In 2005, the U.S. aimed to help India become a major world power, fostering a strategic partnership based on shared possibilities.
The 2025 U.S. National Security Strategy (NSS) reflects a shift towards national reassurance and burden-shifting, with a focus on American interests.
The 2025 NSS frames India more as a component in the U.S.'s China strategy rather than a civilizational actor.
The U.S. now expects partners to assume primary responsibility for their regions, signaling conditional and limited support.
Detailed Insights:
The 2005 partnership was built on the belief that strengthening responsible rising powers would strengthen the world, leading to the civil nuclear breakthrough.
The 2025 NSS expresses a desire to lighten America’s load, treating global leadership as a cost to be minimized, contrasting with the partnership language of 2005.
The Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine indicates a U.S. intent to assert hemispheric exclusivity, signaling a move towards inwardness.
India needs to recognize that the U.S. is now preoccupied with its own vulnerabilities and demands more from partners while offering less in return.
India's rise will depend on its own strategic confidence and material capacity to act independently, as the U.S. support will be conditional.
The challenge for India is to craft a role suited to its scale, interests, and civilizational temperament within a fragmented global order.
Key Concepts Involved:
National Security Strategy (NSS): A document outlining a country's strategic goals, objectives, and how it plans to achieve them in the realm of national security.
Strategic Autonomy: A country's ability to make its own foreign policy decisions without being unduly influenced by other powers.
Indo-Pacific Security: A concept referring to the maintenance of peace and stability in the region spanning the Indian and Pacific Oceans, often involving cooperation between multiple countries.