As multilateralism erodes, India must reframe its foreign policy


As Multilateralism Erodes, India Must Reframe Its Foreign Policy

UPSC Study Note | GS-II (International Relations) | February 2026


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Period Event
1945 UN system established; India among early members; diplomacy centred on Non-Alignment.
1955 Bandung Conference → India co-founds Non-Aligned Movement (NAM); "strategic autonomy" crystallised.
1964 G-77 formed; India becomes a leading voice for developing countries at the UN.
1986 U.S. launches Uruguay Round of trade negotiations (GATT). [S2]
1992 Rio Earth Summit; climate negotiations left "entirely to India by the Global South" — peak of India's intellectual multilateral leadership. [S2]
1995 WTO established; India a founding member. [S2]
~2010 China's rise disrupts India's intellectual leadership at the UN; Beijing creates alternative funding/security institutions (AIIB, SCO expansion, BRI). [S2]
2017 U.S. withdraws from Paris Agreement (first Trump term); multilateral stress becomes visible.
2023 India hosts G-20 Presidency; champions Global South agenda; "Voice of the Global South" summits launched. [S1]
2025–26 U.S. exits 66 international organisations; Trump 2.0 era accelerates unilateralism; China heads 4 principal UN agencies; its aid volumes exceed those of the West. [S2][S4]

4. Core Static Facts

Key Actors & Institutional Shifts - China heads 4 principal UN agencies (as of ~2024–26); Chinese aid volumes now exceed Western aid. [S2] - The U.S. has withdrawn from 31 UN institutions (per the article; the broader Jan 2026 announcement covers 66 international organisations total). [S2][S4] - The WTO (est. 1995, successor to GATT, 164 members) faces U.S. funding pause; developing-country interests are now structurally exposed. [S4]

India's Current Foreign Policy Architecture - Strategic Autonomy: India's traditional doctrine — non-alignment with any bloc, engagement with all. [S2] - Neighbourhood First: Prioritises Bhutan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Maldives, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Afghanistan. [S1] - Act East Policy: Deepening engagement with ASEAN and Indo-Pacific. [S1] - Voice of the Global South: India's G-20 Presidency (2023) framing; hosted two "Voice of Global South" summits. [S1] - Viksit Bharat 2047: India's developmental goal of becoming a developed nation by its centenary of independence. - India-UK FTA: Recently concluded; includes Double Contribution Convention. [S1]

Key Ministries / Bodies - Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) — primary implementing body for foreign policy. - Ministry of Commerce & Industry — WTO, trade negotiations. - No enabling Act per se; constitutional basis: Article 73 (executive power of the Union extends to matters on which Parliament can legislate, including foreign affairs under Union List Entry 14).


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Geopolitical / Strategic

Economic

Historical

Administrative / Governance

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. The WTO was established in 1995, succeeding the GATT, following the Uruguay Round launched in 1986 by the U.S. [S2]
  2. China heads 4 principal UN agencies (as of 2024–26); its aid volumes now exceed those of the West. [S2]
  3. The U.S. announced withdrawal from 66 international organisations on January 7, 2026, including 31 UN-system entities. [S4][S5]
  4. India led climate negotiations at the 1992 Rio Earth Summit on behalf of the Global South — its peak of multilateral intellectual leadership. [S2]
  5. India's traditional foreign policy doctrine is "strategic autonomy" — simultaneous engagement with competing powers without binding alliances.
  6. PM Modi acknowledged the "new world order" formally in the Rajya Sabha in February 2026. [S2]
  7. India's foreign policy prioritises five pillars per MEA: Neighbourhood First, Act East, Think West (Gulf), Indo-Pacific, and Global South leadership. [S1]
  8. The India-UK FTA (concluded 2025–26) includes a Double Contribution Convention — relevant for services and mobility. [S1]
  9. Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) was co-founded by India in 1961 (Belgrade Summit); related to "strategic autonomy" doctrine.
  10. The Bandung Conference (1955) was the precursor to NAM; India was a key participant under PM Nehru.
  11. "Viksit Bharat 2047" is India's target of becoming a developed nation by the centenary of independence — the domestic anchor for foreign policy reorientation.
  12. India's MEA is staffed by approximately 900 IFS officers — a chronic constraint on diplomatic capacity relative to India's global ambitions.
  13. G-77 (Group of 77), established 1964, is the UN's largest coalition of developing nations; India has historically been a leading voice within it.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping: - GS-II: International Relations — India's foreign policy; effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India's interests; India and its neighbourhood; important bilateral, regional and global groupings. - GS-II: Governance — Bilateral, regional and global groupings and agreements involving India and/or affecting India's interests. - GS-I (tangential): Post-Cold War world order, geopolitical shifts.

Syllabus Headings: - India and its neighbourhood — relations - Effect of policies of developed and developing countries on India's interests - Important International Institutions, agencies, and fora — their structure, mandate - Bilateral, regional and global groupings

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The erosion of the UN-centred multilateral order poses both challenges and opportunities for India's foreign policy. Critically examine, with reference to India's doctrine of strategic autonomy." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "China's institutional capture of international organisations has fundamentally altered India's position as a leader of the Global South. Discuss the strategic implications and suggest a reoriented approach for India." (GS-II, 15 marks) 3. "India must transition from a reactive 'strategic autonomy' posture to a proactive 'strategic engagement' doctrine in a post-multilateral world. Elaborate with examples from recent Indian diplomacy." (GS-II, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Conceptual origin of strategic autonomy; understand why it is being questioned today
WTO and Dispute Settlement Mechanism U.S. withdrawal/funding pause directly undermines India's trade interests
India's G-20 Presidency (2023) India's most recent attempt to reshape multilateral governance and Global South agenda
China's BRI and AIIB The alternative multilateral architecture India must contend with
India-UK FTA and FTA Strategy India's pivot to bilateral/plurilateral trade in the absence of effective multilateralism
UN Security Council Reform India's long-standing demand for permanent membership; more urgent as the Council becomes dysfunctional
Indo-Pacific strategy and QUAD India's minilateral/plurilateral hedge against both U.S. withdrawal and Chinese expansion
Viksit Bharat 2047 Domestic development goal whose achievement requires a stable international trade/investment environment

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing "multilateralism" with "bilateralism": Multilateralism = rules-based institutions with many members (UN, WTO, WHO); bilateralism = one-on-one state-to-state deals. The article argues the world is shifting from the former to the latter — don't conflate.
  2. Assuming Strategic Autonomy = Non-Alignment: Strategic autonomy is the post-Cold War evolution of NAM; NAM was specifically anti-bloc during the Cold War. They share roots but are not identical — UPSC may test this distinction.
  3. Wrong year for WTO: WTO was established in 1995 (not 1986 — that was the Uruguay Round launch). [S2]
  4. China's UN agency count: China heads 4 principal UN agencies — do not confuse with total UN bodies or Security Council P5 membership.
  5. Overstating U.S. withdrawal count: The article says India's context involves the U.S. withdrawing from "31 UN institutions"; the broader Jan 2026 announcement covers 66 international organisations total — both figures circulate; use context correctly.
  6. Treating India's G-20 Presidency (2023) as a substitute for multilateral reform: India chaired G-20 but G-20 is not a multilateral treaty organisation — it has no binding decision-making power. Don't conflate.

11. Sources