ABSTRACT

In managing national security, how Realist is India in terms of cultivating and using power and especially military power? A conventional view of India is that it has been uncomfortable with realism or ‘power politics’ as a guide to policy. This volume shows that it has been more realist than is generally recognized and that it has increasingly become comfortable with power in the service of its interests.

The essays in this volume

  • Examine the different aspects and types of realism in India’s national security policy
  • Include a range of perspectives from academics as well as former military officers and diplomats
  • Focus on India’s military and foreign policy in dealing with China, Pakistan, the United States, Southeast Asia, and West Asia.

This key volume will be indispensable to scholars and researchers of politics and international relations, defence and strategic studies, and South Asian studies and to government officials, journalists, and general readers interested in the external dimensions of India’s national security.

part |49 pages

Is India Realist

chapter 2|13 pages

Is India Realist?

chapter 4|13 pages

A Journey Without a Destination

The Cultural-Economy of a Great Power

part |51 pages

Military Realism

chapter 7|19 pages

The Real Tension Between Industrialisation and Indigenisation

How Realistic Is India's Approach to Self-Reliance in Armaments?

part |55 pages

Realism in Diplomacy

chapter 9|18 pages

Look East, Act East

How Realist are Indian Policies Towards the ASEAN States?

part |34 pages

Beyond Realism

chapter 11|17 pages

India and the United States

Clashing Interests and Geopolitics

chapter 12|15 pages

Costs to India, Pakistan of Confrontational Policies

Regional Challenges and Opportunities *