Multilateralism
Must India’s foreign affairs strategy change?
S. Menon, India (Brookings)
Alyssa Ayres, USA (CFR)
Justin Vaisse, France (PPF)
Dino P. Djalal, Indonesia (FPCI)
Rory Medcalf, Australia (ANU)
Transcript + video: brookings.edu/events/webinar…
“we’re in for a poorer, meaner and smaller world. Poorer bc the economic prospects are dim. Meaner because we can see the selfish turning inward and the failure of multilateralism. And smaller because the fragmentation of politics and economics has accelerated.” 3
“let's not confuse strategic autonomy and attention to sovereignty with introversion and either unilateralism or reserve vis-a-vis multilateral initiatives, which are really critical to provide not only for world peace but also for the well-being of Indian citizens” 4
"outer space is under-governed, under-regulated. [India's] anti-satellite weapon test of last year, for example, which created debris, it was a bit disappointing, to be honest, because China had done that 10 years ago and India could have done it better." 9
"when both the greatest powers in the world are revisionist and seem to have turned their back on at least traditional multilateralism, my answer is, issue-based coalitions of the willing. Pick an issue that matters, find those who agree with you and work on it. 11
"India is not going to be a wholesale provider of those [public, global] goods, not in this condition, not today, but we’ll work with partners where we find them. Strategic autonomy in that sense is not autarky, is not isolation, is not cutting ourselves off." 12 / end