| PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2019] The long-sustained image of India as a leader of the oppressed and marginalised Nations has disappeared on account of its new found role in the emerging global order”. Elaborate.Linkage: The PYQ directly connects with India’s changing global perception vs actual capabilities, as highlighted in the article. It tests understanding of soft power, diplomatic positioning, and shifting global roles, which form the core theme of the issue. |
Mentor’s Comment
A renewed debate has emerged on South Asia’s power balance following Pakistan’s elevated diplomatic visibility, particularly as a mediator in U.S.-Iran engagements. This marks a contrast with India’s relatively restrained global posture, especially on major geopolitical issues like Gaza and Iran. The development is significant because it suggests a perceptual shift where Pakistan is gaining diplomatic relevance without major changes in core capabilities.
Why is Pakistan’s diplomatic rise being viewed as a turning point in South Asia?
- Diplomatic Mediation Role: Pakistan facilitated communication between the U.S. and Iran, elevating its relevance in global diplomacy. Example: Public acknowledgment by U.S. leadership for Pakistan’s role in maintaining communication channels.
- Leadership Recognition: Pakistan’s leadership, including military and political heads, received international visibility, strengthening external legitimacy.
- Contrast with India: India maintained strategic silence on major geopolitical issues (e.g., Gaza crisis), leading to perceptions of reduced engagement.
- Perception Shift: Pakistan is now seen as a central diplomatic actor, whereas India is perceived as relatively passive.
How has enhanced diplomatic visibility translated into strategic gains for Pakistan?
- U.S. Engagement: Strengthened ties with the U.S., particularly in counterterrorism cooperation against Al-Qaeda and ISIS.
- Gulf Influence: Expanded influence in Gulf countries; example: Saudi Arabia’s multi-billion dollar financial commitments.
- Security Partnerships: Defence cooperation with Saudi Arabia and potential alignment with Qatar enhances regional leverage.
- Economic Gains: Diplomatic outreach converted into financial and political dividends.
- Narrative Advantage: Pakistan countered India’s attempts to diplomatically isolate it on terrorism issues.
What does the ‘hierarchy of power’ framework reveal about this shift?
- Superpowers: U.S. and China dominate global influence across military, economic, and institutional domains.
- Global Powers: States like Russia project power across multiple regions.
- Middle Powers: Countries like Türkiye, South Korea, Indonesia, Brazil influence through partnerships and economic strength.
- Regional Powers: States like Saudi Arabia dominate geographically limited regions.
- Analytical Insight: Pakistan is moving from a lower regional position toward aspiring middle-power status, while India risks slipping from global to middle-power perception.
Why is India’s global profile perceived to be declining despite strong fundamentals?
- Strategic Restraint: Limited public positioning on major global crises reduces visibility.
- Geopolitical Silence: Lack of assertive stance on issues involving U.S. and Israel affects perception.
- Economic Signals: Decline in India’s ranking from the 4th to 6th largest economy weakens perception.
- Platform Visibility: Reduced prominence of groupings like I2U2, BRICS, and QUAD in current discourse.
- Outcome: India’s image shifts from a proactive global power to a cautious middle power.
How do soft power and perception influence international rankings more than hard power?
- Soft Power Dimensions: Diplomacy, economic networks, and institutional influence shape global standing.
- Lowy Institute Framework: Combines hard power (55%) and soft power (45%) to assess national power.
- Pakistan’s Advantage: Improved diplomatic outreach enhances soft power without major change in material strength.
- India’s Limitation: Strong hard power (military, economy, demographics) not fully translated into diplomatic influence.
- Key Insight: Perception can temporarily outweigh structural capabilities in global politics.
What structural constraints continue to shape India and Pakistan’s long-term power positions?
- India’s Strengths: Military capability, large economy, demographic scale, technological base.
- Pakistan’s Constraints: Fragile economy, dependence on external aid, limited industrial base.
- Sustainability Question: Pakistan’s rise is largely perception-driven, while India’s power remains structurally grounded.
- Policy Implication: Long-term dominance depends on hard power fundamentals, not short-term diplomatic gains.
Conclusion
The current shift reflects a perception-driven recalibration, not a structural transformation of power. Pakistan’s diplomatic assertiveness has enhanced its visibility, while India’s restraint has affected its global image. However, enduring power hierarchies remain anchored in economic strength, military capacity, and technological advancement. India’s challenge lies in aligning its strong fundamentals with more visible and proactive diplomacy.
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