Revista CIDOB d'Afers Internacionals (Sep 1998)

Continuity and Change in India’s Foreign Policy

  • Juan López Nadal

Journal volume & issue
no. 42
pp. 21 – 38

Abstract

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Adaptation of foreign policy to the post-cold war era and the globalisation of the economy has not been easy for India, a country which occupies a key position in Asia and arguably the world due to its size, strategic position and economic potential. In Indiacontinuity and change coexist, manifesting dramatic contradictions, with the former gradually superseding the latter. The diplomacy of New Delhi has come under harsh criticism for its resistance to adapt to a changed and changing world - something rooted in its Britishcolonial heritage and its lack of enthusiasm for questioning traditional values and attitudes. An analysis of the fundamental basis underlining these traditional conceptions is necessary, as is an historical perspective on the evolution of India’s foreign policy which embraces vastly differing factors of influence such as the external environment and internal economic and political conditions. This study begins its historical perspective on the foreign policy of independent India in 1947, dividing the period up to the present decade into three phases: the period of Nehru (1947-65), including L.B.Shastri; that of Indira Ghandi and her successors (1965-1990); and the period following the end of the cold war, under an unstable and uncertain leadership.