💥Join UPSC 2027,2028 Mentorship (July Batch) + XFactor Notes & Microthemes PDF

GS Paper: GS2

  • How India and Canada have mended their frayed ties

    Why in the News?

    Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s visit to India signals a diplomatic reset after the 2023 rupture triggered by allegations over Hardeep Singh Nijjar’s killing. The crisis had led to diplomatic expulsions, visa suspension, and stalled trade talks. Restoration of envoys and revival of Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) negotiations mark a sharp reversal amid $23+ billion bilateral trade stakes.

    How did diplomatic escalation test principles of sovereignty and international law?

    1. Allegations of Extraterritorial Action: Canada accused Indian agents of involvement in Nijjar’s killing in British Columbia (2023), raising concerns under international law and state sovereignty norms.
    2. Reciprocal Diplomatic Expulsions: Both countries expelled diplomats, reducing institutional diplomatic engagement.
    3. Suspension of Visa Services: India temporarily halted visa issuance for Canadians, affecting people-to-people ties.
    4. Terrorism vs. Political Dissent Debate: India classified Nijjar as a designated terrorist under Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 (UAPA), while Canada treated him as a political activist.
    5. Institutional Accountability: Canada initiated investigations; India demanded credible evidence before cooperation.

    What governance mechanisms enabled bilateral recovery?

    1. Leadership Change in Canada: Mark Carney’s accession shifted tone toward calibrated engagement.
    2. Reinstatement of High Commissioners: Diplomatic normalization restored formal communication channels.
    3. G20 Engagement: Modi-Carney interaction at the 2025 G7 Summit in Canada signaled political willingness for reset.
    4. Structured Dialogue Restoration: Agreement to revive working groups on trade, security, and mobility.

    How significant are trade and economic linkages in sustaining the relationship?

    1. Goods Trade (2024): $8.98 billion; exports $4.14 billion; imports $4.84 billion.
    2. Services Trade (2024): $14.22 billion; reflects strong education and IT linkages.
    3. Strategic Commodities: Canada supplies pulses, potash, uranium; India exports pharmaceuticals, textiles, machinery.
    4. CEPA Negotiations: Aim to expand trade to $30 billion by 2030.
    5. Energy Partnership: Canada as a reliable supplier of oil, LNG, and critical minerals.

    How does diaspora politics shape foreign policy and domestic security calculations?

    1. Large Diaspora Presence: Over 1.8 million Indo-Canadians; politically influential in key provinces.
    2. Khalistan Issue: Small but vocal separatist groups influenced bilateral tensions.
    3. Balancing Act: Canada must reconcile free speech protections with counter-terror obligations.
    4. India’s Security Concerns: Cross-border extremism framed as “transnational crime” in bilateral talks.

    What role do multilateral and strategic platforms play in normalisation?

    1. G20 Collaboration: Shared membership necessitates policy coordination.
    2. Indo-Pacific Strategy: Canada seeks stronger Asia engagement; India remains central.
    3. Five Eyes Sensitivity: Canada’s intelligence alignment with US, UK, Australia, New Zealand complicated trust dynamics.
    4. Energy & Climate Cooperation: Clean energy transition, nuclear cooperation under civil nuclear agreement.

    What institutional lessons emerge for diplomatic crisis management?

    1. Crisis Communication Channels: Importance of sustained back-channel diplomacy.
    2. Legal Evidence Standards: Need for transparent, rule-based investigative cooperation.
    3. Trade Insulation Mechanisms: Economic negotiations often pause but resume once political clarity returns.
    4. Diaspora Governance: Foreign policy increasingly intersects with domestic electoral politics.

    Conclusion

    India-Canada relations underscore how diaspora politics, domestic compulsions, and national security concerns can significantly influence bilateral diplomacy between democracies. The recent reset reflects pragmatic statecraft, economic interdependence, and institutional resilience, but the durability of this rapprochement will depend on credible security cooperation, responsible diaspora management, and sustained political dialogue.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2020] ‘Indian diaspora has a decisive role to play in the politics and economy of America and European Countries’. Comment with examples.

    Linkage: The India-Canada diplomatic crisis highlights how diaspora politics can directly influence bilateral relations, domestic electoral calculations, and foreign policy positioning in Western democracies. It demonstrates that the Indian diaspora is not merely an economic asset but also a political actor shaping strategic outcomes and diplomatic tensions.

  • India–Israel Elevate Ties to Special Strategic Partnership

    Why in the News

    India and Israel elevated bilateral relations to a Special Strategic Partnership for Peace, Innovation and Prosperity during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Israel. A total of 17 pacts were signed.

    Key Outcomes

    1. Upgrade of Bilateral Ties

    • Earlier: Strategic Partnership since 2017
    • Now: Special Strategic Partnership
    • Focus on technology, defence, innovation and economic cooperation

    2. Technology Partnership

    • Launch of Critical and Emerging Technologies Partnership
    • Cooperation in:
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Quantum technologies
      • Cyber security
      • Critical minerals

    3. Defence Cooperation

    • Roadmap for joint development and joint production
    • Emphasis on transfer of technology
    • Defence ties described as expanding in scope and scale

    4. Economic & Trade Measures

    • Bilateral Investment Agreement operationalised
    • FTA negotiations to be finalised soon
    • UPI to be enabled in Israel
    • Financial dialogue mechanism launched

    5. Agriculture & Innovation

    • Target of 100 Centres of Excellence
    • Plan for Villages of Excellence
    • India Israel Innovation Centre for Agriculture to be set up
    • 20 joint agricultural research fellowships

    6. Manpower & People Ties

    • Expansion of labour mobility under 2023 agreement
    • Quota of up to 50,000 Indian workers over five years
    • Launch of India Israel Academic Forum

    7. Regional & Global Issues

    • Strong condemnation of terrorism
    • Support for Gaza peace efforts
    • Focus on IMEEC and I2U2 initiatives

    Prelims Pointers

    • India Israel ties established in 1992
    • Strategic Partnership declared in 2017
    • Now elevated to Special Strategic Partnership in 2026
    • Cooperation spans defence, agriculture, AI, cyber security and innovation
    • IMEEC: India Middle East Europe Economic Corridor
    • I2U2: India Israel UAE USA grouping
    [2018] The term “two-state solution” is sometimes mentioned in the news in the context of the affairs of (a) China  

    (b) Israel 

    (c) Iraq  

    (d) Yemen

  • [26th February 2026] The Hindu OpED: Balancing faith, dignity and constitutional rights?

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2021] ‘Constitutional Morality’ is rooted in the Constitution itself and is founded on its essential facets. Explain the doctrine of ‘Constitutional Morality’ with the help of relevant judicial decisions.

    Linkage: The 2018 Indian Young Lawyers Association v State of Kerala invoked constitutional morality to prioritise equality and dignity over exclusionary religious practices. The ongoing review before the Supreme Court of India will determine whether constitutional morality can override denominational autonomy under Articles 25-26.

    Mentor’s Comment

    The review proceedings in the Indian Young Lawyers Association v State of Kerala reopen a foundational constitutional debate: whether courts should determine what is “essential” to religion or instead examine whether religious practices violate dignity and equality. The issue extends beyond the Sabarimala Temple and directly affects the architecture of religious freedom jurisprudence under the Supreme Court of India.

    Why in the News?

    A nine-judge Bench of the Supreme Court of India is reviewing the doctrinal basis of the 2018 Indian Young Lawyers Association v State of Kerala verdict. The Court is reconsidering whether to retain the “Essential Religious Practices” test or adopt an “anti-exclusion” framework grounded in dignity and equality. The decision will redefine the scope of Articles 14, 15, 21, 25 and 26, and clarify the limits of judicial intervention in religious practices across denominations.

    What was the 2018 Sabarimala verdict?

    1. The 2018 verdict in Indian Young Lawyers Association v State of Kerala was delivered by a 4:1 majority of the Supreme Court of India.
    2. The Court held that the practice of excluding women aged 10-50 from entering the Sabarimala Temple was unconstitutional. 
    3. The Court also struck down Rule 3(b) of the Kerala Hindu Places of Public Worship (Authorisation of Entry) Rules, 1965, which permitted the exclusion.
    4. Justice Indu Malhotra dissented, holding that matters of essential religious practice should not ordinarily be subject to judicial review unless they violate public order, morality, or health.

    What was the constitutional basis of the 2018 Sabarimala verdict?

    1. Equality Principle (Article 14): Prohibits arbitrary exclusion based on biological characteristics.
    2. Non-Discrimination (Article 15): Restricts discrimination on grounds of sex.
    3. Freedom of Religion (Article 25): Protects individual right to worship.
    4. Denominational Autonomy (Article 26): Protects rights of religious denominations subject to public order, morality, and health.
    5. Statutory Conflict: Rule 3(b) of the Kerala Hindu Places of Public Worship (Authorisation of Entry) Rules, 1965 conflicted with Section 3 of the parent Act ensuring temple entry for all Hindus.

    How has the ‘Essential Religious Practices’ doctrine shaped judicial review?

    1. Doctrinal Origin: Developed in Shirur Mutt (1954) to determine constitutional protection.
    2. Judicial Determination: Courts assess whether a practice is fundamental to religion.
    3. Theological Evaluation: Judges examine scriptures and doctrines.
    4. Case Illustration: In Sastri Yagnapurushadji vs Muldas Bhudardas Vaishya (1966), the Court interpreted Hindu doctrine to decide sect status.
    5. Institutional Concern: Converts constitutional courts into arbiters of theology.

    What are the limitations of the Essential Religious Practices test?

    1. Doctrinal Subjectivity: Lacks clear standards for determining “essentiality.”
    2. Judicial Overreach: Requires theological interpretation beyond institutional competence.
    3. Procedural Constraints: Constitutional courts lack mechanisms for detailed fact-finding and cross-examination.
    4. Dignity Conflict: Fails to address practices that may be essential yet violate individual dignity.
    5. Secularism Tension: Risks compromising state neutrality in religious matters.

    What is the proposed ‘Anti-Exclusion’ test and how does it alter constitutional analysis?

    1. Shift in Inquiry: Examines consequences of exclusion rather than essentiality.
    2. Dignity Framework (Article 21): Protects equal moral membership in society.
    3. Autonomy Balance: Respects religious autonomy unless exclusion impairs dignity or access to basic goods.
    4. Constitutional Morality: Prioritizes transformative constitutional values.
    5. Non-Theological Review: Grounds judicial scrutiny in constitutional standards, not doctrine.

    How does the review affect the broader architecture of religious freedom?

    1. Doctrinal Recalibration: May redefine relationship between Articles 25 and 26.
    2. Gender Justice Expansion: Impacts disputes involving women’s access to religious institutions.
    3. Community Governance: Influences cases involving excommunication (e.g., Dawoodi Bohra issue).
    4. Marriage and Faith: Affects questions like inter-faith marriage consequences in certain communities.
    5. Institutional Accountability: Clarifies limits of court intervention in religious affairs.

    Does the Constitution prioritize community autonomy or individual dignity?

    1. Individual as Basic Unit: Constitution treats individuals as primary rights-holders.
    2. Limited Communitarianism: Collective rights subject to fundamental rights.
    3. Transformative Vision: Constitution aims to reform discriminatory traditions.
    4. Public Order, Morality, Health: Explicit constitutional limitations on religious freedom.

    Conclusion

    The Sabarimala review marks a doctrinal turning point in religious freedom jurisprudence. A shift from theological essentiality to dignity-based scrutiny redefines the limits of judicial intervention. The outcome will determine whether constitutional courts function as arbiters of faith or guardians of equal moral membership.

  • India–France Sign Amending Protocol to Update DTAC

    Why in the News

    • India and France have signed an Amending Protocol to update the India–France Double Taxation Avoidance Convention (DTAC) of 1992, aligning it with current international tax standards and strengthening bilateral economic cooperation.
    • The Protocol was signed by the Chairperson of the Central Board of Direct Taxes and the French Ambassador to India.

    What is DTAC?

    • A Double Taxation Avoidance Convention is an agreement between two countries to:
      • Avoid taxing the same income twice
      • Prevent tax evasion
      • Promote cross border trade and investment
    • India has DTAA or DTAC agreements with over 90 countries.

    Key Changes in the Amending Protocol

    • Capital Gains Taxation: Full taxing rights on capital gains from sale of shares now lie with the country where the company is resident.
    • Removal of MFN Clause: The Most Favoured Nation clause has been deleted. This resolves long standing interpretational disputes regarding treaty benefits.
    • Dividend Taxation: Earlier: Single 10 percent rate
    • Now:
      • 5 percent for shareholders holding at least 10 percent capital
      • 15 percent for others
    • Fees for Technical Services: Definition aligned with the India US Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement. Introduces greater clarity in taxation of cross border services.
    • Expansion of Permanent Establishment: Introduces Service Permanent Establishment concept. Expands tax jurisdiction where services are provided in another country.
    • Exchange of Information
      • Updated as per international standards.
      • Introduces Article on Assistance in Collection of Taxes.
      • Enhances mutual tax cooperation.
    • Exchange of Information: Integrates provisions of the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting Multilateral Instrument. Strengthens anti tax avoidance framework.
    [2016] The term ‘Base Erosion and Profit Shifting’ is sometimes seen in the news in the context of (a) mining operation by multinational companies in resource-rich but backward areas 

    (b) curbing of the tax evasion by multinational companies 

    (c) exploitation of genetic resources of a country by multinational companies 

    (d) lack of consideration of environmental costs in the planning and implementation of developmental projects.

  • India Conducts VAJRA PRAHAR with US and DHARMA GUARDIAN with Japan

    Why in the News

    • India is simultaneously hosting two major bilateral military exercises:
      • The 16th edition of Exercise VAJRA PRAHAR with the United States in Himachal Pradesh.
      • The 7th edition of Exercise DHARMA GUARDIAN with Japan in Uttarakhand.
    • Both drills aim to enhance interoperability and strengthen defence cooperation.

    1. Exercise VAJRA PRAHAR (India–US)

    Participants

    • Indian Army Special Forces, 45 personnel
    • United States Army Special Forces, 12 personnel

    Venue and Duration

    • Special Forces Training School, Bakloh, Himachal Pradesh
    • February 24 to March 16, 2026
    • Previous edition held in Idaho, USA in November 2024

    2. Exercise DHARMA GUARDIAN (India–Japan)

    • Participants

        • Indian Army
        • Japan Ground Self-Defence Force
    • Units Involved

      • India: Ladakh Scouts
      • Japan: 32nd Infantry Regiment
    [2024] Which of the following statements about ‘Exercise Mitra Shakti-2023’ are correct? 

    1. This was a joint military exercise between India and Bangladesh. It commenced in Aundh (Pune). 
    2. Joint response during counter-terrorism operations was a goal of this operation. 
    3. Indian Air Force was a part of this exercise. 

    Select the answer using the code given below: 

    (a) 1, 2 and 3 (b) 1 and 4 (c) 1 and 4 (d) 2, 3 and 4

  • India and GCC Sign Joint Statement Launching FTA Negotiations

    Why in the News

    India and the Gulf Cooperation Council signed a Joint Statement on February 24, 2026 in New Delhi, formally launching negotiations for an India–GCC Free Trade Agreement. The statement was signed by Piyush Goyal and GCC Secretary General Jasem Mohamed Albudaiwi.

    About the Gulf Cooperation Council

    The GCC is a regional bloc comprising:

    • Saudi Arabia
    • United Arab Emirates
    • Qatar
    • Kuwait
    • Oman
    • Bahrain
    • Established in 1981
    • Combined GDP about 2.3 trillion dollars
    • Population about 61.5 million

    Trade Significance

    • GCC is India’s largest trading partner bloc.
    • Bilateral trade in FY 2024-25: 178.56 billion dollars
      • Exports: 56.87 billion dollars
      • Imports: 121.68 billion dollars
    • Accounts for about 15.42 percent of India’s global trade.
    • Average annual trade growth over last five years: 15.3 percent.

    Key Trade Items

    • India’s Exports to GCC: Engineering goods, Rice, Textiles, Machinery, Gems and jewellery
    • India’s Imports from GCC: Crude oil, LNG, Petrochemicals and Gold

    Investment and Diaspora Linkages

    • GCC investments in India exceed 31.14 billion dollars.
    • Nearly 10 million Indians live and work in GCC countries.
    • Strong people to people ties support economic cooperation.

    Expected Benefits of the FTA

    • Greater trade predictability and certainty.
    • Diversification of exports.
    • Stronger energy security cooperation.
    • Enhanced market access for goods and services.
    • Deeper economic integration amid global uncertainty.
    [2016] Which of the following is not a member of ‘Gulf Cooperation Council’? (a) Iran 

    (b) Saudi Arabia 

    (c) Oman 

    (d) Kuwait

  • SC Registers Suo Motu Case Over NCERT Textbook Reference

    Why in the News

    The Supreme Court of India has registered a suo motu case over a reference to “corruption in the judiciary” in a Class 8 Social Science textbook published by the National Council of Educational Research and Training.

    The matter is titled In Re: Social Science Textbook for Grade 8 (Part 2) published by NCERT and ancillary issues.

    What Triggered the Case?

    • The chapter titled “The Role of the Judiciary in Our Society” mentioned:
      • Corruption
      • Backlog of cases
      • Shortage of judges
    • The Chief Justice described the content as a “calculated attempt” to denigrate the judiciary.
    • Even after reports that the portion was withdrawn, the Court proceeded with registration of the case.

    What is Suo Motu Cognisance?

    • Suo motu means “on its own motion.” It refers to the power of a constitutional court to take up a matter: Without a formal petition
      • Based on information from media reports, letters, or public knowledge
    • The Supreme Court derives this power from: Article 32 (writ jurisdiction) and Article 142 (complete justice powers)

    About NCERT

    • Autonomous organisation under Ministry of Education.
    • Develops school textbooks and curricular frameworks.
    • Its books are widely used across CBSE schools.
    [2019] With reference to the Constitution of India, prohibitions or limitations or provisions contained in ordinary laws cannot act as prohibitions or limitations on the constitutional powers under Article 142. It could mean which one of the following? (a) The decisions taken by the Election Commission of India while discharging its duties cannot be challenged in any court of law. 

    (b) The Supreme Court of India is not constrained in the exercise of its powers by laws made by the Parliament. 

    (c) In the event of grave financial crisis in the country, the President of India can declare Financial Emergency without the counsel from the Cabinet. 

    (d) State Legislatures cannot make laws on certain matters without the concurrence of Union Legislature.

  • [25th February 2026] The Hindu OpED: India’s trade strategy in a multipolar world

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] “The West is fostering India as an alternative to reduce dependence on China’s supply chain and as a strategic ally to counter China’s political and economic dominance.’ Explain this statement with examples.”

    Linkage: This question directly links to India’s recent FTAs with the EU and the U.S., which aim to position India as a reliable alternative supply-chain hub in a multipolar world. It connects trade policy with geopolitical strategy, economic diplomacy, and global value chain realignment, core themes of GS 2 (IR) and GS 3 (External Sector & Growth).

    Mentor’s Comment

    India is revising its trade strategy in response to geopolitical tensions, shifting supply chains, and growing protectionism. This topic is highly relevant for GS 2 (India’s foreign policy and international relations) and GS 3 (Indian economy, external sector, globalization, and industrial growth), especially in questions related to trade policy, economic diplomacy, supply-chain resilience, and strategic autonomy in a multipolar world.

    Why in the News?

    India’s recent signing of the India-EU Free Trade Agreement (January 2026) and an interim trade framework with the U.S. (February 2026) marks one of its most ambitious trade expansions in recent years. These moves reflect a clear departure from its earlier cautious FTA approach and signal a strategic push to position India as a key player in a multipolar global trading system.

    How Does India’s Revised FTA Strategy Reflect a Shift in Governance Philosophy?

    1. Strategic Autonomy Framework: Ensures sovereign decision-making while engaging major economic powers. Expands beyond regional FTAs to advanced economies such as EU, U.S., U.K., UAE, and Australia.
    2. Market Diversification: Reduces overdependence on single geographies. FTAs projected to cover 22% of exports by 2026, up from 17%.
    3. Institutional Reform Alignment: Aligns FTAs with domestic reforms under FTP 2023 targeting $2 trillion exports by 2030.
    4. Value Chain Integration: Facilitates integration into global production networks rather than mere tariff concessions.

    How Do Recent Trade Agreements Strengthen India’s Export Competitiveness and Industrial Capacity?

    1. Tariff Liberalisation: Reduces or eliminates tariffs on over 90% of traded goods, enhancing cost competitiveness.
    2. Sectoral Boost: Strengthens textiles, leather, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, marine products, electronics, and semiconductors.
    3. Technology Access: Facilitates access to advanced European machinery and U.S. semiconductor collaboration.
    4. Production Efficiency: Lowers input costs and enhances regulatory cooperation, improving manufacturing productivity.
    5. Export Performance Data: Recorded 6.05% annual growth in exports in 2025; total exports reached $825.25 billion.

    How Do FTAs Enhance India’s Integration into Global Supply Chains and Digital Trade Ecosystems?

    1. Intermediate Goods Liberalisation: Reduces barriers on inputs, enabling seamless cross-border production.
    2. Digital Trade Facilitation: Expands cooperation in e-commerce, services trade, and digital standards alignment.
    3. MSME Integration: Integrates Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises into global value chains through improved market access.
    4. High-Growth Sectors: Strengthens pharmaceuticals, electronics, services, and high-technology industries dependent on component mobility.

    How Do Trade Agreements Operate as Instruments of Economic Diplomacy in a Multipolar Order?

    1. Diplomatic Leverage: Enhances India’s role in shaping global trade norms and standards.
    2. Geopolitical Balancing: Diversifies partnerships across EU, U.S., UAE, Australia, and U.K., reducing vulnerability.
    3. Investment Attraction: Strengthens investor confidence through predictable regulatory frameworks.
    4. Strategic Signalling: Projects India as a reliable global trade partner amid supply-chain reconfiguration.

    What Institutional and Regulatory Reforms Are Necessary to Maximise FTA Gains?

    1. Customs Modernisation: Ensures faster clearance and trade facilitation under WTO-compliant mechanisms.
    2. Standards Harmonisation: Aligns domestic quality infrastructure with global standards.
    3. Supply Chain Infrastructure: Expands logistics capacity and port efficiency to reduce transaction costs.
    4. Production-Linked Incentives (PLI): Supports domestic manufacturing scale-up in electronics and high-tech sectors.
    5. Digital Governance: Strengthens data governance and digital trade regulations.

    What Are the Structural Risks and Governance Challenges in Aggressive Trade Liberalisation?

    1. Domestic Industry Exposure: Increases competition pressure on sensitive sectors.
    2. Trade Deficit Risk: Expands imports of intermediate and capital goods.
    3. Regulatory Adjustment Costs: Requires institutional capacity to implement complex trade provisions.
    4. Labour and Environmental Standards: Necessitates compliance with evolving global norms.

    Conclusion

    India’s evolving trade strategy reflects a calibrated shift from protection-driven engagement to rule-based, strategic integration with major economies. By aligning FTAs with domestic industrial policy, supply-chain resilience, and digital governance reforms, India seeks to convert trade agreements into instruments of long-term economic transformation. The effectiveness of this approach will depend on regulatory preparedness, institutional capacity, and the ability to balance competitiveness with strategic autonomy in an increasingly fragmented global order.

  • Cabinet’s nod to rename Kerala as Keralam

    Why in the News?

    The Union Cabinet approved the proposal to alter the name of Kerala to “Keralam” under Article 3 of the Constitution. The proposal follows unanimous resolutions passed by the Kerala Legislative Assembly in 2023 and 2024. The Centre will now refer the Bill to the State Legislature for views before Parliamentary approval. The change aligns the English name with its Malayalam usage and corrects what the state considers a historical anomaly in the First Schedule of the Constitution.

    The development also contrasts with stalled demands such as West Bengal’s proposal to rename itself as Bangla. This raised questions about uniformity and political considerations in Centre-State relations.

    How does Article 3 of the Constitution regulate alteration of state names, and what does it reveal about federal balance?

    1. Article 3 Provision: Empowers Parliament to form new states, alter boundaries, or change names of existing states.
    2. Presidential Reference: Requires the President to refer the Bill to the concerned State Legislature for its views. The President must refer the bill to the state legislature within a specified period.
    3. Non-Binding Opinion: State Legislature’s views are not binding on Parliament. Parliament is not bound to accept or act upon the views of the state legislature.
    4. Parliamentary Supremacy: Final decision rests with Parliament through simple majority.
    5. Constitutional Amendment Not Required: Change of name does not require Article 368 amendment; modification of First Schedule suffices.

    Article 3 demonstrates that India is an “indestructible Union of destructible states”. It highlights a unitary bias within the federal structure. This is because the Parliament can unilaterally reorganize the territory of a state without its consent, prioritizing national administrative and political considerations over state autonomy

    What historical and linguistic factors underpin the demand to rename Kerala as ‘Keralam’?

    1. Linguistic Identity: “Keralam” is the Malayalam name of the state.
    2. State Reorganisation (1956): Formed on 1 November 1956 under the States Reorganisation Act on linguistic basis.
    3. First Schedule Anomaly: English name “Kerala” differs from Malayalam usage.
    4. Assembly Resolutions (2023 & 2024): Unanimously passed resolutions requesting amendment under Article 3.
    5. Kerala Piravi Day: Observed on 1 November marking linguistic reorganisation.

    What governance and administrative implications arise from renaming a state?

    1. Statutory Changes: Requires amendments in central and state laws referencing the state name.
    2. Administrative Revisions: Updating official records, seals, stationery, digital platforms.
    3. Financial Implications: Expenditure on branding, documentation, and communication.
    4. Diplomatic Communication: Change to be reflected in official communications and treaties.
    5. Public Identity Alignment: Harmonises constitutional name with linguistic usage.

    How does this development fit within India’s broader history of renaming and identity politics?

    1. Bombay to Maharashtra (1960): Linguistic reorganisation.
    2. Madras to Tamil Nadu (1969): Cultural assertion.
    3. Orissa to Odisha (2011): Corrected anglicised spelling via constitutional amendment.
    4. Uttaranchal to Uttarakhand (2007): Regional identity assertion.
    5. West Bengal-Bangla Demand: Illustrates pending identity-based renaming request.

    Conclusion

    The proposal to rename Kerala as “Keralam” reflects the dynamic character of Indian federalism, where linguistic identity operates within a clearly defined constitutional framework. Article 3 balances parliamentary supremacy with consultative federalism, ensuring that state aspirations are processed through institutional mechanisms rather than political discretion alone. The development underscores the continuing relevance of linguistic reorganisation in post-independence India and highlights the need for consistency, transparency, and procedural integrity in handling similar demands. Ultimately, the episode reaffirms that constitutional flexibility remains central to accommodating identity-based aspirations within the unity of the Indian Union

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2020] How far do you think cooperation, competition and confrontation have shaped the nature of federation in India? Cite some recent examples to validate your answer.

    Linkage: It tests the dynamic nature of Indian federalism under GS II (Centre-State Relations), focusing on cooperative and competitive dimensions within constitutional design. It links directly to developments like the Article 3 process for renaming Kerala as “Keralam,” GST negotiations, and Centre-State disputes over governors and fiscal devolution.

  • As PM visits Israel, how ties evolved over the years

    Why in the News? 

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s 2026 visit to Israel comes amid the Gaza conflict, US-Iran tensions, and shifting West Asian geopolitics. Since the first-ever standalone PM visit in 2017, ties have become overtly strategic, particularly in defence and technology. The visit is significant as India balances Israel partnership, Gulf energy interests, and the IMEC corridor in a volatile regional environment.

    How has India’s diplomatic engagement with Israel evolved from hesitancy to strategic normalization?

    1. Early Recognition (1950): India recognized Israel but avoided full diplomatic engagement due to Non-Aligned Movement priorities and domestic political considerations.
    2. Delayed Diplomatic Relations (1992): Full diplomatic ties established after Cold War end and Madrid Peace Conference; marked policy recalibration.
    3. Strategic Dehyphenation Policy (Post-2014): India delinked Israel relations from Palestine engagement; PM Modi’s 2017 visit excluded Ramallah, first such shift.
    4. Reciprocal High-Level Visits: Israeli PM Netanyahu visited India in 2018; sustained political signalling strengthened bilateral trust.
    5. Institutionalization of Strategic Partnership: Defence, agriculture, innovation forums and joint working groups operationalized cooperation.

    How has defence cooperation reshaped the strategic character of India-Israel relations?

    1. Defence Procurement: Israel emerged as one of India’s top three defence suppliers; supplies include UAVs, radar systems, Barak missiles, and precision munitions.
    2. Operational Support: Israel reportedly supplied emergency defence equipment during Kargil War (1999); deepened strategic trust.
    3. Technology Transfer: Joint development projects such as Barak-8 missile system strengthened indigenous capacity.
    4. Cyber and Intelligence Cooperation: Collaboration in counter-terrorism, border security, surveillance technology.
    5. Post-October 7 Context: Defence cooperation remains critical amid heightened regional security tensions.

    How does India balance its Israel partnership with West Asian geopolitics and domestic considerations?

    1. Energy Dependence: India imports significant crude oil from Gulf nations; requires diplomatic balance with Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar.
    2. Diaspora Factor: Nearly 9 million Indians reside in Gulf countries; remittances influence economic diplomacy.
    3. Palestine Position: India continues to support two-state solution in multilateral forums; abstentions at UN reflect calibrated diplomacy.
    4. US-Iran Rivalry: Tensions in West Asia complicate India’s strategic calculus; Chabahar port interests intersect with regional dynamics.
    5. Domestic Political Optics: Visits to Israel attract political attention due to communal sensitivities.

    How does economic and technological cooperation expand beyond defence into developmental governance?

    1. Agriculture Cooperation: Centers of Excellence across Indian states improve drip irrigation, horticulture yields.
    2. Water Management: Israeli water recycling and desalination technologies deployed in Indian urban projects.
    3. Innovation Partnerships: India-Israel Industrial R&D Fund supports joint startups and technology incubation.
    4. IMEC Integration: India-Middle East-Europe Corridor aims to enhance connectivity linking India with Europe via Israel.
    5. Startup Ecosystem Collaboration: Cybersecurity, AI, agri-tech exchanges institutionalized.

    How do regional conflicts and Abraham Accords reshape India’s strategic calculations?

    1. Abraham Accords (2020): Israel normalized relations with UAE and Bahrain; reduced diplomatic friction for India’s parallel engagements.
    2. Gaza Conflict (2023-26): Regional instability affects energy markets and shipping routes.
    3. Red Sea Security Concerns: Houthi attacks disrupted maritime trade; impacts India’s export routes.
    4. IMEC Uncertainty: Corridor viability linked to regional stability.
    5. Multipolar Engagement: India maintains ties with Israel, Iran, Arab states, and US simultaneously.

    Does the evolution of India-Israel ties reflect a broader shift in India’s foreign policy doctrine?

    1. Strategic Autonomy 2.0: Engagement without bloc alignment; issue-based partnerships.
    2. From Ideology to Pragmatism: Shift from Third World solidarity emphasis to technology-security driven diplomacy.
    3. Security-Centric Foreign Policy: Counter-terrorism cooperation prioritized.
    4. West Asia as Extended Neighbourhood: Integrated into India’s Act West policy.
    5. Balancing Multi-Vector Diplomacy: Simultaneous engagement with Israel, Palestine, Gulf, Iran.

    Conclusion

    India-Israel relations have transitioned from cautious engagement to structured strategic partnership driven by defence cooperation, technology collaboration, and geopolitical convergence. The relationship now operates within a broader West Asian recalibration marked by the Abraham Accords, Gaza conflict, US-Iran tensions, and emerging connectivity frameworks such as IMEC. India’s approach reflects calibrated strategic autonomy, strengthening security ties with Israel while safeguarding energy, diaspora, and political interests in the Gulf. The durability of this partnership will depend on India’s ability to sustain multi-vector diplomacy, manage regional instability, and align bilateral cooperation with long-term national interests.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] “India’s relations with Israel have, of late, acquired a depth and diversity, which cannot be rolled back” Discuss.

    Linkage: It directly mirrors the theme of strategic normalization post-2014, defence cooperation, and technological partnership discussed in the article. It tests understanding of irreversible strategic convergence despite West Asian volatility.