India’s balancing act in the Indo-Pacific : multi-alignment and tilt to the U.S.

This dissertation aims to examine the nature of India’s strategic partnerships against the backdrop of the Indo-Pacific and addresses the question of how it is balancing these relationships. The main argument put forth is that India is balancing two approaches with respect to its Indo-Pacific strate...

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Main Author: Karuturi, Ramyashri Rao
Other Authors: -
Format: Thesis-Master by Coursework
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140131
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1401312020-11-01T08:36:00Z India’s balancing act in the Indo-Pacific : multi-alignment and tilt to the U.S. Karuturi, Ramyashri Rao - S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Anit Mukherjee isamukherjee@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Political science::International relations This dissertation aims to examine the nature of India’s strategic partnerships against the backdrop of the Indo-Pacific and addresses the question of how it is balancing these relationships. The main argument put forth is that India is balancing two approaches with respect to its Indo-Pacific strategy. The first is the broader multi-alignment framework in which it is consolidating its maritime cooperation through a range of strategic partnerships. The second, which is interlinked with the first approach, involves strengthening India-U.S. ties in this sphere given the increasingly aligned interests between the two powers. This paper will explore the multi-alignment framework through the lens of the expanding India-U.S. relationship. This is studied using cases of India’s strategic partnerships with Japan, Australia, France, China, Russia, Iran, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Singapore. This dissertation concludes that while key partnerships have been augmented by India’s tilt to the U.S., in large part due to the nature of the defence relations between them and common vision for the region, there have been significant constraints to India’s other partnerships. However, New Delhi’s commitment towards strategic autonomy has allowed these constraints to be limited in nature, further justifying the importance of an alignment with the U.S. rather than an alliance. Moving forward, in order to secure and develop these ties without the label of a being a ‘reluctant’, ‘uncertain’, or an ‘evasive’ partner, India would likely benefit from advancing the multilateral initiatives it partakes in by focusing on other avenues. Master of Science (Strategic Studies) 2020-05-26T12:52:56Z 2020-05-26T12:52:56Z 2020 Thesis-Master by Coursework https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140131 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Political science::International relations
spellingShingle Social sciences::Political science::International relations
Karuturi, Ramyashri Rao
India’s balancing act in the Indo-Pacific : multi-alignment and tilt to the U.S.
description This dissertation aims to examine the nature of India’s strategic partnerships against the backdrop of the Indo-Pacific and addresses the question of how it is balancing these relationships. The main argument put forth is that India is balancing two approaches with respect to its Indo-Pacific strategy. The first is the broader multi-alignment framework in which it is consolidating its maritime cooperation through a range of strategic partnerships. The second, which is interlinked with the first approach, involves strengthening India-U.S. ties in this sphere given the increasingly aligned interests between the two powers. This paper will explore the multi-alignment framework through the lens of the expanding India-U.S. relationship. This is studied using cases of India’s strategic partnerships with Japan, Australia, France, China, Russia, Iran, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Singapore. This dissertation concludes that while key partnerships have been augmented by India’s tilt to the U.S., in large part due to the nature of the defence relations between them and common vision for the region, there have been significant constraints to India’s other partnerships. However, New Delhi’s commitment towards strategic autonomy has allowed these constraints to be limited in nature, further justifying the importance of an alignment with the U.S. rather than an alliance. Moving forward, in order to secure and develop these ties without the label of a being a ‘reluctant’, ‘uncertain’, or an ‘evasive’ partner, India would likely benefit from advancing the multilateral initiatives it partakes in by focusing on other avenues.
author2 -
author_facet -
Karuturi, Ramyashri Rao
format Thesis-Master by Coursework
author Karuturi, Ramyashri Rao
author_sort Karuturi, Ramyashri Rao
title India’s balancing act in the Indo-Pacific : multi-alignment and tilt to the U.S.
title_short India’s balancing act in the Indo-Pacific : multi-alignment and tilt to the U.S.
title_full India’s balancing act in the Indo-Pacific : multi-alignment and tilt to the U.S.
title_fullStr India’s balancing act in the Indo-Pacific : multi-alignment and tilt to the U.S.
title_full_unstemmed India’s balancing act in the Indo-Pacific : multi-alignment and tilt to the U.S.
title_sort india’s balancing act in the indo-pacific : multi-alignment and tilt to the u.s.
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140131
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