and its most carefully hedged.  India has used "Indo-Pacific" as a strategic concept since PM Modi's 2018 Shangri-La Dialogue address (Singapore), where he described India's vision of a "Free, Open, Inclusive Indo-Pacific" — carefully inserting "inclusive" to distinguish India's framing (where ASEAN and China can participate) from the US/Japan framing (where "free and open" is essentially about managing China). India participates in the Quad's security dimension while participating in BRICS and SCO alongside China; it pursues the "SAGAR" (Security and Growth for All in the Region) doctrine for the Indian Ocean while building the Quad's Indo-Pacific framework. Representational Image: How India Navigates th...

How India Uses Soft Power in Foreign Policy

Image
India's soft power — the ability to attract and influence through cultural appeal, values, and the legitimacy of its policies rather than through coercion or payment — is arguably the country's most under-leveraged foreign policy asset. Joseph Nye's concept of soft power is particularly apt for India: a country with a 5,000-year civilisation, the birthplace of major world religions (Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism), the inventor of zero and the decimal system, the origin of yoga and Ayurveda, the producer of the world's most-watched film industry (approximately 2,000 films/year), and the home of the world's largest democratic electoral process — all of which have global cultural reach that formal diplomatic instruments cannot replicate. Representational Visualization: How India Uses Soft Power in Foreign Policy Modi's government has systematically mobilised soft power in its foreign policy: the International Day of Yoga (UN General Assembly resolution 2015,...

How India's Diaspora Serves Foreign Policy

Image
India's global diaspora — approximately 32 million people of Indian origin (Persons of Indian Origin and Non-Resident Indians) in over 110 countries — is among the world's largest, most economically successful, and most geographically diverse diaspora communities. The diaspora's foreign policy relevance is multidimensional: it generates the world's largest remittance inflow ($120+ billion in 2022, consistently the global top); it includes politically influential communities in the US, UK, UAE, and other strategic partners; it provides soft power projection through cultural influence, professional achievement, and institutional presence; and it represents a network of goodwill that Indian diplomacy can leverage in host country political and business circles. Representational image: How India's Diaspora Serves Foreign Policy India's government engages the diaspora through the Ministry of External Affairs' "E" (Emigration) division and through the Ove...

How India's Counter-Terrorism Diplomacy Works

Image
Counter-terrorism diplomacy — using diplomatic instruments to isolate, delegitimise, and hold accountable state sponsors of terrorism against India — is one of India's most sustained and most contested foreign policy activities. India's primary target is Pakistan's state-facilitated use of terrorist groups (Lashkar-e-Taiba, Jaish-e-Mohammed, Hizbul Mujahideen, and allied groups) against India, most recently documented in the Pahalgam attack (April 22, 2025).  India's diplomatic counter-terrorism toolkit includes: bilateral pressure on Pakistan's partners to curtail support for Pakistan-based groups; seeking UN Security Council sanctions against specific groups and individuals (Masood Azhar, Hafiz Saeed designation campaigns); FATF pressure on Pakistan for insufficient counter-terrorism financing enforcement; and public diplomacy campaigns presenting evidence to international audiences. Representational Image: How India's Counter-Terrorism Diplomacy Works India...
Loading... Loading IST...
US-Israel Attack Iran
Loading headlines...

Loading Top Trends...

How India Works

Scanning sources...

🔦 Newsroom Feed

    🔗 View Source
    Font Replacer Active