GDP Upgrade: FY26 at 7.6% | SC: Judges Won't Be Influenced |Kerala Paradox, Global Vision | International Law Still Resilient | Bad Publicity | Up In The Chair | NCERT Order Sparks Row | Realism: When Power Is Truth | India-Canada Reset in Trump Era | PM Israel Visit Signals Shift
GDP UPGRADE: FY26 AT 7.6%KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Government released Second Advance Estimates of GDP for FY 2025–26.
- Real GDP growth projected at 7.6% (higher than earlier 7.4%).
- Base year revised to 2022–23 (earlier 2011–12). Nominal GDP for 2023–26 revised downward, impacting fiscal ratios.
- FY26 size of economy estimated at ₹345.47 lakh crore (lower than earlier estimate).
Important Facts
- Growth Revisions
- 2023–24: Revised to 7.2% (earlier 9.2%).
- 2024–25: Revised to 7.1% (earlier 6.5%).
- FY26: 7.6% (Second Advance Estimate).
- Sectoral Growth (FY26)
- Primary Sector: 2.8% (Agriculture slowdown to 2.5%)
- Secondary Sector: 9.5%
- Tertiary Sector: 8.9%
- Fiscal Implications
- Lower nominal GDP leads to higher:
- Fiscal Deficit-to-GDP ratio
- Debt-to-GDP ratio
- Estimated increase in deficit ratio: approximately 15–20 basis points.
Static Concepts for Prelims
- GDP at Market Price = GVA + Net Indirect Taxes Real GDP:
- Measured at constant prices (inflation adjusted)
- Nominal GDP: Measured at current price
- Advance Estimates released by NSO:
- First Advance Estimate: January
- Second Advance Estimate: February
- Base Year Revision Purpose:
- Reflect structural changes in the economy
- Update price weights
- Improve data coverage (GST, MCA-21 database)
Constitutional & Policy Linkages
- FRBM Act, 2003:
- Fiscal deficit targets Debt sustainability
- Fiscal deficit expressed as percentage of GDP.
- Debt sustainability depends on:
- Growth rate
- Interest rate
- Primary deficit
Mains Angle
- Importance of Base Year Revision
- Improves statistical accuracy and credibility.
- Captures formalisation and digital economy trends.
- Aligns with international standards such as UN System of National Accounts (SNA 2008).
- Concerns
- Downward revision increases fiscal ratios.
- May affect fiscal consolidation roadmap.
- Primary sector slowdown may impact rural income and demand.
Way Forward
- Strengthen agricultural productivity and climate resilience.
- Improve tax buoyancy to maintain fiscal discipline.
- Continue capital expenditure-led growth.
- Ensure transparency in statistical methodology.
- Maintain balance between growth and fiscal consolidation.
SC: JUDGES WILL NOT BE INFLUENCED
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- The Supreme Court addressed concerns regarding the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in West Bengal.
- Judicial officers were deployed for verification of claims/objections of excluded voters.
- Allegations were raised that the Election Commission of India (ECI) training module might influence judicial officers.
- The Court clarified:
- ECI can impart procedural training.
- Documents recognized in Supreme Court orders must be accepted.
- ECI cannot override judicial directions.
- Court directed continuous publication of supplementary voter lists until nomination for Assembly elections.
Key Constitutional & Legal Provisions
- Article 324 – Superintendence, direction and control of elections vested in ECI.
- Article 326 – Elections based on adult suffrage.
- Representation of the People Act, 1950 –Preparation and revision of electoral rolls.
- Representation of the People Act, 1951 – Conduct of elections.
- Judicial Review – Basic Structure (Kesavananda Bharati, 1973).
- Article 329(b) – Bar on judicial interference in electoral matters once election process begins (except through election petitions).
Governance & Institutional Issues
- Balance between ECI’s administrative authority and Judiciary’s constitutional supremacy.
- Deployment of judicial officers in non-judicial functions.
- Transparency in electoral roll verification.
- Ensuring non-discretionary acceptance of documents as per court directions.
- Maintaining free and fair elections (Basic Structure doctrine).
Static Concepts Linked
- Independence of constitutional bodies. Separation of powers.
- Electoral integrity and procedural fairness.
- Natural justice in administrative processes.
- Role of supplementary electoral rolls.
Analytical Points
- Positives
- Reinforces judicial supremacy in constitutional interpretation.
- Protects voters against arbitrary exclusion.
- Enhances transparency through continuous publication of supplementary lists.
- Strengthens procedural safeguards in electoral roll revision.
- Concerns
- Judicial officers performing executive verification tasks.
- Potential federal friction between State government and ECI.
- Risk of politicisation of electoral roll verification.
- Administrative burden during election year.
Way Forward
- Clear Standard Operating Procedures aligning ECI guidelines with Supreme Court orders.
- Public disclosure of admissible documents.
- Independent grievance redressal mechanism.
- Strengthening digital verification systems with audit trails.
- Safeguarding judicial capacity from diversion.
KERALA PARADOX, GLOBAL VISION
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Kerala’s economy has historically depended heavily on international remittances, particularly from Gulf countries (Kerala Migration Survey – Centre for Development Studies).
- Remittances are estimated at around ₹1–1.5 lakh crore annually and form nearly 20–25% of State income (Kerala Economic Review).
- Recent policy discussions emphasize shifting towards a knowledge-based, innovation-driven economy focusing on biotechnology, marine economy, space-tech, fintech, and high-value agriculture.
- Commissioning of the Vizhinjam International Seaport and expansion of ISRO-linked institutions like Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre strengthen prospects for logistics and space- sector growth.
- Kerala has the highest proportion of elderly population among Indian States (Census projections; MoHFW data), indicating advanced demographic transition.
- The State lies in the ecologically fragile Western Ghats region (UNESCO World Heritage Site), necessitating sustainable development strategies.
Key Points
- Literacy Rate: 96%+ (Census 2011; NFHS-5 indicators).
- High Human Development Index (NITI Aayog SDG India Index).
- Population Density: ~860+ persons per sq km (Census 2011).
- Biodiversity: Western Ghats hosts ~5,600+ species of flowering plants (State Biodiversity Board data).
- Coastline: ~590 km, offering Blue Economy potential. Space Sector: ISRO presence; private participation enabled under IN-SPACe reforms (2020) and Indian Space Policy 2023.
- Health Infrastructure: Strong public health model; National Programme for Health Care of the Elderly applicable due to ageing trend.
- Agriculture: GI-tagged Pokkali rice; potential for protected cultivation under Mission for Integrated Development of Horticulture (MIDH).
- Energy: Scope under National Green Hydrogen Mission (2023) and rooftop solar (MNRE).
Static Linkages
- Demographic transition and dependency ratio (NCERT Population Chapter; Economic Survey).
- Federal structure: State role in industrial development (Seventh Schedule – State & Concurrent Lists).
- Sagarmala Programme for port-led development.
- Biological Diversity Act, 2002.
- FRBM Act, 2003 (fiscal constraints on States). National Policy on Electronics, 2019.
- National Green Hydrogen Mission, 2023.
- IN-SPACe and space sector liberalization reforms.
Critical Analysis
- Advantages
- Strong human capital base.
- Large global diaspora network for FDI and knowledge transfer.
- Sustainable growth aligned with SDGs.
- Diversification reduces vulnerability to Gulf economic shocks.
- Challenges
- Fiscal stress due to high welfare expenditure and FRBM limits.
- Land scarcity and high population density.
- Climate risks: floods and landslides (Western Ghats sensitivity; Gadgil and Kasturirangan reports).
- Limited heavy industrial base.
- Regulatory and labour-related bottlenecks.
Way Forward
- Develop innovation clusters in biotech, marine sciences, med-tech, and space-tech.
- Promote regulatory sandboxes for fintech and health- tech.
- Strengthen public-private partnerships.
- Invest in climate-resilient infrastructure and disaster management technology exports.
- Leverage diaspora bonds and green finance instruments.
- Integrate traditional medicine with evidence-based research under AYUSH.
- Promote vertical farming and high-value spice processing.
- Develop Vizhinjam into a value-addition logistics and transshipment hub.
INTERNATIONAL LAW STILL RESILIENT
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- Rising tensions between the United States and Iran involving threats of use of force.
- Continuing global conflicts such as:
- Russian invasion of Ukraine
- Conflict in Gaza Strip
- Increasing unilateral military actions by major powers.
- Debate among scholars on whether international law, especially the prohibition on use of force under the UN Charter, is weakening.
- At the same time, new treaties like the High Seas Treaty and ongoing Pandemic Agreement negotiations show that international law- making continues.
Core Concept: Prohibition on Use of Force
- Article 2(4) of the UN Charter
- Prohibits the threat or use of force.
- Protects territorial integrity and political independence of states.
Exceptions:
- Self-defence – Article
- Action authorised by the UN Security Council under Chapter VII.
This is a cornerstone of the post-1945 international legal order.
Has International Law Collapsed?
- Historical Violations
- Soviet intervention in Afghanistan (1979)
- US invasion of Iraq (2003)
- NATO intervention in Libya (2011)
- Russian invasion of Ukraine
- Despite repeated violations, Article 2(4) continues to exist as a binding legal norm
Important analytical point
- Violation of law does not mean extinction of law.
- Law continues to serve as a standard to evaluate state conduct.
International Law Beyond Security Issues
International law is not limited to the UN Charter. It regulates:
- International trade (WTO system)
- Climate change (Paris Agreement)
- Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)
- Human rights conventions (ICCPR, ICESCR)
- Marine biodiversity (High Seas Treaty) Judicialisation of International Relations
- International Court of Justice
- International Criminal Court
Numerous global and regional courts continue to resolve disputes peacefully.
Static Linkages for exam
- Principle of sovereign equality of states.
- Collective security system under Chapter VII of the UN Charter.
- Customary international law and opinio juris.
- Pacta sunt servanda (agreements must be kept).
- Responsibility to Protect (R2P).
- Article 51(c) of the Indian Constitution – Promotion of respect for international law.
- Article 253 – Parliament’s power to implement international treaties.
Critical Analysis
- Challenges
- Rise of unilateralism and populist nationalism.
- UNSC veto politics leading to paralysis.
- Weak enforcement mechanisms in international law.
- Selective compliance by powerful states.
Why the “Death of International Law” Argument is Misleading
- States still justify actions in legal terms.
- Legal norms shape diplomatic discourse.
- International trade, aviation, maritime navigation depend on legal predictability.
- Smaller states rely on international law for protection.
Way Forward
- Reform of the UN Security Council.
- Strengthening multilateral institutions.
- Clear norms for cyber warfare and emerging technologies.
- Greater representation of Global South countries in global governance.
- India to promote a rule-based international order while maintaining strategic autonomy.
BAD PUBLICITY
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
- India AI Impact Summit 2026 was held in New Delhi to promote Artificial Intelligence ecosystem and innovation.
- A protest was staged by activists of the Indian Youth Congress against the India–U.S. interim trade deal.
- The Delhi Police registered multiple serious charges including rioting, unlawful assembly, criminal conspiracy, and promoting enmity.
- Inter-state friction reportedly occurred between Delhi and Himachal Pradesh police.
- The episode triggered debate over criminalisation of peaceful dissent and proportionality of police action.
Key Points
- Article 19(1)(a) – Freedom of speech and expression.
- Article 19(1)(b) – Right to assemble peacefully without arms.
- Article 19(2) & 19(3) – Reasonable restrictions (sovereignty, public order, security of state, etc.).
- Public Order – State List (List II, Seventh Schedule).
- Police is a State subject.
- Doctrine of Proportionality – Applied by Supreme Court to test validity of restrictions on Fundamental Rights.
- Democracy and Rule of Law – Part of Basic Structure doctrine.
Static Linkages
- Basic Structure doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati case).
- Right to Protest recognised but subject to regulation (Supreme Court jurisprudence).
- Federalism – Division of legislative & executive powers (Articles 245–246).
- Criminal law & maintenance of public order – State domain.
- Separation of powers & judicial review.
Critical Issues
- Criminalisation of Dissent
- Peaceful dissent is integral to democracy.
- Excessive charges may create chilling effect on free speech.
- Proportionality in Police Action
- Restrictions must be reasonable and proportionate.
- Preventive policing vs suppression of democratic rights.
- Federal Concerns
- Inter-state police coordination challenges.
- Political overtones affecting administrative functioning.
- Technology & Governance
- Politicisation of tech summits undermines credibility.
- Need for transparent innovation ecosystem.
Way Forward
- Clear SOPs for handling peaceful protests.
- Strict adherence to doctrine of proportionality.
- Judicial scrutiny of FIRs involving dissent.
- Strengthening federal coordination mechanisms.
- Promote constitutional literacy among enforcement agencies.
- Depoliticise scientific and technological platforms.
UP IN THE CHAIR
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Within one month (Jan–Feb 2026), multiple incidents involving non-scheduled/charter aircraft occurred:
- Small aircraft crashes in Maharashtra and Jharkhand.
- Helicopter crash-landing in Andaman & Nicobar Islands.
- As per the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) (updated till Sept 30, 2025):
- 133 Non-Scheduled Operators (NSOs) in India.
- DGCA convened a meeting (Feb 24, 2026) with NSOs to address safety concerns.
Key Exam-Relevant Points
- Regulatory Framework
- Aircraft Act, 1934 – Parent legislation.
- Aircraft Rules, 1937 – Operational and licensing norms.
- DGCA functions under the Ministry of Civil Aviation.
- Accident investigation conducted by the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB).
- India is a signatory to the Chicago Convention, 1944 (ICAO standards).
- DGCA’s Recent Measures
- Safety ranking of charter operators.
- Mandatory public disclosure:
- Aircraft age
- Maintenance history
- Pilot experience
- Strict audit of:
- Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) Fuel records
- ADS-B surveillance data
- Flight Duty Time Limitations (FDTL)
- Management accountability for systemic failures.
- Focus on weather-awareness training.
- Key Issues in Charter Aviation
- Adverse weather linked to past accidents:
- Bell 430 crash (2009).
- Beechcraft C-90 King Air accident (2001).
- Gaps in:
- Simulator training centres
- Type-rated pilot experience
- Quality instructors
- Operations to uncontrolled airfields.
- DGCA manpower shortages.
Static Concepts
- Difference between:
- Scheduled Operators (Airlines)
- Non-Scheduled Operators (Charter/air taxis)
- Flight Duty Time Limitations (crew fatigue norms).
- Safety Management System (SMS).
- ICAO Universal Safety Oversight Audit Programme.
- Regulatory independence and delegated legislation.
Mains Pointers
- Issues
- Regulatory capacity constraints.
- Commercial pressure (VIP schedules vs safety).
- Weak audit mechanisms.
- Transparency deficit.
- Significance
- Aviation as critical infrastructure.
- Rapid expansion under regional connectivity initiatives.
- Need for data-driven safety governance.
Way Forward
- Strengthen DGCA staffing.
- Independent safety audits.
- Expand simulator infrastructure.
- Annual public safety rating publication.
- Strict and consistent enforcement
NCERT ORDER SPARKS ROW
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- The Class 8 Social Science (Part II) textbook released in 2026 by the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) was withdrawn within a day of publication.
- The withdrawal followed reports that a chapter included references to “corruption in the judiciary.”
- The Supreme Court of India took suo motu cognisance and imposed a blanket ban on its publication, reprinting, and digital dissemination.
- The revision exercise is part of reforms under: National Education Policy (NEP 2020)
- National Curriculum Framework for School Education (NCFSE 2023)
Why This is Important for Exam
- Tests concepts of Separation of Powers
- Raises questions of Judicial Activism vs Overreach
- Linked to Education Policy Reforms
- Connects to Basic Structure Doctrine
- Involves themes of Secularism, Academic Autonomy & Constitutional Morality
Key Facts
- Education moved to the Concurrent List by the 42nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1976.
- NCERT is an autonomous body registered under the Societies Registration Act, 1860 (not a constitutional/statutory body).
- Supreme Court can take suo motu cognisance under Articles 32 and 142.
- Secularism is part of the Basic Structure (S.R. Bommai case, 1994).
- Article 21A – Right to Education.
- Article 19(1)(a) – Freedom of speech and expression.
- Article 51A(h) – Duty to develop scientific temper.
Static Linkages
- Judicial Review as part of Basic Structure (Kesavananda Bharati, 1973).
- Institutional integrity of constitutional bodies. Federal structure in social sector governance.
- Role of NHRC under Protection of HumanRights Act, 1993.
- Curriculum development under NCF (2005 vs 2023 framework).
Mains Analysis
- Separation of Powers
- Judiciary intervening in textbook publication raises debate:
- Protection of institutional credibility.
- Scope of judicial review in academic matters.
- Balance between:
- Academic autonomy
- Constitutional supremacy Judicial restraint
- Education Governance & Federalism
- Education under Concurrent List → Shared responsibility.
- Centralised curriculum reforms under NEP 2020.
- Implications for State boards aligned with NCERT.
- Constitutional Morality & Secularism
- Textbooks must align with:
- Secular values
- Scientific temper Pluralism
- Social harmony
- Avoid selective historiography or ideological bias.
- Ethical Dimensions (GS4)
- Objectivity in public institutions.
- Transparency in decision-making.
- Institutional accountability.
- Trust in constitutional bodies.
Critical Evaluation
- Arguments Supporting Withdrawal
- Safeguards dignity of judiciary.
- Prevents erosion of public trust.
- Ensures constitutional sensitivity in school education.
- Immediate corrective response by NCERT.
- Concerns Raised
- Potential chilling effect on academic freedom.
- Questions about transparency in revision process.
- Risk of judicial overreach.
- Politicisation of curriculum.
Way Forward
- Institutionalise independent textbook review panels.
- Pre-publication constitutional vetting for sensitive content.
- Transparent public disclosure of revision rationale.
- Strengthen peer-review mechanisms.
- Promote critical inquiry rather than deletion- based correction.
- Balance institutional respect with democratic debate.
REALISM: WHEN POWER IS TRUTH
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- A recent opinion debate in Indian public discourse critiques the growing invocation of “realism” in both foreign and domestic policy.
- The argument draws from The Captive Mind by Czesław Miłosz, which describes how intellectuals rationalise submission to concentrated power.
- In India, “realism” is increasingly used to justify:
- Strategic decisions in foreign policy (relations with USA, China, Russia, West Asia).
- Acceptance of executive centralisation and reduced tolerance for dissent.
- The debate is relevant amid:
- Rising geopolitical competition (US–China rivalry, Russia–Ukraine conflict).
- Expanding executive influence in governance.
- Discussions on civil liberties, dissent, and constitutional morality.
Key Points
- Realism in International Relations
- Emphasises national interest, balance of power, strategic autonomy.
- Prioritises prudence over moral idealism.
- Sees international system as anarchic (no central authority).
- Indian Foreign Policy Context
- Strategic Autonomy (evolved from Non- Alignment).
- Multi-alignment: Engagement with US, Russia, China, West Asia.
- Energy security decisions during Russia–Ukraine war.
- West Asia diplomacy balancing Israel and Gulf nations.
- Domestic Governance Context
- Increasing executive dominance in policymaking.
- Debate over:
- Civil liberties.
- Freedom of speech (Article 19).
- Federal balance.
- Concerns about centralisation vs cooperative federalism.
- Core Ethical Question
- Does realism mean pragmatic governance?
- Or does it become justification for submission to power?
Static Linkages
- Preamble – Justice, Liberty, Equality.
- Article 19 – Freedom of speech and expression.
- Basic Structure Doctrine – Limits on parliamentary power.
- Separation of Powers – Executive accountability.
- Rule of Law – Equality before law (Article 14).
- Constitutional Morality – Ambedkar’s emphasis.
- Ethics of Responsibility vs Ethics of Conviction – Max Weber.
- Balance of Power Theory – International relations.
- Strategic Autonomy – Post-Cold War Indian diplomacy.
Critical Analysis
- Merits of Realism
- Ensures protection of national interest.
- Avoids moral grandstanding in geopolitics.
- Recognises power asymmetry in global order.
- Enhances strategic flexibility (multi-alignment).
- Limitations
- May rationalise executive overreach.
- Risks erosion of democratic dissent.
- Encourages selective silence toward powerful actors.
- Can undermine constitutional morality.
- Weakens anti-authoritarian vigilance.
- Stakeholder Perspective
- Government: Needs pragmatic policy space.
- Opposition: Seeks institutional accountability.
- Civil Society: Protects rights and liberties.
- Judiciary: Guardian of constitutional balance.
- International Actors: Evaluate India’s normative positioning.
Way Forward
- Balance realism with constitutional morality.
- Strengthen institutional checks and balances.
- Preserve space for democratic dissent.
- Develop principled strategic autonomy (values + interests).
- Encourage evidence-based policymaking.
- Promote ethical leadership in public administration.
INDIA-CANADA RESET IN TRUMP ERA
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Visit of Canadian PM Mark Carney to India marks a reset in bilateral ties after a diplomatic freeze since September 2023.
- 2023 crisis followed allegations by then PM Justin Trudeau regarding India’s alleged involvement in the killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar.
- Diplomatic downgrade lasted nearly two years; high commissioners reinstated in 2025.
- Bilateral engagement revived through:
- G7 Summit (Kananaskis, 2025)
- G20 Summit (Johannesburg, 2025)
- Proposed $2.8 billion uranium supply agreement (10 years).
- Reboot of Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) negotiations.
Key Facts
- Bilateral goods trade: ~$13.3 billion (2024).
- CEPA target: $60 billion trade by 2030.
- Canada is:
- A major global uranium producer.
- A member of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG).
- India received NSG waiver in 2008, enabling civil nuclear trade despite not being an NPT signatory.
- Approx. 4.3 lakh Indian students in Canada (one of the largest foreign student groups).
- India’s Net Zero target: 2070 (COP26 commitment).
Static Linkages
- 2008 NSG waiver and civil nuclear cooperation.
- Three-stage nuclear power programme of India.
- Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWRs). Energy security as part of national security.
- Role of diaspora in foreign policy.
- Trade agreements (FTA/CEPA) and tariff liberalisation.
- Indo-Pacific strategic framework.
Importance for Mains
- Strategic Significance
- Strengthening middle-power cooperation in a fragmented global order.
- Indo-Pacific alignment and diversification of partnerships.
- Energy Security
- Uranium supply critical for nuclear expansion.
- Nuclear energy contributes to:
- Clean energy transition.
- Base-load power stability.
- Climate commitments.
- Economic Dimension
- Market diversification for both countries.
- Boost to services, mobility, agri-trade, and investments.
- Diaspora Diplomacy
- Indian diaspora as stabilising factor.
- Student mobility and remittances.
- Challenges
- Residual trust deficit post-2023 allegations.
- Political sensitivities related to separatist movements.
- Trade negotiation hurdles (dairy, agriculture, mobility).
- Domestic political pressures in both countries.
Way Forward
- Institutionalised 2+2 dialogue.
- Fast-tracked CEPA with phased tariff reduction.
- Enhanced counter-terror intelligence cooperation.
- Clean energy collaboration (SMRs, nuclear tech).
- Structured diaspora engagement mechanisms.
PM ISRAEL VISIT SIGNALS SHIFTKEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Prime Minister’s recent diplomatic engagement with Israel signals a calibrated shift in India’s West Asia policy.
- India endorsed the U.S.-backed Gaza peace and reconstruction framework earlier proposed under Donald Trump.
- Address at the Knesset emphasized counter- terror cooperation, technology partnership, and strategic convergence.
- India reiterated support for the Palestinian cause while deepening bilateral ties with Israel.
- The changing global stance on Gaza reflected in discussions at the United Nations Security Council.
Key Facts
- Diplomatic Relations: Full diplomatic ties established in 1992.
- Defence Cooperation:
- Israel among India’s top defence suppliers (SIPRI).
- Key systems: Barak missiles, UAVs, surveillance radars.
- Agriculture Cooperation:
- Indo-Israel Agricultural Project (Centres of Excellence in multiple states).
- Focus on drip irrigation and water efficiency.
- Trade:
- Bilateral trade (excluding defence) ~USD 10 billion (Ministry of Commerce).
- Energy Context:
- West Asia supplies over 50% of India’s crude oil imports (MoPNG data).
- Diaspora:
- ~8–9 million Indians reside in Gulf countries (MEA).
- India’s Palestine Position:
- Supports two-State solution based on peaceful coexistence.
Static Linkages
- Article 51 (DPSP) – Promotion of international peace and security.
- Principles of:
- Strategic Autonomy
- Non-Alignment Movement (NAM) legacy
- Panchsheel
- Executive conducts foreign policy (Parliamentary oversight in financial/legislative implications).
- Energy Security as component of National Security (Economic Survey).
- West Asia as part of India’s “Extended Neighbourhood”.
Critical Analysis
- Strategic Rationale
- Israel as reliable defence and technology partner.
- Intelligence cooperation strengthens counter-terror capabilities.
- Agriculture and water innovations support India’s climate resilience goals.
- Pragmatic approach aligns with multi-alignment strategy.
- Concerns
- Risk of alienating Arab partners critical for:
- Energy imports
- Remittances
- Domestic political polarization affecting foreign policy discourse.
- Balancing moral support for Palestine with realpolitik.
- Geopolitical Dimension
- Arab–Israel normalization (post-Abraham Accords) reduces earlier diplomatic constraints.
- Shift from ideological solidarity to interest-driven diplomacy.
- Growing multipolarity encourages flexible engagement.
Way Forward
- Maintain calibrated balance: Support two-State solution while expanding Israel ties.
- Institutionalize trilateral cooperation (India–Israel– UAE models).
- Diversify energy sources to reduce vulnerability.
- Strengthen parliamentary debates on foreign policy transparency.
- Enhance developmental role in Gaza reconstruction consistent with international law.