No Result
View All Result
  • MISSION STATEMENT
  • CONTACT
  • BE PART OF QUALITY JOURNALISM
  • ARCHIVE
Sunday, October 1, 2023
E-Paper
Kashmir Observer
12 °c
Srinagar
  • NEWSLIVE
    • TOP STORIES
    • LOCAL
    • CITY
    • REGIONAL
    • WORLD
  • IN DEPTH
    • FEATURE
    • HEADS & TAILS
    • OPINION
      • OPINION
      • EDITORIAL
      • KO ANALYSIS
      • LETTERS TO EDITOR
    • SPECIAL REPORT
    • INTERVIEW
    • REVIEW
      • BOOKS
    • LONGFORM
  • BUSINESS
    • BUSINESS NEWS
    • MARKET
    • ENERGY
    • HORTICULTURE
    • HANDICRAFTS
    • CARS & BIKES
    • STARTUP KASHMIR
  • SPORT
    • FOOTBAL
    • CRICKET
    • ADVENTURE SPORTS
    • GOLF
    • ATHLETICS
    • SKIING
    • OTHER SPORTS
  • MEDIA
  • PEOPLE
  • CULTURE
    • KHYEN CHYEN
    • ARTS
    • CRAFTS
    • FESTIVALS
    • THEATER
    • LANGAUGE
  • TRAVEL
    • HOUSEBOATS
    • HOTELS
    • ANGLING
    • CAMPING
    • DESTINATION FOCUS
  • SOCIETY
    • EDUCATION
    • HEADS & TAILS
    • GENDER
    • YOUTH
    • CHILD WELFARE
  • LITERATURE
    • SHORT STORY
    • BOOKS
    • NARRATIVE
  • CINEMA
    • CINEMA & TV
  • ePAPERS
    • BAZAAR OBSERVER
    • YOUNG KASHMIR
    • MIZRAB
  • NEWSLIVE
    • TOP STORIES
    • LOCAL
    • CITY
    • REGIONAL
    • WORLD
  • IN DEPTH
    • FEATURE
    • HEADS & TAILS
    • OPINION
      • OPINION
      • EDITORIAL
      • KO ANALYSIS
      • LETTERS TO EDITOR
    • SPECIAL REPORT
    • INTERVIEW
    • REVIEW
      • BOOKS
    • LONGFORM
  • BUSINESS
    • BUSINESS NEWS
    • MARKET
    • ENERGY
    • HORTICULTURE
    • HANDICRAFTS
    • CARS & BIKES
    • STARTUP KASHMIR
  • SPORT
    • FOOTBAL
    • CRICKET
    • ADVENTURE SPORTS
    • GOLF
    • ATHLETICS
    • SKIING
    • OTHER SPORTS
  • MEDIA
  • PEOPLE
  • CULTURE
    • KHYEN CHYEN
    • ARTS
    • CRAFTS
    • FESTIVALS
    • THEATER
    • LANGAUGE
  • TRAVEL
    • HOUSEBOATS
    • HOTELS
    • ANGLING
    • CAMPING
    • DESTINATION FOCUS
  • SOCIETY
    • EDUCATION
    • HEADS & TAILS
    • GENDER
    • YOUTH
    • CHILD WELFARE
  • LITERATURE
    • SHORT STORY
    • BOOKS
    • NARRATIVE
  • CINEMA
    • CINEMA & TV
  • ePAPERS
    • BAZAAR OBSERVER
    • YOUNG KASHMIR
    • MIZRAB
No Result
View All Result
Kashmir Observer
No Result
View All Result
Home IN DEPTH

G20 Takeaway

New Delhi walked a tightrope between the west’s demands and Russia’s expectations

by Riyaz Wani
September 18, 2023
A A
1
SHARES
45
VIEWS
G20 Takeaway

As was expected, the G20 summit turned out to be a loud, flamboyant gabfest that brought India and prime minister Narendra Modi’s leadership into global focus. Most of the spotlight was of a favorable kind. The western powers led by the US were more than willing to acknowledge India’s arrival on the global stage –  of course, more as a power that could act as a countervailing force to China, now effectively the world’s No 2 power raring to take over as the No 1. And to that end, the summit made quite a statement. More so, with Chinese president Xi Jinping and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin choosing to give the summit a conspicuous miss.  

But New Delhi has made it clear through its diplomacy that it doesn’t want to be seen as taking sides between the US and China – albeit, in recent years, the country has grown far more closer to the US than it ever was before. China’s 2020  incursions at five points along the Line of Actual Control in Ladakh made India acutely aware of its need to secure its flanks. West’s support came thus handy. But it is not that only India needs the west. The west, in a sense, needs India more than vice versa. The reason is that while India only needs west’s cooperation to create space for its geopolitical maneuvering in the teeth of China, the west led by the US faces an existential situation vis-a-vis China and desperately needs allies in the fight. And what better than India, a subcontinental size country with a 1.4 billion population. What is more, by the current official estimates, India is also a fastest growing economy. The alliance with New Delhi thus not only offers a decisive geopolitical advantage but also a large market to boot. 

As it has turned out, India has stayed well short of allying with either of the emerging cold war blocks. It has acted in its core national interest and zealously guarded its strategic autonomy. The country has now accumulated enough military and economic muscle to act largely independently and wherever possible even throw its weight around: for example, in its relations with Pakistan, or for that matter even against Canada, as the lukewarm approach towards Canadian president Justin Trudeau at the G20 summit underlined. 

ADVERTISEMENT

The G2O declaration was a best example of India playing a deft hand in international affairs: it ensured that the declaration didn’t come down hard on Russia and the world including the west went along. So, once again, India effectively asserted its strategic autonomy by walking a tightrope between the west’s demands and Russia’s expectations. This approach also doesn’t pit India against the emerging China-led bloc as Russia is its most powerful member after China. So, whichever side wins or loses in Ukraine – West or Russia – India won’t be the loser. 

Another geopolitical factor that goes to the advantage of India is that the US-led unipolar world birthed by the break-up of the USSR in 1989 is giving way to a multilateral world – the continuing pre-eminence of the US notwithstanding. This has given New Delhi a greater diplomatic heft  in regional and global affairs. And it is apparent in current geopolitical order: India is no longer equated with Pakistan, something the West was wont to do earlier. The country is now seen as a rival to China despite the large power gap between the two. Earlier this year, a report by Center for a New American Security said that a potential India-China conflict was now a bigger worry for the West than India-Pak tension. Over the past two decades, India has incrementally left Pakistan behind in terms of conventional military and economic advancement.  But it has yet to gain a decisive advantage over its longstanding adversary. The centre of gravity of regional power equation between the two countries is still far from shifting in favour of New Delhi. 

Read Also

India’s South East Asia Policy

Canada Hits Pause On Trade Mission To India After Tensions At G20 Summit

Similarly, in the case of China, while India is now amply qualified to be a geopolitical rival it is still short of measuring up to Beijing’s military and economic might. Result of this is that there is a complex geopolitics in operation regionally even as the new global cold war takes shape. India faces formidable challenges in navigating a non-aligned relationship between the West and China, but it is also aggressively wooed by the two. This has strategically located the country in a geopolitical sweet spot.

Where do we go from here? It could be more of the same in the near future. China and Russia’s boycott of the G20 has added to the existing bitterness in the geopolitical affairs. Much will depend on the outcome of the ongoing war in Ukraine. America, despite its setback in Afghanistan, its failure to have its way in Syria, and its difficulties in pushing Russia out of Ukraine, remains the world’s pre-eminent power. Its GDP and defense expenditure remains several times higher than its nearest competitor China. That said, we are at an interesting moment in history. The victor in Ukraine will determine the new global geopolitics if not the new superpower of the world. And as the G20 summit underlined, India won’t be on the wrong side of the new order. 


  • Views expressed in the article are the author’s own and do not necessarily represent the editorial stance of Kashmir Observer 

Follow this link to join our WhatsApp group: Join Now

Be Part of Quality Journalism

Quality journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce and despite all the hardships we still do it. Our reporters and editors are working overtime in Kashmir and beyond to cover what you care about, break big stories, and expose injustices that can change lives. Today more people are reading Kashmir Observer than ever, but only a handful are paying while advertising revenues are falling fast.

ACT NOW
MONTHLYRs 100
YEARLYRs 1000
LIFETIMERs 10000

CLICK FOR DETAILS

ShareTweetSendShareShareSend
Previous Post

Sports Department’s Water Sports Activities Begin In Srinagar

Next Post

Iran, US Complete Landmark Prisoner Exchange Deal

Riyaz Wani

Riyaz Wani

Riyaz Wani is the Political Editor at Kashmir Observer

Related Posts

India’s South East Asia Policy
IN DEPTH

India’s South East Asia Policy

Canada Expels Indian Diplomat As It Investigates India's Possible Link To Sikh Activist's Murder
WORLD

Canada Hits Pause On Trade Mission To India After Tensions At G20 Summit

Security Challenges Persist
EDITORIAL

G20 Diplomatic Triumph

G20 Declaration Emphasises Freedom Of Religion, Denounces Religious Hatred
TOP STORIES

G20 Declaration Emphasises Freedom Of Religion, Denounces Religious Hatred

Europe-Middle-East-India Trade Corridor To Rival China's BRI
TOP STORIES

Europe-Middle-East-India Trade Corridor To Rival China’s BRI

PM Identified as Leader Representing Bharat at G20
TOP STORIES

PM Identified as Leader Representing Bharat at G20

Next Post
 Iran, US Complete Landmark Prisoner Exchange Deal

Iran, US Complete Landmark Prisoner Exchange Deal

Letter To Editor | Power of Words 

Letter To Editor | Power of Words 

Pages

  • ABOUT US
  • ADVERTISE IN KO
  • ARCHIVE
  • BE PART OF QUALITY JOURNALISM
  • CONTACT
  • CONTRIBUTORS
  • INTERNSHIPS AT OBSERVER
  • JOBS@KO
  • KO – Homepage
  • MISSION STATEMENT
  • POLICIES
    • COMMENTING GUIDELINES
    • COOKIE POLICY
    • DISCLAIMER
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS
  • Refund Policy
  • Team

SEARCH IN ARCHIVE

No Result
View All Result

FOLLOW US

About Us

The media in Kashmir, comprising a robust English and vernacular press has a particularly unenviable job to do. The problems faced by it are both universal to the conflict situations and unique to the region. Read More

Advertising

For Advertising on various Kashmir Observer platforms
contact

[email protected]
+91-194-2502327; +91-1947969705

© 1997 -2023 | KASHMIR OBSERVER LLP

No Result
View All Result
  • NEWS
    • TOP STORIES
    • LOCAL
    • CITY
    • REGIONAL
    • WORLD
  • IN DEPTH
    • FEATURE
    • HEADS & TAILS
    • OPINION
      • OPINION
      • EDITORIAL
      • KO ANALYSIS
      • LETTERS TO EDITOR
    • SPECIAL REPORT
    • INTERVIEW
    • REVIEW
      • BOOKS
    • LONGFORM
  • BUSINESS
    • BUSINESS NEWS
    • MARKET
    • ENERGY
    • HORTICULTURE
    • HANDICRAFTS
    • CARS & BIKES
    • STARTUP KASHMIR
  • SPORT
    • FOOTBAL
    • CRICKET
    • ADVENTURE SPORTS
    • GOLF
    • ATHLETICS
    • SKIING
    • OTHER SPORTS
  • MEDIA
  • PEOPLE
  • CULTURE
    • KHYEN CHYEN
    • ARTS
    • CRAFTS
    • FESTIVALS
    • THEATER
    • LANGAUGE
  • TRAVEL
    • HOUSEBOATS
    • HOTELS
    • ANGLING
    • CAMPING
    • DESTINATION FOCUS
  • SOCIETY
    • EDUCATION
    • HEADS & TAILS
    • GENDER
    • YOUTH
    • CHILD WELFARE
  • LITERATURE
    • SHORT STORY
    • BOOKS
    • NARRATIVE
  • CINEMA
    • CINEMA & TV
  • ePAPERS
    • BAZAAR OBSERVER
    • YOUNG KASHMIR
    • MIZRAB

© 1997 -2023 | KASHMIR OBSERVER LLP