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Perils of self-hyphenation
Business Standard
|June 21, 2025
China and Pakistan are in a tight strategic alliance. India must deal with them one at a time, but be prepared in case they decide to collude
Last week, National Interest teased a sequel: The perils of self-hyphenation. What does this mean?
For three decades de-hyphenation from Pakistan has been the centre point of our grand strategy. But we can't move away from Pakistan physically or strategically. As Atal Bihari Vajpayee's immortal line goes: "You cannot choose your neighbours." India is particularly "blessed" in that respect, with two big hostile nuclear-armed neighbours.
They are in a tight strategic alliance, which is today perhaps the strongest in the world after America and Israel. Yet they're different countries, with shared interests but different priorities. You have to have the wherewithal to deal with them. Ideally, one at a time, but be prepared in case they decide to collude, either indirectly as principal-and-proxy, as during Operation Sindoor, or, who knows, in active warfare. The first element of Indian grand strategy, therefore, has to be to prevent.
Of the two, militarily and economically, India is much better equipped to deal with Pakistan. China is the really formidable challenge that we will need years to either match up to, or to create sufficient mutual vested interest in stable peace. That is where the idea of de-hyphenation with Pakistan comes from. It is wise, and has been pursued by every Prime Minister since Indira Gandhi's second coming in 1980.
India has pushed back sharply at any suggestion of an Indo-Pak policy from Western powers (read the United States). Progress on this was slow, until the first Bill Clinton term, and then picked up. In the two decades since the nuclear deal, it has moved at a sprinting pace.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 21, 2025-Ausgabe von Business Standard.
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