Prof. S. D. Muni,
Ladies & Gentlemen,
Thank you for asking me to speak to such a distinguished gathering
of thinkers and opinion-makers this morning. The topic that was
suggested, “The Challenges Ahead for India’s Foreign Policy”, lends
itself to several and varied interpretations. Which challenges we
choose depend upon what matters to us, i.e. our priorities. The
primary task of our foreign policy is to ensure an external
environment that is conducive to India’s transformation and
development. To oversimplify, what are the issues and what kind of
foreign policy would enable us to eradicate poverty, grow at 8-10%
and transform India into a moderately well off state where our
people can realize their potential?
Looked at in this light, broadly speaking there would be three sets
of challenges: Firstly, ensuring a peaceful periphery; secondly,
relations with the major powers; and, thirdly, issues of the future
namely food security, water, energy and environment.
I
The first area of focus for our foreign policy is naturally our
neighbourhood, for unless we have a peaceful and prosperous
periphery we will not be able to focus on our primary tasks of
socio-economic development. We must, therefore, accord the highest
priority to closer political, economic and cultural ties with our
neighbours and are committed to building strong and enduring
partnerships with all our neighbours.
When we look around us today, each of our neighbors is going through
accelerated internal political transformations. Bhutan is
consciously introducing a form of constitutional monarchy and
democracy. Recognizing changed realities, in February this year we
signed a new India-Bhutan Friendship treaty to replace the earlier
one of 1949. Both sides ratified the treaty in March. The new treaty
updates the legal basis of our bilateral relations and reflects
contemporary reality. Nepal is undergoing a remarkable double
transition: bringing into being a new democratic order while
mainstreaming the Maoists. The transition, though delicately
balanced, is on course, as evidenced in last week’s formation of the
interim government. While the basic decisions on the direction and
nature of change lie with the Nepalese people, we have given our
full support to Nepal in this process and remain committed to its
success. In Bangladesh too the new interim government is taking
steps towards transforming the political landscape. As a friend and
neighbour, India is interested in a democratic, stable and
prosperous Bangladesh. While our relations with Sri Lanka continue
to develop steadily, we remain concerned about continuing ethnic
conflict.
It is necessary to
find a negotiated political settlement to the ethnic issue within
the framework of a united Sri Lanka that is acceptable to all
sections of Sri Lankan society. With Pakistan, the dialogue process
continues to change the relationship. The composite dialogue, the
Joint Commission and the Joint Anti-terrorism Mechanism have
provided a structured framework within which major issues are
discussed. For us, terrorism remains a particular concern.
Infiltration continues from across the border. We have stressed to
Pakistan that the success of the dialogue process is predicated on
Pakistan fulfilling its commitment not to permit any territory under
its control to be used to support terrorism in any manner.
The challenge for us in our neighbourhood is to build
inter-dependencies which not only integrate economies but also
create vested interests in each other’s stability and prosperity in
the subcontinent. Interestingly, today India is not the issue in any
of our neighbors’ political transitions; rather, the countries of
the neighbourhood look to the Indian market and economy as positive
factors for their own economic growth. The smooth and productive
course of the 14th SAARC Summit in Delhi, free of disputes or
posturing, is a reflection of changing circumstances. The hope must
be that as our engagement with each of neighbours increases, the
value of our bilateral linkages will outweigh the attractions of
sterile confrontation.
We will continue
to work with each of our neighbours, through the innovative use of
development partnerships, our economic and technological
capabilities, the development of cross border infrastructure
projects as well as our civilisational linkages, to achieve the goal
of a peaceful periphery. In this process we are ready to provide
benefits to our neighbours without necessarily insisting on
reciprocity. Hence PM’s announcement of unilateral zero-duty access
to goods from LDCs in the region by the end of the year, and the
reduction of tariff lines for such countries.
In addition to our bilateral relationships, we see the SAARC process
as contributing to our goal of building a peaceful and prosperous
periphery. At the recently concluded 14th SAARC Summit in New Delhi,
all the SAARC members including newly-admitted Afghanistan agreed to
a vision of a South Asian community where there was a smooth flow of
goods, services, peoples, technologies, knowledge, capital, culture
and ideas in the region. As you know, South Asia remains one of the
least integrated regions in the world. Intra-regional trade is less
than 5 % of total regional trade. In addition, cross-border
investments and the flow of ideas are at rather low levels. Starting
from such a low base, greater integration among South Asian
countries could bring huge benefits to the people of the region.
With present high
growth rates in the countries of the region, we have an opportunity
to advance together through trade, open borders and economic
integration, and to bring about shared prosperity between India and
her neighbors. Several practical steps were agreed, such as
establishing a South Asia University, a SAARC Food Bank and
operationalising the SAARC Development Fund. The SAARC Summit also
agreed to work together to deal with water (including flood
control), environment, energy and food security, involving
multilateral organizations where necessary. It will be a challenge
for India’s diplomacy to translate these agreements into reality. As
Chair of SAARC, it will be our endeavour to usher in a new phase of
effective regional cooperation, reconnecting the subcontinent to
itself and the world. We thereby hope to create a common space of
prosperity in South Asia based on enhanced economic, trade and
investment linkages and sustainable social and economic development.
II
The second set of
challenges is that of managing our relationship with the world’s
major powers. The world today is increasingly multivalent, marked by
considerable political cooperation among major powers whose
economies are becoming inextricably intertwined with each other. The
current global economy is increasingly defined by freer and
substantial movement of capital and by the technology revolution, in
particular information technology. While capital is free to roam the
world, other factors of production like labor and technology are
not, and access to markets remains patchy. As a result of our
development, we are on both sides of a range of issues such as IPRs
– where we are both a supplier and consumer. We need to therefore
use our strengths to create partnerships with major powers in a
manner which would allow us political and economic space to grow.
This will require us to strengthen relations with all the major
powers of the world.
India’s relations
with the USA have been substantially transformed in the past few
years resulting in wide-ranging engagement across many fields
including defence and security issues, counterterrorism, science &
technology, health, trade, space, energy, agriculture, maritime
cooperation and the environment. The July 18, 2005 decision to
cooperate in civil nuclear energy is a major symbol of this
transformed relationship. We seek to arrive at an early agreement
with the US on civil nuclear energy cooperation within the
parameters laid out in the 18 July 2005 India-US Joint Statement and
the 2 March 2006 Separation Plan. While cooperation in nuclear
energy is no doubt a very important step, we should avoid the
tendency to view relations with the US only within the narrow
confines of civil nuclear cooperation. There are many diverse
strands to our cooperation with the US, which are progressing well,
and which will impart greater resilience to our relations in the
future. Relations with the US are important to us, not just because
it is the superpower, but also because of the positive effect it has
on our dealings with the rest of the world, and on our access to
markets, high technology and resources crucial to our future
economic growth and development.
We have developed
a strong partnership with the European Union covering a wide range
of areas including trade and investment, culture, science &
technology. Our traditional relations with Russia continue to remain
strong as evidenced in the recent visit of Russia’s President
Vladimir Putin as the Chief Guest at our Republic Day this year.
Agreements reached during the visit will significantly expand our
cooperation in the fields of energy, high technology, defence and
space. The strategic partnership between India and Russia is poised
to deepen even further. India’s relations with Japan have also
developed considerably with several exchanges of high level visits.
There has been a qualitative shift in India-Japan relations
following our Prime Minister’s visit to Japan in December 2006 and
the visit of the External Affairs Minister to Japan in March 2007
and we have agreed impart a strategic and global perspective to our
partnership. The visit of Chinese President Hu Jintao to India in
November 2006 strengthened the process of sustained comprehensive
development of India-China relations. There have been some concerns
expressed about the ‘peaceful rise’ of China. However, as PM has
said, it is our belief that there is enough space for both of us to
grow. We remain hopeful about steady progress in our relations with
China, and at the same time will continue to work towards a
resolution of the boundary question.
As we look forward to an increasing role in global affairs we need
to expand our network of international relationships, political
engagement and economic and technical cooperation with the world. We
are looking today at expanding circles of engagement, starting with
the immediate neighbourhood, West Asia, Central Asia, South-east
Asia and the Indian Ocean region.
This is reflected in
our political, economic and defence engagement with these regions.
Our Look East policy and the consequent intensified engagement with
East and South-east Asia has led to the rebuilding of India’s
historically benign and stabilizing role in these regions premised
on the commerce of ideas and goods. Indian companies have long had a
presence in South-east Asia. Now they are venturing farther and
investing in China, Japan and Australia. ASEAN and its member states
are important markets for our goods and services while South Korea
and Japan are important sources of investment and technology. We
need to strengthen political, physical and economic connectivity
between India and East Asia and broaden the underpinnings of our
quest for peace and prosperity. We are also adding important
elements to our traditional ties with countries of the Persian Gulf
region by leveraging economic opportunities.
If our politics can create an enabling environment, the focus of our
economic diplomacy in coming years will be on promoting trade and
investment flows especially in critical areas such as
infrastructure, in assuring predictable energy supplies and in
securing the widest possible access to technologies. We also hope to
work towards significantly upgrading our economic relationship with
South-east Asia, East Asia, Latin America and Africa, build new
investment-driven partnerships with USA and EU, and nurture a web of
cooperative energy security networks in Asia and with new suppliers
in West Africa, Central Asia and Latin America.
III
Lastly, there is a
cluster of issues of the future such as food, water, energy and
climate change. These are interlinked issues, and will have critical
impact as our ability to address them successfully will greatly
shape our future. All these are cross-boundary issues, which require
us to work with others to solve them. Some, like water and flood
control and energy have solutions in our immediate or extended
neighborhood. Hence the Delhi SAARC Summit decision to undertake
regional or sub-regional projects in these areas. Others, like the
environment and climate change, are global in their nature and
impact and need global solutions, and will directly affect our food,
water and energy security. Our participation in drawing up those
solutions is essential if the outcomes are to be satisfactory and if
our development is not to be affected.
Last year India was a net importer of food after many years. The
size of our population, economic growth and prosperity have led to
consumption and life-style changes. Assuming a 7-8% GDP growth rate,
by 2020 we would require 340 million tonnes of food-grains. This is
a challenge both for scientists as well as for the agro-management
of our rain-fed and dry-land farming areas. We need a second Green
Revolution, harnessing contemporary tools like bio-technology, water
conservation and rain harvesting techniques and other steps which
are environmental-friendly and economically sustainable. We also
need to tap into the resources of developed countries. The India-US
Agriculture Knowledge Initiative announced in July 2005, is a step
in this direction and aims to address new challenges and facilitate
agricultural research, education, and extension.
Food security is not
only about food production because in India, 2/3rd of our population
is dependent on agriculture for its livelihood. It is in this sense
that international trade is a vitally inter-linked component. The
impasse in international trade negotiations is disappointing for us.
When agriculture was brought into the multilateral trade
negotiations, developing countries were given a clear understanding
that trade disparities created by agricultural subsidies would be
phased out in a definite time frame. Unfortunately, the developed
countries, so far, are reluctant to do away with their subsidies
that render the playing field quite uneven.
Ensuring adequate water supply both for drinking and for agriculture
and industry will also be a critical challenge for the future. While
our sub-continent is fortunate to have adequate resources, we have
not seen enough collaboration in its use in the past. We must
reverse this. As agreed at the SAARC Summit, we will work with our
neighbours in this regard.
Our continued economic growth needs increases in the supply of cheap
and sustainable sources of energy. Despite our large population and
GDP growth averaging over 8% in the last few years, our per capita
electricity consumption continues to be as low as 1/6th of the world
average. Presently 67% of our electricity comes from burning fossil
fuels, and 70% of our oil is imported. To meet our future energy
requirements we will build partnerships with other countries who
have surplus energy. Additionally we will have to increase the share
of non-fossil fuel based energy resources in our energy mix. The
India-US civil nuclear energy cooperation is one step in this
direction.
This brings me to the
issue of climate change and global environmental degradation. We are
ready to work with others on the principle of “common but
differentiated responsibilities” enshrined in the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change. In our view, this issue cannot be
viewed in isolation and must be seen in the context of the
developmental needs of developing countries. Today India has a very
low per capita level of emissions and has an energy intensity per
unit of GDP which matches the best in the developed world. We look
at climate change in the context of the promises made by the
international community for technology transfer and additional
financing since Rio, which have remained unfulfilled. Critical
technologies which can have significant impact on de-carbonization,
have been out of reach of developing countries because of
prohibitive costs and the existing IPR regime. A related concern for
us is that trade advantages should not be sought through the
instrumentality of environmental treaties. This issue will be in
sharp focus at the forthcoming G8 Summit, particularly after the
report of the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change. Addressing
climate change issues in a manner that also meets our concerns will
be a major preoccupation for us in the foreseeable future.
I have tried to
give you a sense of the challenges that our foreign policy faces and
is likely to confront in the immediate future. Some of you might see
a great omission in this listing of challenges. What about balance
of power issues such as the military balance in our own region and
the world, and issues of conventional security? These require a
separate speech by themselves to do them justice. Besides they
probably receive sufficient public airing. Speaking personally, I
believe that there is a good realist or balance of power argument to
be made for choosing precisely these issues as our major foreign
policy challenges. But sadly the language of strategic discourse in
India is not yet developed enough to describe what we empirically
know and face as reality around us. We need to develop our own
strategic concepts and vocabulary. I am repeatedly struck by the use
of concepts, ideas and methods of analysis that come from other
situations and interests, (such as deterrence, parity, or
reciprocity), and bear little relationship to our unique
circumstance. That is something that needs serious examination on
its own. It is probably best left to thinkers like you by diplomats
like me.
Thank you for the patient hearing. I would be happy to hear your
comments and to answer any questions.
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