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Cold Light of Reason Through Fog of Diplomacy
The Morning Standard
|May 14, 2025
The deals being struck by other nations should be instructive of the zeitgeist. This is a time to grab a hand offered without animus, not strike a truculent posture
OUR days of clashes with Pakistan exposed the faultlines in India's foreign policy and diplomacy. None of India's neighbours voiced support for Operation Sindoor; it had a public spat with the European Union; Russia remained largely indifferent, and alongside the Global South, refused to take sides. And after allowing for US mediation, we are now in a sullen mood and denial.
President Donald Trump, in his characteristic way, reacted to our split personality by promising to work with us "to see if, after a 'thousand years' (of Hindu-Muslim animosity), a solution can be arrived at concerning Kashmir". Trump's India-Pakistan hyphenation apart, our diplomacy vis-a-vis the US is crumbling. Our 'middle class' cannot be happy about it. The paradox is, we are squirming when Trump pays flattering tribute to PM's "wisdom, and fortitude to fully know and understand that it was time to stop the current aggression". Indeed, "aggression"—Trump's choice of word—implied a vehement rejection of the raison d'être of Operation Sindoor.
On Monday, Trump tightened the screws further by disclosing he told India and Pakistan that if they didn't stop fighting, "there won't be any trade". In his words: "We stopped a nuclear conflict. I think it would have been a bad nuclear war. Millions of people would have been killed. I also want to thank VP JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio for their work."
This unsavoury happening is playing out against the backdrop of the government's frenetic attempts during the previous 100 days to put India on a path of deeper alignment with the US. The attempts to pamper Trump's ego, even while stomaching insults, give away unilaterally tangible economic benefits to US companies, get India more integrated with America's military and tech ecosystems—none of this helped India. Consider the following.
This story is from the May 14, 2025 edition of The Morning Standard.
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