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Thursday, 14 September 2017

Talking Foreign Policy: How India Sees the World (Asia Society)

Asia Society India Centre hosted Shyam Saran, former Foreign Secretary and Ambassador, and Madhav Das Nalapat, India’s first Professor of Geopolitics and Vice Chair of the Manipal Advanced Research Group, for a discussion centred around Saran’s career as a senior foreign Diplomat and his new book ‘How India Sees the World: Kautilya to the 21st Century’. The discussion began with an analysis of India’s national identity. Saran observed that there is no single idea of ‘India’ - that by virtue of its location at the intersection of various caravan and maritime routes, India has historically been able to assimilate from many different cultures, making it cosmopolitan and comfortable with plurality, which is an asset in today’s globalized world. Nalapat asked why no serious attempt had been made to define core elements of nationhood in India, Saran responded saying there can be no one idea because India is too diverse and heterogeneous, and trying to utilize a singular model of national identity would be counterproductive for a country as plural as India. As the discussion moved to foreign policy, Nalapat sought to understand what the need was for a substantial country like India to follow the policy of non-alignment in its early years. Saran argued, that it made complete sense for a country like India, which had just achieved independence from colonial rule, to avoid becoming subordinate to another power. Saran also pointed out how India had managed to maintain strategic alliances, such as with the Soviet Union, despite the non-alignment policy. He said that this “strategic autonomy”, has always been a goal of Indian foreign policy and one that successive administrations have tried to achieve and maintain. Regarding India’s immediate neighbours, Saran opined that China has been India’s most significant foreign policy challenge till date (both in terms of being a threat as well as an opportunity) and is likely to grow in significance. Saran emphasized that there is much potential for cooperation between the two countries, recounting instances during his own career when he had witnessed this, such as during the Copenhagen climate change negotiations of 2009 or negotiations on general trade issues. 

 [L-R] Madhav D. Nalapat & Shyam Saran

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