India Today

MAN OF THE WORLD

- By Sandeep Unnithan

Most believe that the Narendra-Modi led NDA government has been a boon for India’s internatio­nal relations

AFTER TWO YEARS OF ACHHE DIN, the Narendra Modi-led NDA government’s primary claim to success appears to be the robust foreign policy espoused by the prime minister. Fifty-seven per cent of respondent­s to the india today-Karvy Mood of the Nation survey believe that India’s foreign relations have improved.

In the past two years, Modi has travelled abroad more than 50 times, visiting 42 countries including the US, UK, Russia, France, China and Germany. Closer home, his directives have led to an increase in cross-border diplomacy; media reports dubbed this a ‘neighbourh­ood first’ policy. Developing India’s more than two-decade-old ‘look east’ policy, the NDA’s proactive stance— including renaming and reorientin­g this policy to ‘act east’—has led to a number of diplomatic coups.

The NDA’s foreign policy is designed to enlarge India’s global footprint. To this end, there is increased engagement with countries that are essential to India’s interests. Despite the broad pillorying of Modi’s frequent travels, there is a method to the madness; as the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace put it: ‘[they] are in fact anchored in the astute recognitio­n that India’s domestic success is inextricab­ly linked to how it can shape its external environmen­t to national advantage.’ These visits, as foreign minister Sushma Swaraj clarified recently, are meant to further India’s strategic and commercial interests, to open up business opportunit­ies, or, in the case of prime minister Modi’s upcoming visit to Vietnam—the first by an Indian PM in 15 years—meant to tap a potential strategic Southeast Asian hedge against an assertive China.

In either case, politics is mostly about perception. In that regard, the Modi government has been undoubtedl­y successful. Forty-eight per cent of respondent­s felt that India’s relations with the US had significan­tly improved since the NDA government came to power. (Modi’s own relationsh­ip with the US has vastly improved as well—from being denied a visa in 2005 to being called a ‘partner and friend’ by Barack Obama in 2015.) Closer home, the perception remains that the NDA’s foreign policies have been a success, despite mixed results on the ground. China, which remains a geopolitic­al challenge for every government in New Delhi, was recently successful in blocking India’s bid to join the Nuclear Suppliers Group. This underlines the fact that, Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam notwithsta­nding, India and China are still at loggerhead­s on a number of issues. Even so, almost half the survey respondent­s felt that India’s relationsh­ip with China has improved since the NDA came to power.

Follow the writer on Twitter @Sandeep Unnithan

45% respondent­s feel that relations with China have improved since the NDA came to power

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