HPAS 2025 Mains GS-2 Question 6
Question: Describe the Gujral Doctrine as India’s policy towards its neighbours.
The Gujral doctrine was officially articulated in Chatham House (1996) and a Colombo speech (1997). and marked a transition from a transactional, quid pro quo approach of foreign policy to a model of enlightened self-interest and unilateral accommodation.
Principles of Gujral Doctrine
- Unilateral and asymmetric concessions to small neighbours without demanding exact reciprocity.
- Denial of sovereign territory for any hostile acts or sub-conventional warfare against regional actors.
- Strict policy of non-interference regarding domestic affairs of neighbouring countries.
- Respect for each other’s territorial sovereignty and integrity.
- Peaceful Bilateral Conflict Resolution.
Objectives
- Dismantle perception of Indian regional hegemony (Big Brother Syndrome).
- Secure immediate strategic depth to focus on domestic consolidation and multipolarity.
- Foster Complex Regional Interdependence via economic platforms like SAARC.
Applications
- Ganga Water Sharing Treaty (1996) with Bangladesh.
- Mahakali Treaty (1996) with Nepal.
- Confidence Building Measures along LAC with China (1996).
Limitations
- Utopian Idealism, ignoring harsh neorealist constraints.
- Perceived as Strategic Appeasement, rendering India soft on terror.
- Surrenders vital bargaining leverage by abandoning strict reciprocal demands.
Adverse Fallouts
- Systemic intelligence degradation caused by dismantling RAW’s offensive covert capabilities.
- Enabled Asymmetric Free Riding by neighbours.
Achievements
- Projected immense soft power, rebranding India as a security provider.
- Resolved chronic resource disputes, securing landmark regional water treaties.
Contemporary Relevance
- Serves as the ideological foundation of “Neighbourhood First” Policy.
- Counters Offshore Adversarial Balancing via Non-Reciprocal Medical Statecraft (e.g., Vaccine Maitri).
- Prevents Hostile Bandwagoning and Managing Structural Regional Asymmetry.
Contemporary Challenges
- Extra-regional penetration by China.
- Credibility gap due to India’s infrastructure implementation delays.
- Unrelenting asymmetric warfare by Pakistan.
- Ineffective SAARC.
Way Forward
- Adopt pragmatic smart power, blending non-reciprocal goodwill with robust deterrence.
- Operationalise subregional multilateralism, bypassing stalled SAARC through BIMSTEC and BBIN.
- Bridge the delivery deficit by streamlining project execution.
