Contents
Introduction
Amid geoeconomic turmoil, India is shifting from strategic restraint to proactive leadership, seeking to shape global order while safeguarding Global South interests.
From Non-Alignment to Strategic Leadership
- India’s foreign policy has evolved through phases:
- Non-Alignment (Cold War): Moral voice, limited influence.
- Strategic Autonomy (Post-1991): Balancing major powers.
- Multi-alignment (21st century): Engagement with QUAD, BRICS, SCO.
- Today, the shift is toward strategic leadership, not merely navigating power blocs but shaping global norms.
- The 2023 G20 Presidency marked a turning point, where India actively shaped outcomes on inclusive growth, digital public infrastructure, and climate finance, positioning itself as the Voice of the Global South.
India as a Proactive Architect of World Order
- Normative and Institutional Leadership: Advocacy for UNSC reforms to reflect contemporary realities. Push for WTO reforms and fair-trade rules and promotion of rules-based order grounded in UN Charter principles.
- Conflict Mediation & Global Commons: Increasing role in maritime security (Indo-Pacific) and anti-piracy. Potential mediator in West Asia, leveraging ties with US, Iran, Gulf. Focus on energy security corridors amid crises like Strait of Hormuz disruptions.
- Climate Justice: At COP30 in Belém, India emerged as the leading voice for climate justice, representing the Like-Minded Developing Countries (LMDCs).
- Technological Diplomacy: Export of Digital Public Infrastructure (UPI, Aadhaar) to Global South. Leadership in International Solar Alliance and climate governance.
- Economic Statecraft: Trade agreements (India–UAE CEPA, ongoing EU FTA). Positioning India as supply chain alternative to China.
Safeguarding the Interests of the Global South
- Voice and Representation: Voice of Global South Summits aggregating concerns of 100+ nations. Advocacy for equitable climate finance and debt relief. Example: Three editions (2023-2024), African Union permanent membership in G-20.
- Equitable Development: Championing Climate Justice and technology transfers that allow developing nations to grow without the prohibitive costs imposed by Western-centric standards. Example: India-UN Development Fund.
- Financial Sovereignty: Promotion of de-dollarisation debates and local currency trade. Strengthening institutions. Example: BRICS Bank (NDB).
- Health and Food Security: Leveraging India’s Pharmacy of the World status and its leadership in the International Year of Millets (expanding into 2026) to ensure supply chain resilience for the vulnerable. Example: vaccine diplomacy.
The Cost of Passivity and Risks to Credibility
Remaining silent during UN Charter violations poses significant risks:
- Erosion of Moral Authority: If India remains passive during territorial violations elsewhere, its own arguments regarding its borders lose international weight.
- Vacuum of Leadership: In the absence of a proactive India, the Global South may drift toward more transactional or debt-heavy alliances with other major powers.
Challenges to Proactive Diplomacy
- Resource Constraints: Unlike the US or China, India’s diplomatic machinery and financial outreach are still scaling.
- Internal-External Paradox: Balancing domestic developmental priorities with the costs of global leadership and foreign aid.
- The China Factor: Navigating the competition with a peer-competitor that seeks its own version of a New World Order.
Way Forward
- Institutionalise a dedicated Global South engagement cell with cross-ministerial coordination.
- Increase development assistance and technical cooperation budgets strategically.
- Deepen partnerships through platforms like G20, BRICS, and Quad while maintaining strategic autonomy.
- Invest in diplomatic capacity building and public diplomacy to build domestic consensus.
- Link global leadership initiatives to domestic job creation through skill-aligned sectors.
Conclusion
India’s rise as a global architect depends on aligning principled diplomacy with inclusive development and employment-driven growth for lasting legitimacy.


