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How India's Nuclear Doctrine Works

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India is an acknowledged nuclear weapons state outside the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) framework, possessing approximately 160–170 nuclear warheads as of 2024 (Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists estimate) delivered by a nuclear triad — land (Agni ballistic missiles), sea (K-15 submarine-launched, Arihant SSBN), and air (Mirage 2000H and Jaguar aircraft with nuclear gravity bombs).  India's nuclear doctrine is articulated in the "Draft Nuclear Doctrine" (1999) and the "Nuclear Doctrine of India" (2003) issued after the 2003 National Security Advisory Board review. The doctrine's two foundational elements are: (1) No First Use (NFU) — India will not use nuclear weapons first against a nuclear-armed state, only in response to nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons attack; and (2) massive retaliation — India's response to a nuclear attack will be massive and designed to inflict unacceptable damage on the attacker. Representational Visualisation: ...

How India Engages With Europe

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India's relationship with Europe — comprising the EU as an institutional block, bilateral relationships with France, Germany, UK, and others — is India's most underdeveloped major power relationship relative to its strategic and economic potential.  Europe is India's largest trading partner as a bloc (EU-India trade approximately €120 billion); France is India's most substantive European strategic partner (Rafale jets, Scorpène submarines, civilian nuclear cooperation, space cooperation through ISRO-CNES); Germany is India's most important industrial partner (Volkswagen, Siemens, BMW manufacturing in India; German engineering in India's green hydrogen ambitions); and the UK remains linked through the Commonwealth, the Indian diaspora, and the ongoing India-UK Free Trade Agreement negotiations. Representational Image: How India Engages With Europe India's engagement with Europe has been characterised as "reactive rather than proactive" by analysts —...

How India Engages With the Gulf and Middle East

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India's Middle East and Gulf engagement has undergone profound transformation under Modi — from a relationship primarily defined by energy dependence and diaspora management to a comprehensive strategic partnership characterised by security cooperation, economic investment, and geopolitical alignment. The "Think West" addition to India's directional foreign policy doctrines reflects this transformation: India is not merely looking east and engaging its neighbourhood, but actively cultivating the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), Israel, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Iran as strategic partners.  The Gulf's importance to India is structural: approximately 18 million Indian diaspora in the Gulf (the largest concentration of the 32 million strong Indian diaspora globally), contributing $120+ billion in annual remittances (the world's largest remittance flow); approximately 40–50% of India's oil imports from Gulf states; and growing Indian defence, infrastructure, a...

How India Engages With BRICS and the Global South

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India's participation in BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, plus since 2024: Ethiopia, Egypt, Iran, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Argentina reversed membership) alongside China and Russia is the dimension of Indian foreign policy that Western partners find most difficult to categorise. BRICS is simultaneously: a forum for Global South coordination on economic governance reform (IMF/World Bank reform, New Development Bank); a China-led geopolitical project to build an alternative to Western-dominated multilateral institutions; and a platform where India gains influence by being present rather than absent.  India's engagement with BRICS reflects the multi-alignment logic: India uses BRICS for its Global South and economic reform agenda while using the Quad for its Indo-Pacific security agenda. Representational Visualization: How India Engages With BRICS and the Global South India's G20 Presidency (2023) was the most successful expression of India's Global South strat...

How India Manages the US Relationship

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India-US relations — formally designated the "Comprehensive Global Strategic Partnership" — represent India's most transformative bilateral relationship of the post-Cold War era: from estranged democracies (the Cold War era when India tilted toward the Soviet Union and the US provided strategic cover to Pakistan) to the world's defining bilateral partnership (the aspirational framing of Biden-era engagement).  The relationship's foundation rests on: the Civil Nuclear Deal (2008) recognising India as a de facto nuclear state; defence trade worth $21+ billion since 2008; the Quad security framework (India, US, Japan, Australia); the India-US Major Defence Partnership designation; 2+2 Ministerial Dialogue (Defence + Foreign ministers); iCET (Initiative on Critical and Emerging Technologies, launched 2022) covering semiconductors, AI, quantum, space, and defence manufacturing; and the shared values framing ("world's two largest democracies"). Representat...

How India Manages the Russia Relationship

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India's relationship with Russia — formally designated a "Special and Privileged Strategic Partnership" — is India's most enduring great power relationship: anchored in decades of defence supply, diplomatic support on Jammu and Kashmir (Soviet/Russian UNSC veto protection), and economic cooperation that includes the Kudankulam nuclear power plant (built with Russian assistance).  The relationship has been severely tested since February 2022 when Russia invaded Ukraine: India has abstained on all UN votes condemning Russia; continued purchasing Russian discounted crude oil (making India Russia's largest crude buyer at approximately 1.8 million bpd); maintained defence procurement (S-400 delivery continued 2021–22; BrahMos joint venture ongoing); and resisted Western pressure to sanction Russia — all while stating that "this is not an era of war" and calling for dialogue. The Modi-Putin Kazan meeting (October 2024, on the sidelines of BRICS) and Modi's...

How India Manages the China Relationship

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India-China relations are defined by the world's most complex simultaneous competition-cooperation dynamic: China is India's largest trading partner (two-way trade approximately $125–135 billion in FY2024) while being its primary security threat (Galwan Valley clash 2020, continued Line of Actual Control deployments, China-Pakistan CPEC running through Indian-claimed territory). The relationship is governed by what India calls "the three Cs framework" — competition, cooperation, and conflict must all be managed simultaneously — and what Chinese analysts call the "ABC framework" (Acknowledge differences, Build cooperation, Counter threats). Neither framework has produced breakthrough; both sides manage a structural rivalry that neither can afford to escalate but neither can resolve. Representational Visualization: How India Manages the China Relationship The Galwan Valley clash (June 15–16, 2020) — in which an estimated minimum of 35–45 Chinese soldiers were ...
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