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
- Multilateralism — the governance system built on rules-based international institutions (UN, WTO, WHO, etc.) since 1945 — is under structural stress as the U.S. retreats and China expands its influence, forcing middle powers like India to recalibrate. [S1][S4]
- India's legacy foreign policy rested on strategic autonomy and leadership of the Global South within the UN framework; both pillars now face obsolescence as that framework itself hollows out. [S2]
- This is a Prelims + Mains priority topic spanning GS-II (International Relations, India's foreign policy, multilateralism) and GS-I (geopolitics, world order).
- The 2047 Viksit Bharat vision provides the domestic anchor for a reoriented foreign policy: build endogenous capabilities, diversify trade, reduce dependence on eroding institutions.
2. Why in the News
- January 7, 2026: The U.S. announced withdrawal from 66 international organisations, including 31 UN-system entities — the single largest institutional retreat in post-war history. [S4][S5]
- January 2025: U.S. exited the WHO (second time); paused funding to WTO; earlier withdrew from UNESCO and UN Human Rights Council. [S4]
- February 13, 2026: PM Narendra Modi formally acknowledged the "new world order" in a speech to the Rajya Sabha, signalling official recognition of the paradigm shift. [S2]
- China and Russia have moved to fill the vacuum, expanding influence in UN forums after each U.S. exit. [S4]
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
- The unipolar moment (post-1991) is over; the world is transitioning to multipolarity with no effective rule-setter. Power politics and transactional bilateralism replace rules-based multilateralism. [S2][S4]
- India's strategic autonomy doctrine, designed for a U.S.-led rules-based order, paradoxically becomes less useful as that very order collapses — the doctrine needs reinvention, not repetition.
- China's institutional capture (4 UN agencies, AIIB, BRI, aid volumes) effectively replaces Western multilateralism with Sino-centric multilateralism, creating a new pressure on India. [S2]
- India is viewed by Indo-Pacific and Global South nations as a "voice of balance and responsibility" — a diplomatic asset in the vacuum left by U.S. retreat. [S1]
Economic
- U.S. withdrawal/funding pause at the WTO threatens the Dispute Settlement Mechanism that India has used to protect export interests and contest agricultural subsidy rules.
- Trade diversification is imperative: India must reduce exposure to any single trade architecture (WTO-centred, or U.S.-dependent) and pursue bilateral/regional FTAs (India-UK FTA concluded; Gulf, EU, ASEAN FTAs in progress).
- Endogenous capability building — domestic manufacturing (PLI schemes), tech self-reliance (semiconductors, defence) — becomes the economic pillar of a reoriented foreign policy.
- Viksit Bharat 2047 goal requires sustained 7–8% GDP growth, which is contingent on a stable trade/investment environment that multilateral frameworks no longer guarantee. [S2]
Historical
- India's Oxbridge-educated diplomats (Nehru era) shaped UN norms on decolonisation, non-interference, sovereign equality — this was India's "soft power" peak at the UN. [S2]
- The 1992 Rio Summit marked maximum Indian influence on global rule-making (climate); post-2010, this intellectual leadership has eroded. [S2]
- Parallel: India's NAM stance in the Cold War was also a response to a bipolar order — the current moment demands a similarly creative conceptual reframing for a multipolar/anarchic order.
Administrative / Governance
- India must strengthen diplomatic capacity: MEA staffing is thin (~900 IFS officers for a 1.4 billion population country vs. China's far larger diplomatic corps).
- Coalition-building with like-minded middle powers (EU, Japan, Australia, Brazil, South Africa) becomes operationally critical as U.S.-led coalitions weaken.
- PM Modi's Rajya Sabha acknowledgment of the "new world order" (Feb 2026) signals political will but the institutional re-tooling of Indian foreign policy machinery is yet to follow. [S2]
Ethical / Governance
- India's historical claim to moral leadership — non-alignment, anti-colonialism, peaceful resolution — is an asset but risks becoming rhetorical if not backed by material capability and clear positioning.
- A transactional world order risks marginalising smaller/poorer nations of the Global South — India faces the ethical dilemma of championing their interests while also pursuing hard national interest.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Jan 2025: U.S. withdraws from WHO on Day 1 of Trump 2.0; pauses WTO funding; exits Paris Agreement again.
- Feb 2025: U.S. halts engagement with UN Human Rights Council; China and Russia fill vacuum in UN forums. [S4]
- 2025 (ongoing): China's aid and institutional influence exceed Western levels; China heads 4 major UN agencies. [S2]
- Jan 7, 2026: U.S. announces withdrawal from 66 international organisations (31 within UN system) — single largest multilateral retreat in history. [S4][S5]
- Feb 13, 2026: PM Modi formally acknowledges "new world order" in Rajya Sabha. MEA article (Mukul Sanwal) calls for reframing Indian foreign policy beyond strategic autonomy. [S2]
- June 2025: PIB publishes "Bharat's Global Footprint" document outlining India's expanded global engagements. [S1]
- India-UK FTA concluded (2025–26); includes Double Contribution Convention — landmark bilateral milestone. [S1]
- India consistently described by MEA as a "reliable partner" for Indo-Pacific and Global South nations. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)
- The WTO was established in 1995, succeeding the GATT, following the Uruguay Round launched in 1986 by the U.S. [S2]
- China heads 4 principal UN agencies (as of 2024–26); its aid volumes now exceed those of the West. [S2]
- The U.S. announced withdrawal from 66 international organisations on January 7, 2026, including 31 UN-system entities. [S4][S5]
- India led climate negotiations at the 1992 Rio Earth Summit on behalf of the Global South — its peak of multilateral intellectual leadership. [S2]
- India's traditional foreign policy doctrine is "strategic autonomy" — simultaneous engagement with competing powers without binding alliances.
- PM Modi acknowledged the "new world order" formally in the Rajya Sabha in February 2026. [S2]
- India's foreign policy prioritises five pillars per MEA: Neighbourhood First, Act East, Think West (Gulf), Indo-Pacific, and Global South leadership. [S1]
- The India-UK FTA (concluded 2025–26) includes a Double Contribution Convention — relevant for services and mobility. [S1]
- Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) was co-founded by India in 1961 (Belgrade Summit); related to "strategic autonomy" doctrine.
- The Bandung Conference (1955) was the precursor to NAM; India was a key participant under PM Nehru.
- "Viksit Bharat 2047" is India's target of becoming a developed nation by the centenary of independence — the domestic anchor for foreign policy reorientation.
- India's MEA is staffed by approximately 900 IFS officers — a chronic constraint on diplomatic capacity relative to India's global ambitions.
- 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
- 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.
- 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.
- Wrong year for WTO: WTO was established in 1995 (not 1986 — that was the Uruguay Round launch). [S2]
- China's UN agency count: China heads 4 principal UN agencies — do not confuse with total UN bodies or Security Council P5 membership.
- 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.
- 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
- [S1] "Bharat's Global Footprint / India has become a voice of balance & responsibility" — PIB Press Release (2025) — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2195762 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] Mukul Sanwal, "As multilateralism erodes, India must reframe its foreign policy" — The Hindu, February 13, 2026 (article excerpt provided as primary source) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-13/th_international/articleGO0FHRO7J-13529978.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S3] "India-France Bilateral Brief" — MEA, June 2026 — https://www.mea.gov.in/Portal/ForeignRelation/India-France_June_2026.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "Opting Out: United States to Stop Engaging with More UN Entities" — CSIS Analysis — https://www.csis.org/analysis/opting-out-united-states-stop-engaging-more-un-entities (reference context)
- [S5] "United States withdrawal from 66 international organisations" — Focus 2030 — https://focus2030.org/en/united-states-withdrawal-from-66-international-organizations-a-new-step-in-a-disengagement-initiated-in-2025/ (reference context)