China's nominal GDP is nearly five times that of India's; it is the largest trading partner for almost all of America's trading partners, and it occupies a near-unimpeachable position in global manufacturing supply chains.
One should not adopt China's policies without replicating China's industrial or economic capacity.
Domestic strength that hinges solely, or to a large extent, on the size of the domestic consumption market is hardly a leverage against the US, especially with a president who prioritizes symbolism, narcissism, and reaffirmation of US hegemony over corporate profits.
So is North Korea. The matter at hand is largely an economic/industrial fight, and nuclear weapons don't guarantee economic victories.
Small point - India's nuclear program was greenlit by Indira Gandhi in the 1970s.
Driving public euphoria isn't what diplomacy is meant for, though?
The point the others have made here is this - Trump cares a lot about his ego. If he makes a statement about something, don't dig your heels in. Let him have his victory lap; nothing will change for you. Deal with the Russians for all anyone cares, but don't go out of your way to rub it in his face. If he wants a Nobel, let him have it; just stay silent.
The criticism being made against Mr. Jaishankar here is that he's mimicking China's wolf warrior tactics while representing an economy/industrial complex that has a far greater reliance on the West for technology/investments than China's.
Please do not cherry pick sentences from long response and frame them out of context. But still, you've raised very valid and important points that needs to be discussed cause they often aren't.
China's nominal GDP is nearly five times that of India's; it is the largest trading partner for almost all of America's trading partners, and it occupies a near-unimpeachable position in global manufacturing supply chains.
One should not adopt China's policies without replicating China's industrial or economic capacity
Please read the whole para that you're replying to. Nowhere did I say that we need to adopt chinese policies vis a vis America. I used chinese vs trump 1.0 as an example to stress the need and importance of building resilience. That doesn't mean having a fallout with US or behaving like them.
It means having an economy and military that is not critically dependent on Washington or russia or EU. It doesn't mean stopping trades. It means "building" manufacturing capacities in essential sectors. That is what everyone is doing. We started it with make in india, but now it's time for MII2.0, faster, more fearless in investing (R&D) , reforms etc.
You wont deny it's importance, I hope. We have come far in our capabilities decade by decade.. we will continue.
Domestic strength that hinges solely, or to a large extent, on the size of the domestic consumption market is hardly a leverage against the US, especially with a president who prioritizes symbolism, narcissism, and reaffirmation of US hegemony over corporate profits.
Again, I would urge you not to change the words. I said resilience, not leverage. We do have leverage over them already ( ally vis a vis China, the market for Big Tech etc) ..it's just that, they got more leverage on US (technology of big tech etc) , then we have on them. With resilience, you deny/reduce the leverage USA has right now over us. Leading to balance in the partnership.
And one builds resilience according to strengths. We need to tap into our strength.. workforce, talent, youth, the readiness to adopt new tech, market, domestic consumption and through them reduce our weakness ( low R&D, low IP creation, low manufacturing, unskilled workforce etc) . I don't know what the future holds.. but things have picked up pace in last 6-7 years and with our support and prudence.. things can be even faster.
—So, next time you see a port being built, 5G infra being invested in, private industrialist aligning their corporate interest with national interest.. celebrate it. And voice out against who undermines India (internal or external) . Meanwhile, take advantages of plethora of finance schemes, subsidies out there if you wish to start something. —
So is North Korea. The matter at hand is largely an economic/industrial fight, and nuclear weapons don't guarantee economic victories.
You literally took 5 words out of a long sentence and an even longer paragraph and framed it out of context. At least understand the sentence and why i stated our nuclear status in my response.
Small point - India's nuclear program was greenlit by Indira Gandhi in the 1970s.
Yup. I know. Operation Buddha. And yet the Sonia led left-liberal ecosystem admonished APJ Abdul Kalam and even questioned the need of nuclear weapons during UPA govt tenure.
Driving public euphoria isn't what diplomacy is meant for, though?
You have taken my response to a different conversation and used it in the context of another response for different conversation. That's not how it works. Don't mislead the discussion. One is context public led response to youtube bytes. Another is geopolitics.
The point the others have made here is this - Trump cares a lot about his ego. If he makes a statement about something, don't dig your heels in. Let him have his victory lap; nothing will change for you. Deal with the Russians for all anyone cares, but don't go out of your way to rub it in his face. If he wants a Nobel, let him have it; just stay silent.
The criticism being made against Mr. Jaishankar here is that he's mimicking China's wolf warrior tactics while representing an economy/industrial complex that has a far greater reliance on the West for technology/investments than China's.
I was waiting to come to this part.
Tell me, who was pouncing on Modi and Jaishankar to call trump a liar in parliament when both were showing diplomatic prudence by letting trump get over his antics?
Why is onus on them, but not on the cabal that baited modi to either call out trumps lie or undermine India's strategic position in the world? When the opposition baits you and you remain silent.. the world will think that it's easy to bend India with trump like antics. So, why don't you ask this question to the people who undermined the interest of Indian economy, military and people for their selfish goals? Or are they not responsible for India? If you noticed, trumps tantrum via tarrif came a day or two later after Modi's speech in Lok Sabha. And everyone noticed the glee on their faces when it happened and celebrated that trump called indian economy as dead.
So, you're blaming the wrong guys. Go ask the one responsible to not leaving flexibility needed to manouver the approach you proposed.
Now, what govt has done if flipped the narrative. Govt is standing strong against bullying and hedging it's best.
I won't comment on the extent of reforms.. but be ready to see some substantial policy reforms if US continues to maintain this posture and arm twists.
The criticism is misguided cause jaishankar is vocal when it comes to EU. He is very worded with USA. Because both are different and need different approach.
EU isn't USA and jaishankar reminded them. Then again, of the question are asked in public, and India is accused for its autonomy then its rightful duty of FM to show them the mirror.
It's not wolf warrior. It's called having a backbone.
And mind you, EU is a bloc, not a country. A bloc where India has its own partners and partnership outside the pov of EU as bloc.
EU isn't a technology leader like USA nor has it invested in India while they have loved to boss us around. They themselves are dependent on Chinese so much that their economies will basically crash if they went against China fully. And do you know, who they need to not let that happen? India. But for that, they need to come out of colonial mindset of superiority and show mutual respect. And they wouldn't have done it if not for India's stand and rebuttals.
Don't let youtube shorts fool you regarding the diplomacy our MEA has done with European nations since 2020. It's not just interviews of FM... But whole MEA that works.
And it's not just the europe that needs to come out of colonial mindset. It's also the Indians who needs to come out of colonial mindset and this inferiority complex we have against white color. Grow a spine. Stop looking for validation. Their economy is in dire straits and domestic politics even direr.