Modi's 'Adventures' to Energise India in the Global realm

Ray

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Modi and the middle powers

C Raja Mohan

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to France, Germany and Canada beginning Thursday should help New Delhi consolidate three of India's very special relationships. France was the first Western power to become a strategic partner for India and can now turbocharge India's high technology sectors. Germany is an economic powerhouse with growing political clout in Europe and beyond. Canada and India are colonial cousins, with a shared Anglo-Saxon political heritage and massive economic synergies. Canada is also home to one of our most important overseas communities.

Until now, Modi has been preoccupied with rejuvenating ties with America and China. He has had two quick summits with US President Barack Obama and is preparing for the second round with Chinese President Xi Jinping next month in Beijing. The Modi government has also sought to improve relations with neighbours in the subcontinent and reconnect with the extended neighbourhood in Asia and the Indian Ocean.

Under Modi's "Act East Policy", India has intensified engagement with key regional powers like Japan, South Korea, Vietnam and Australia. More recently, Modi had a successful "Sagar Yatra" to Seychelles, Mauritius and Sri Lanka. The same, however, cannot be said about other regions of the world, including Europe, the Middle East, Africa and the Americas beyond the US.

Modi's visit to Europe and Canada should help restore some balance to India's international engagement. India is preparing to host the Africa Summit later this year and raise its game in the Middle East, where political turbulence is shaking up the old regional order. If geographic regions are one way of organising foreign policy, there is no substitute for boosting bilateral ties to a few pivotal countries around the world, three of which are on Modi's itinerary this week.

All three are Western middle powers. Despite their longstanding alliances with America, all three of them have their own national interests and have often pursued policies independent of Washington. Acutely aware of this reality, China has invested significant amount of time and energy in cultivating the middle powers of the West, despite many differences over ideology and policy. The recent European stampede to join China's Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, despite American opposition, reflects the depth of realpolitik among the Western middle powers.

If the Indian strategic community tends to think of the multipolar world as an anti-Western platform, China has rightly seen the idea as an instrument to explore the strategic possibilities within the West and build separate partnerships with each of the middle powers. India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, did not view the world in anti-Western terms despite his invention of non-alignment.

Nehru argued against postwar Germany being treated like an enemy state at the United Nations. French Gaullism helped create space for India amidst an all-encompassing rivalry between America and Russia. Genuine commitment to liberal internationalism brought Nehru close to the Canadian prime minister, Lester Pearson, and together they sought to strengthen the UN and international norms at the height of the Cold War.

The end of the Cold War and India's economic globalisation created a lot more room for India's engagement with the Western middle powers, especially in the last decade. But the UPA government was unable to seize the moment and turn new opportunities into tangible outcomes.

Despite the fact that Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has travelled twice to India in the last few years and invested much political capital in transforming the bilateral relationship, Canada hardly figured on India's political radar. That resource-rich Canada would be a natural partner for mineral-hungry India seemed to make no difference to Delhi's political approach to Ottawa.

Harper had overruled the strong nuclear nonproliferation community in Canada to put an end to the prolonged atomic dispute with India that began after Delhi's lone nuclear test in 1974 and cast a shadow over political ties. Harper's Ottawa also became one of the first countries to sign a civil nuclear cooperation agreement with India. He also agreed to reasonable terms on monitoring the uranium bought from Canada.

As the first Indian prime minister to visit Canada on bilateral business in more than four decades, Modi has much catching up to do. The PM's decision to travel to Canada in the very first year of his tenure signals the recognition that India must not only value its friends but also show its political appreciation. Modi's now standard outreach to the diaspora during his travels abroad will have an additional dimension in Canada — to end the alienation of the Canadian Sikh community from India.
The problem with France and Germany has not been a lack of high-level interaction over the last decade. Both Paris and Berlin have relentlessly pursued cooperation — strategic, economic and political — with India. But the UPA government smothered the possibilities with Paris and Berlin with its lack of political coherence and ceding of strategic decision-making to the bureaucracy.

India is not going to get the best terms from France on the long-pending nuclear and defence deals by letting its accountants run riot. For, the mega deals at hand are not just about buying equipment at the lowest price. They are about leveraging Delhi's purchasing power to expand the defence industrial base, build a modern nuclear industry, strengthen the aerospace sector, and gain access to advanced technologies.

Paris, Berlin and Ottawa can each contribute substantially to the realisation of India's new national goals — from ensuring energy security to creating jobs in the manufacturing sector and addressing climate change to building smart cities. Modi can only unlock the multiple possibilities with these middle powers in the West by injecting a strategic perspective into the talks with the three nations.
Modi and the middle powers | The Indian Express | Page 2
The article sums up the effort being made to rejuvenate the moribund foreign policy and to India's best advantage.

It indicates that the reach has and is being extended to all regions that of India's national and strategic interest, and at the same time, engaging nations that have a say in international political and economic destiny.

if the initiative that Modi has brought to roost is followed up sincerely, then India shall benefit.
 

Peter

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The article sums up the effort being made to rejuvenate the moribund foreign policy and to India's best advantage.

It indicates that the reach has and is being extended to all regions that of India's national and strategic interest, and at the same time, engaging nations that have a say in international political and economic destiny.

if the initiative that Modi has brought to roost is followed up sincerely, then India shall benefit.
Sir,
A complete turnaround from the previous Cong govt policies. The previous govt under the ever silent MSM had been planning to give away Kashmir and Ladakh to Pakistan so that he can get a Nobel peace prize. On the contrary Modiji seems determined to corner and isolate Pakistan diplomatically. I hope Modiji gets the support of more countries as they can help us in matters relating to education,infrastructure etc.
 

jouni

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No word of Russia? What happened to close friendship with -now isolated by the west- Russia?
 

Voldemort

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No word of Russia? What happened to close friendship with -now isolated by the west- Russia?
Putin visited India last year. Russia remains as close as ever. Russia is helping us in fields like nuclear energy. They need to speed up FGFA though.
 

tarunraju

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No word of Russia? What happened to close friendship with -now isolated by the west- Russia?
Russia midwifed Congress-I (the party dominated by Nehru-Gandhi family), and they are politically incompatible with BJP. Modi wouldn't want a repeat of LB Shastri. So he will keep his interactions with Russia very limited.
 
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Rowdy

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No word of Russia? What happened to close friendship with -now isolated by the west- Russia?
Looking forward to Russia visit: PM Modi
Last Updated: Wednesday, January 21, 2015 - 16:39

New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday said he looked forward to visit Russia later this year, an official release said here Wednesday.

During a meeting with Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu, Modi recalled a very successful visit of Russian President Vladimir Putin to India in December 2014.

The prime minister said the time-tested special and privileged strategic partnership between India and Russia acquired a new momentum with Putin's visit to New Delhi.

Modi conveyed that he looked forward to visit Russia later this year for the 7th BRICS summit and for the bilateral annual summit.

Sergei Shoigu is visiting India for the 14th meeting of the Inter-Governmental Commission on Military and Technical Cooperation which is co-chaired by the defence minister of India.

IANS
Looking forward to Russia visit: PM Modi | Zee News[/url

____________________________________________________
Russia to be cornerstone of Modi's foreign policy in 2015?
India's top leadership will visit Russia this year with Prime Minister Narendra Modi scheduled to pay two visits to the country and President Pranab Mukherjee to travel to Moscow in May.

While Modi will be visiting Russia in July for BRICS (Brazil-Russia-India-China-South Africa) Summit, he is again scheduled to travel to Moscow for annual bilateral Summit towards end of the year.

Mukherjee will be visiting to take part in Russian Victory Day celebrations on May 9.

Apart from Mukherjee and Modi, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar and External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj will also visit Russia to co-chair inter-governmental Commissions with Russian counterparts on key strategic issues of bilateral, regional and international importance.

These visits will provide opportunity for high-level interactions between Indian and Russian leaders at least five times in six months starting from May.
 

Ray

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No word of Russia? What happened to close friendship with -now isolated by the west- Russia?
There are on going projects with Russia.

India is buying things from all over and improving the strategic and economic ties with the world.

Have goods and TOT, Will Buy is the mantra.

Watch what is happening in France right now.
 

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