India’s unusually busy diplomatic schedule reflects the turbulent era we live in, defined by profound geopolitical, geoeconomic and technological transitions. Some of the developments occupying New Delhi’s strategic thinking do not directly involve India, but their ramifications are central to India’s strategic calculus. Multiple theaters of interest are simultaneously converging on India. The recently concluded Trump-Xi meeting took place almost in parallel with the meeting of BRICS foreign ministers. gathering in New Delhi.
Around the same time, Prime Minister Narendra Modi embarked on a five-country strategy. tour covering the United Arab Emirates, the Netherlands, Sweden, Norway and Italy. And this week, Russian President Vladimir Putin visited China, even as Quad foreign ministers prepare to land in New Delhi. Added to this is the unresolved West Asian crisis, which continues to disrupt energy markets and disrupt shipping routes. The simultaneous convergence of multiple theaters, crises, and strategic conversations makes this perhaps the most important test of India’s multialignment strategy and its ability to engage multiple poles simultaneously while retaining control of its own independent agency.
Autonomy is not equidistance
Each of these summits presents a plethora of opportunities but also risks for India’s foreign policy, highlighting the quintessential dilemma between prudence and leverage. This in turn requires constant revision of the conceptual and operational meaning of strategic autonomy. Can self-reliance enable selective deepening and selective distancing, when India’s interests demand it, without running the risk of being labeled unreliable by opposite ends of the strategic spectrum?
Each of the platforms competing for India’s attention and political reach is intrinsically linked to the advancement of India’s national security and economic development: Gulf for energy security; Europe for commerce, technology and industry; THE Quad countries for maritime security, connectivity and critical minerals supply chains; And BRICS for political space in global governance and reformed multilateralism. The new grammar and geometry of great power relations are shaping India’s strategic calculations. New Delhi is navigate the interplay of foreign policy legacies, pragmatic connections, and prevailing power asymmetries.
Undeniably, the policy thinking behind India’s external engagements has changed significantly, both substantively and optically, over the past two decades and more. The practice of strategic autonomy is no longer defined by ideological constraints, but by the extent and limits of The rise of India within the international system. This, in turn, is influenced and shaped by the significant transformation of India’s material capabilities.
As India becomes increasingly willing to make strategic and tactical choices that redefine its alignments and realignments, power asymmetries vis-à-vis countries with far superior material capabilities continue to widen. constrain the range of choices that New Delhi seeks to make. Indian political discourse also unabashedly emphasizes development and growth, with the argument that what is beneficial for India’s growth is, as a corollary, beneficial for regional and global growth.
Tailored multialignment for asymmetrical multipolarity
While the post-Cold War world has gradually moved away from American unipolarity, true multipolarity remains incomplete and unequal, as power has diffused but continues to remain highly concentrated in a few large states, particularly the United States and China. Multipolarity is not an automatic structural outcome, but one actively shaped by how states behave, align, compete, and cooperate. Rather than producing a balanced and cooperative order, the rise of great power rivalry has successful in a “asymmetric” Or “imbalance“multipolarity, where smaller powers seek greater strategic space even as major powers continue to dominate the system. Therefore, navigating the vagaries of an asymmetric multipolarity will make India’s practice of multialignment relevant, as it maneuvers through a system defined by political choices, strategic calculations, and the interactions between states themselves.
Ultimately, India’s foreign policy challenge is not just to align, but to repeatedly and selectively align without wasting its discretion and independence. While in decline While the predictability and increasing volatility of the international system are testing India’s foreign policy, they have not reshaped, but rather aggravated, the contradictions that India must continually manage. The menu of priorities in India’s outreach and foreign policy commitments reflects a story of pragmatism and diplomatic juggling that requires constant recalibration. These priorities cover strategic energy reserves, defense industrial cooperation, maritime security, new technologies, semiconductors and critical minerals supply chains.
India’s simultaneous commitments themselves illustrate this balancing act. New Delhi is deepening its maritime and technological cooperation with the Quad countries while remaining engaged with BRICS and maintaining strategic ties with Russia in areas such as defense and energy. Similarly, India’s efforts to establish semiconductor partnerships with the United States, Japan, and Europe coexist with efforts to preserve stable economic engagement with China despite lingering strategic mistrust. In West Asia, India balances relations between competing hubs, from Israel to the Gulf states and Iran, while safeguarding energy security, connectivity interests and the well-being of the diaspora.
The strategic history of any emerging power is defined by its ability to manage contradictions, rather than its ability to expect linearity of partnerships, because strategic unanimity in international relations is a pipe dream not worth pursuing. This requires a differentiated diplomatic vocabulary and calibrated strategic signaling, each informed by an uncompromising calculation of national interest.
From diplomatic balance to strategic capacity
India’s multialignment strategy will ultimately be judged not only by the scale of its commitments, but also by the depth of its state capacity to support them simultaneously. The challenge facing New Delhi is no longer simply one of diplomatic outreach, but one of institutional bandwidth, economic resilience, technological competitiveness and military preparedness. Multialignment without corresponding national capacity risks becoming performative rather than strategic.
India’s ability to maintain credibility in the face of competing power centers will depend on whether its partners perceive New Delhi as a stable and reliable actor rather than a transactional state. Strategic flexibility cannot come at the expense of strategic clarity. India’s partners can accept policy differences on specific issues, but they will always seek predictability regarding India’s long-term direction and commitments.
The real test of India’s multi-alignment, then, is not to avoid choices altogether, but to sequence and calibrate choices without getting trapped in binary rivalries. This is particularly difficult in an international system where economic interdependence coexists with strategic distrust and where technology ecosystems, supply chains and security partnerships increasingly acquire ideological and geopolitical connotations.
Importantly, India’s rise is occurring at a time when the international system itself is undergoing simultaneous transitions: the diffusion of economic power, the militarization of technology and trade, the fragmentation of multilateral institutions, and the return of harsh geopolitics. Unlike previous rising powers that emerged within relatively stable global orders, India must navigate a context of systemic churn. This makes strategic agility not a tactical preference, but a structural necessity.
For New Delhi, multialignment is therefore not a temporary diplomatic posture but the operational logic of a fractured world order. The challenge is not simply to engage all parties, but to do so while gradually expanding India’s material capabilities and strategic room for maneuver. In an era characterized by overlapping crises and competing centers of power, India’s foreign policy will increasingly be measured by its ability to maintain flexibility without appearing indecisive, to deepen partnerships without becoming dependent, and to exercise autonomy without falling into isolation. This is the real test of India’s rise in the era of asymmetric multipolarity.
