Prøve GULL - Gratis
Not a G2 reboot, but possibly a G2 overlay
Hindustan Times Thane
|November 23, 2025
For India, a US-China détente carries significant implications. New Delhi must sharpen diplomatic signalling and make it clear to partners and rivals alike that it values open regional architectures, not spheres carved by others
US President Donald Trump's post on Truth Social ahead of his October 30 meeting with Chinese president Xi Jinping in Busan, South Korea - "THE G2 WILL BE CONVENING SHORTLY!"- revived chatter of a US-China duet to manage global affairs. The theatre was unmistakably Trumpian, but the substance that followed was tactical and reversible: Modest tariff adjustments, reversal of escalated export controls, resumed Chinese purchases of US agricultural products, suspension of some planned actions for one year, reopened military hotlines, narrowly scoped regulatory dialogues, and reciprocal visits in 2026. These measures were useful deescalation, but they did not constitute the architecture of a duopoly or co-governance. Yet the perception of a "G2 overlay" may carry significant implications for India.
The shorthand "G2" denotes a Group of Two, in which the US and China act as joint stewards of global governance. The label was floated most prominently in 2009 by Zbigniew Brzezinski and Fred Bergsten as a prescription for crisis management during the global financial crisis. Over time, the shorthand expanded to imagine two powers setting rules, managing crises, and, in troubling versions, dividing spheres of influence. It has remained an inchoate idea. Trump's rhetorical flourish does not change that fact. For all its buzz, a durable G2 remains elusive. Any initiative to take G2 beyond rhetoric into co-governance or spheres of influence runs into four obstinate realities.
First, the difference between symbolism and substance. Busan was a theatre with tactical deescalation, not institutionalised co-rule. Understandings reached are de-risking band-aids, easily ripped off when politics shift.
Denne historien er fra November 23, 2025-utgaven av Hindustan Times Thane.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Hindustan Times Thane
Hindustan Times Thane
Kuldeep’s triple strike gives hosts late relief and slender edge on opening day
All the South African batters got starts but none of them went on to really hurt India in the Guwahati Test
6 mins
November 23, 2025
Hindustan Times Thane
Rising graph of BJP and absent hand of Congress
After the National Democratic Alliance's unbelievable victory in Bihar and the Mahagathbandhan's shattering defeat, there are two questions that stare us in the face - why do the BJP and Narendra Modi keep winning? Why do the Congress and Rahul Gandhi keep losing? These are not easy questions to answer, but, equally, they are important questions to ask. So, let me offer a series of issues that seek to explore these questions.
2 mins
November 23, 2025
Hindustan Times Thane
RED FORT BLAST SUSPECT REVEALS CHEMICAL SUPPLY, FUNDING DETAILS
Muzammil Ganaie, one of the key accused in the white-collar terror module case, has purportedly told NIA investigators how a ₹26 lakh fund was raised among five doctors to finance a conspiracy to execute coordinated terror strikes across multiple cities.
1 min
November 23, 2025
Hindustan Times Thane
Not a G2 reboot, but possibly a G2 overlay
For India, a US-China détente carries significant implications. New Delhi must sharpen diplomatic signalling and make it clear to partners and rivals alike that it values open regional architectures, not spheres carved by others
5 mins
November 23, 2025
Hindustan Times Thane
Songs as time machines, our memory bookmarks
The year is 1996. It's a cold December morning, you are riding pillion with your hands wrapped around your dad's waist, as he rides his Rajdoot motorcycle to drop you at school because you missed the bus.
3 mins
November 23, 2025
Hindustan Times Thane
Fly me to the moon...
It wasn't easy, bringing the stars indoors. The world's first planetarium opened 100 years ago, in Germany. It used the grainy imagery of the time, but elicited gasps nonetheless. Today, planetariums invite viewers to zoom through galaxies, tour clouds of asteroids, view meteors as they approach. And, a new future looms: explorations of tech, biology, even the human body - on domes so large and crystal-clear, they're helping astrophysicists learn about space
4 mins
November 23, 2025
Hindustan Times Thane
Global South, terror, climate finance: An Indian imprint in G20 declaration
India’s key priorities, such as the campaign against terrorism and bolstering financing to address the climate crisis, and measures to address the concerns of the Global South found resonance in the declaration adopted at the G20 Summit in South Africa despite opposition from the US, which is boycotting the gathering.
1 min
November 23, 2025
Hindustan Times Thane
China takes dispute with Japan over Taiwan to UN
China has taken its growing dispute with Japan to the United Nations, accusing Tokyo of threatening \"an armed intervention\" over Taiwan and vowing to defend itself in its strongest language yet in the two-week-old dispute.
1 min
November 23, 2025
Hindustan Times Thane
ROW ERUPTS ON BILL TO EXPAND CENTRE'S POWERS OVER CHANDIGARH
The Centre has proposed to include the Union Territory of Chandigarh under the ambit of Article 240 of the Constitution, which empowers the President to make regulations for the UT and legislate directly, triggering a political row.
1 min
November 23, 2025
Hindustan Times Thane
Climate compromise: Belém deal gavelled after impasse, dilution
World governments reached a compromise climate deal on Saturday after nearly a week of talks that pitted developed against developing countries over who should bear the burden of climate action.
1 min
November 23, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

