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Epaper Sunday, March 01, 2026

Editorial

Op-ed: Strategic autonomy in a polarised world

March 01, 2026 05:25 PM

In today's increasingly polarized world, where great-power rivalries between the United States, China, and Russia intensify, and regional conflicts-from Ukraine to West Asia-force nations to choose sides, India stands out by steadfastly pursuing strategic autonomy. This approach is not mere non-alignment from the Cold War era but an evolved, proactive policy of multi-alignment: engaging diverse partners on their merits, prioritizing national interests, and avoiding entrapment in exclusive blocs.

Strategic autonomy means India retains the will and capacity to decide independently on matters affecting its vital interests-security, economy, technology, and sovereignty. In a multipolar landscape marked by fragmentation, this enables New Delhi to hedge risks, diversify dependencies, and maximize leverage. For instance, India deepens Defence and technology ties with the US through frameworks like the Quad while sustaining reliable energy and arms partnerships with Russia. Simultaneously, it advances economic cooperation with China despite border tensions, ensuring no single power can dictate terms.

A clear example is India's balanced diplomacy in West Asia, a region rife with polarization. India has elevated its strategic partnership with Israel, yielding tangible benefits in defence (co-developed systems like Barak-8), agriculture (drip irrigation via 33+ Centres of Excellence boosting farmer yields), water management (desalination and recycling addressing scarcity), and innovation (Al, cybersecurity through joint R&D funds). Bilateral merchandise trade stands at around $3.75 billion (FY24-25), with ongoing FTA negotiations (launched February 2026) promising further growth in high-tech and MSMEs.

Yet this engagement never compromises India's broader regional stance. New Delhi maintains strong ties with Arab states like the UAE and Saudi Arabia (energy, infrastructure, and connectivity), supports a two-state solution for Palestine (with substantial aid, and engages constructively with others like Iran. Recent developments-such as PM Modi's February 2026 visit to Israel-underscore de-hyphenation: deepening bilateral gains without alienating Arab partners or abandoning humanitarian principles. This pragmatic balancing reinforces stability, humanitarian sensitivity, and India's role as a voice for the Global South.

In a polarised era, strategic autonomy is India's shield against coercion and its bridge to opportunity. It allows sovereign choices that deliver citizen-centric outcomes-enhanced security, food and water security, jobs through innovation-while upholding empathy in conflicts and advocating multilateralism. As global fault lines deepen, India's model of independent, interest-driven diplomacy offers a mature path: not aloofness or drift, but confident agency in shaping a multipolar order that serves development, peace, and equity for all.

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