| PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2013] Discuss the political developments in Maldives in the last two years. Should they be of cause of concern to India?Linkage: The PYQ reflects UPSC’s emphasis on how regional geopolitical developments affect India’s foreign policy and strategic interests. Similarly, India-Vietnam relations must be examined through the lens of regional balancing, maritime security, and Indo-Pacific strategy. |
Mentor’s Comment
The state visit of Vietnamese President Tô Lâm to India (May 5-7, 2026) marks an important step in India-Vietnam relations. It shows the growing strength of their Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, established a decade ago. The visit is significant because Vietnam, facing increasing Chinese pressure in the South China Sea, is expanding defence and economic ties with India. At the same time, India is looking for trusted partners in the region to strengthen its Act East Policy and Indo-Pacific strategy.
How has the India-Vietnam strategic partnership evolved into a comprehensive relationship?
India and Vietnam elevated their ties to an Enhanced Comprehensive Strategic Partnership in May 2026, marking 10 years of their previous 2016 partnership. This deepening of relations focuses on intensified defense cooperation, maritime security, trade, digital payments, and critical technology, with a goal of $25 billion in bilateral trade by 2030
- Strategic Evolution: India-Vietnam ties have progressed from political goodwill to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (CSP) established in 2016, institutionalising defence and security cooperation.
- Act East Convergence: Vietnam occupies a central position in India’s Act East Policy, reinforcing India’s diplomatic and economic outreach to Southeast Asia.
- Historical Trust: Long-standing diplomatic engagement and political trust have strengthened cooperation in trade, defence, maritime affairs, and capacity-building.
- Institutional Mechanisms: Regular high-level exchanges, defence dialogues, naval cooperation, and capacity-building initiatives have deepened bilateral engagement.
- Regional Context: China’s increasing assertiveness in the South China Sea has accelerated strategic convergence between India and Vietnam.
Why has defence cooperation emerged as the backbone of India-Vietnam relations?
Defence cooperation constitutes the strongest pillar of bilateral engagement due to shared concerns over maritime security and regional stability.
- Lines of Credit: India extended US $225 million in defence credit to Vietnam, facilitating military modernisation.
- Naval Cooperation: Maritime engagement includes joint exercises, training assistance, port calls, and maritime cooperation mechanisms.
- Cooperation has moved beyond exercises to include joint hydrographic surveys (first conducted in May 2025) and a Mutual Submarine Search and Rescue Agreement.
- Defence Capacity Building: India supports training of Vietnamese armed personnel and defence institution-building.
- Gifted Assets: India gifted the missile corvette INS Kirpan to Vietnam in 2023.
- BrahMos Dimension: Discussions surrounding potential BrahMos supersonic cruise missile exports indicate growing defence trust and a shift in deterrence calculations in the South China Sea.
- New Strategic Mechanisms: During the May 2026 visit, both nations agreed to establish a 2+2 Ministerial Dialogue (Foreign and Defence Ministers) to deepen policy coordination.
- Strategic Signalling: Defence cooperation strengthens a rules-based maritime order and enhances balancing capacity against coercive regional behaviour.
- Logistics & Training: Vietnam signed its first-ever Mutual Logistics Support MoU with India in 2022, facilitating reciprocal access to military bases for replenishment.
How do Indo-Pacific dynamics shape India-Vietnam cooperation?
- Shared Strategic Concerns: Both countries support freedom of navigation, maritime security, and peaceful dispute resolution in the Indo-Pacific.
- Vietnam formally joined India’s Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative (IPOI) in 2026. This voluntary initiative focuses on maritime governance, sustainable development, and a rules-based order, directly countering unilateral actions in the South China Sea.
- South China Sea Factor: Vietnam faces persistent Chinese assertiveness, creating convergence with India’s emphasis on a stable maritime order.
- ASEAN Centrality: Vietnam supports India’s participation in an ASEAN-led regional architecture, ensuring inclusive regional cooperation.To further this, Prime Minister Modi declared 2026 as the ASEAN-India Year of Maritime Cooperation, a move supported by Vietnam to ensure inclusive regional engagement.
- Supply Chain Resilience: To reduce dependence on single-country (Chinese) supply chains, the two nations have focused on:
- Critical Minerals: An MoU between IREL (India) Ltd. and Vietnam’s ITRRE aims to secure the extraction and processing of rare earth elements essential for high-tech and defence sectors.
- Economic Targets: A bilateral trade goal of USD 25 billion by 2030 was established to foster economic stability amid global geopolitical flux.
- Minilateral Balancing: India and Vietnam increasingly participate in issue-based strategic partnerships without entering formal military alliances.
- Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative (IPOI)
- The “2+2” Ministerial Dialogue (Instituted recently)
- Both participate in ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting Plus (ADMM-Plus) and the East Asia Summit (EAS)
- Mekong-Ganga Cooperation (MGC): India uses the MGC framework to implement Quick Impact Projects (QIPs) in Vietnam.
- Digital Connectivity Blocks: Agreements between NPCI International and NAPAS for cross-border QR code payments create a digital economic corridor
- Rules-Based Order: Joint emphasis on international law and UNCLOS principles reflects commitment to legal mechanisms in maritime disputes.
Can economic cooperation become the next pillar of the partnership?
- Trade Expansion: Bilateral trade has crossed US $15 billion, with ambitions to reach US $25 billion by 2030, indicating untapped economic potential.
- Supply-Chain Diversification: Vietnam offers India an alternative manufacturing and supply-chain partner amid concerns over China-centric production networks.
- Digital and Technology Cooperation: Cooperation is expanding in semiconductors, digital economy, artificial intelligence, and payment systems integration.
- Manufacturing Synergies: Vietnam’s integration into global value chains complements India’s manufacturing ambitions.
- Energy Cooperation: Collaboration in energy security strengthens broader economic engagement.
What role does Vietnam play in India’s Indo-Pacific strategy?
Vietnam is the central pillar of India’s Act East Policy and a critical strategic anchor in the Indo-Pacific region.
- Strategic Geography: Vietnam occupies a vital position near the South China Sea, making it strategically important for India’s regional outreach.This is reinforced by India’s support for UNCLOS and freedom of navigation.
- Reliable Regional Partner: Vietnam functions as a dependable partner for India in balancing regional uncertainties.
- ASEAN Connectivity: Vietnam facilitates India’s engagement with Southeast Asia and broader Indo-Pacific institutions.
- Gateway to ASEAN: As a key member of ASEAN, Vietnam serves as a bridge for India to deepen its engagement with the 11-nation bloc.
- Vision MAHASAGAR: India officially recognizes Vietnam as a pillar in its Vision MAHASAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region).
- Mekong-Ganga Cooperation: Vietnam facilitates India’s strategic reach into the Mekong sub-region, driving developmental and economic integration
- Security Cooperation: Defence coordination with Vietnam enhances India’s maritime presence and strategic footprint.
- Geopolitical Significance: Vietnam’s independent foreign policy and strategic hedging align with India’s preference for multi-alignment.
What structural challenges may constrain deeper India-Vietnam engagement?
- Implementation Deficit: Strategic intent requires conversion into operational outcomes in trade, defence industrial cooperation, and connectivity.
- Logistical Constraints: Limited transport and connectivity infrastructure impede faster trade integration.
- Regulatory Barriers: Legal and procedural bottlenecks restrict rapid expansion of bilateral projects.
- Private Sector Participation: Greater business-to-business investment remains necessary for achieving ambitious economic goals.
- Defence Delivery Challenges: Potential transfer of advanced systems such as BrahMos may face diplomatic and logistical complexities.
Conclusion
India-Vietnam relations are transitioning from a conventional diplomatic partnership to a multidimensional strategic relationship. This is shaped by defence cooperation, economic resilience, and Indo-Pacific security concerns. Sustained institutional implementation, stronger trade integration, and deeper defence-industrial collaboration will determine if the partnership evolves into a durable pillar of regional stability and strategic balancing.





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