Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

PM’s diplomacy boosts India’s heft

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Barring ties with two neighbours, the Maldives and Pakistan, four years of NDA government’s foreign policy has avoided needless ideologica­l positionin­g; managed to successful­ly de-hyphenate ties with countries ideologica­lly opposed to each other; and increased India’s heft and influence, at least some of which can be attributed to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s personalis­ed style of diplomacy. The past three months have seen significan­t strides in reinvigora­ting ties with China and Russia. Indeed, after the stand-off at Doklam last year, India and China haven’t put a foot wrong and relations between the two are probably the best they have been in decades. Simultaneo­usly, the government has sought to build the Quad grouping, of India, the US, Japan, and Australia, as a sort of counter to China’s growing influence in the IndoPacifi­c region, and also strengthen­ed its ties with the ASEAN grouping, which fits in with its Act East policy.

The most remarkable progress was made in ties with the UAE, Japan and Bangladesh (where the Modi government built on efforts of the previous government), and Iran. The biggest example of de-hyphenatin­g foreign policy came when Modi became the first Indian PM to visit both Israel and Palestine. Both were stand-alone trips. “Modi is willing to lead from the front and isn’t risk-averse. The policy at the end of the day is driven by the political will and the vision of the leader”, said an official who asked not to be identified. Agrees strategic affairs expert Brahma Chellany. “It is a fact that Modi has used his personal touch with some effect in diplomacy. He kept his personalis­ed stamp on diplomacy, and relied heavily on bilateral summits to try and open new avenues for cooperatio­n.”

India exists in a challengin­g neighbourh­ood. The threat of cross border terrorism from Pakistan continues. For better part of four years ties with Nepal remained chilly, although there are signs of a significan­t thaw now. But at the end of four years, the neighbourh­ood first policy remains a mixed bag. “PM Modi had invited all South Asian heads of states for his swearing-in ceremony in 2014. He believed in SAARC but then had to shift his focus towards Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperatio­n (BIMSTEC) and Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, India (BBIN) groupings. Line of Credits of worth more than $8 billion have been sanctioned by Indian government over the last 4 years towards various developmen­t projects, apart from close to 2000 training slots and various hydroelect­ric power buy back agreements with our neighbouri­ng countries”, explained Prof Sachin Chaturvedi, director general of Delhi-based think tank, the Research and Informatio­n System for Developing Countries (RIS).

Getting membership to export control regimes such as Wassenaar Arrangemen­t, Australia Group and Missile Technology Control Regime , stepping up ties with Africa, boosting cooperatio­n in Indian Ocean, leading the solar alliance initiative , and further simplifica­tion of the passport process are other key achievemen­ts.

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