DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 30th May 2026

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  • May 31, 2026
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(PRELIMS  Focus)


SkyCast System: India's First Advanced Aviation Weather Monitoring System at IGI Airport

Subject: Science & Tech – Aviation Weather Monitoring; Mission Mausam; SkyCast; Fog Forecasting; WiFEX; IMD; IITM.

Why in News?

  • Union Minister Dr. Jitendra Singh inaugurated India’s first SkyCast System at the Indira Gandhi International Airport (IGI), New Delhi.
  • India becomes the 19th country in the world to deploy this advanced integrated aviation weather monitoring system.
  • Developed under Mission Mausam (Ministry of Earth Sciences).

About SkyCast System

Definition

  • Advanced integrated aviation weather monitoring system.
  • Provides real-time weather intelligence to pilots, reducing flight delays, diversions, and cancellations caused by fog and turbulence.

Scientific Foundation

  • Based on the Winter Fog Experiment (WiFEX), jointly initiated by:
    • Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM)
    • India Meteorological Department (IMD)
    • Under Ministry of Earth Sciences at IGI Airport in 2015.

Key Technologies Integrated

Technology Function
Radar Wind Profiler Core of the system; measures wind speed, wind direction, turbulence, vertical velocity, boundary-layer dynamics (up to ~3 km)
Ground-based Fog Aerosol Spectrometer (GFAS) Monitors fog droplets, aerosols, and aerosol-fog interactions (critical for Delhi’s pollution-fog interaction)
CL61 Lidar-based Ceilometer Monitors vertical structure of fog and visibility conditions in real time
SODAR Acoustic radar for wind profiling (Sonic Detection and Ranging)
Microwave Radiometer Measures temperature and humidity profiles

Capabilities

  • Monitors atmosphere from surface up to nearly 10 km altitude.
  • Generates aviation meteorological parameters:
    • Wind shear
    • Turbulence
    • Fog formation indicators
    • Icing potential
  • Provides advance alerts within short time windows (around 3 hours) – enabling pilots to decide safest time for landing.

Significance

For Aviation

  • Reduces flight disruptions caused by fog and turbulence.
  • Supports pilots, airlines, airport operators, and air traffic management with accurate nowcasting and early warning services.
  • IGI Airport (Delhi) is one of the most fog-affected airports in the country – SkyCast will be particularly beneficial during winter months.

Beyond Aviation

  • Supports:
    • Advanced forecasting models
    • AI-enabled decision support systems
    • Urban weather forecasting
    • Pollution management
    • Transport advisories
    • Disaster preparedness initiatives

Key Terms for Prelims

  • SkyCast: Advanced integrated aviation weather monitoring system
  • Mission Mausam: Government initiative to strengthen weather and climate services (2024)
  • WiFEX: Winter Fog Experiment (2015 at IGI Airport) – scientific foundation of SkyCast
  • Radar Wind Profiler: Measures wind speed, direction, turbulence, vertical velocity
  • GFAS (Ground-based Fog Aerosol Spectrometer): Monitors fog droplets and aerosol-fog interactions
  • Lidar Ceilometer: Measures cloud base height and vertical fog structure
  • SODAR: Sonic Detection and Ranging – acoustic wind profiler
  • Nowcasting: Very short-range weather forecast (0-3 hours)
  • IITM: Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (Pune)
  • IMD: India Meteorological Department (established 1875)

Possible Prelims MCQs

Q1: The SkyCast System has been developed under which mission?

  • Mission Mausam

Q2: The scientific foundation of SkyCast comes from which experiment?

  • Winter Fog Experiment (WiFEX)

Q3: Which technology forms the core of the SkyCast System?

  • Radar Wind Profiler

Q4: What is the primary purpose of the Ground-based Fog Aerosol Spectrometer (GFAS) in SkyCast?

  • Monitor fog droplets, aerosols, and aerosol-fog interactions

Source/Reference:

https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2266638&reg=3&lang=1


Banni Grassland: NTPC Solar Project Threatens Asia's Fragile Ecosystem & Maldhari Livelihoods

Subject: Environment – Grassland Ecosystem; Renewable Energy – Solar vs Ecology; Ramsar Site; Pastoralist Livelihoods; Gujarat.

Why in News?

  • NTPC Renewable Energy Limited has proposed a solar project on the Banni grassland in Gujarat’s Kachchh district.
  • The project has pitted India’s renewable energy ambitions against one of Asia’s most fragile ecosystems and the Maldhari pastoralist communities who have depended on the land for centuries.
  • Chhari Dhand wetland (a Ramsar site) lies barely 500 metres from the proposed project site.

About Banni Grassland

Location

  • Along the northern border of Kachchh district, Gujarat.
  • Covers approximately 2,600 sq km.

Protected Areas within Banni

  • Kutch Desert Wildlife Sanctuary
  • Chhari Dhand Conservation Reserve (designated a Ramsar site in January 2026)

Indigenous Communities

  • Home to 22 ethnic groups, majority are pastoralists:
    • Maldharis (including Fakirani Jat), RabarisJatsMutwasMeghwals

Flora

  • Grass species: 37 varieties.
  • Dominant vegetation includes Prosopis juliflora (invasive weed), Cressa critica, Cyperus spp, Sporobolus, Dichanthium, Aristida.

Fauna

  • Mammals: Nilgai, Chinkara, Blackbuck, Wild boar, Golden Jackal, Indian Hare, Indian Wolf, Caracal, Asiatic Wildcat, Desert Fox.
  • Birds: Over 275 bird species; lakhs of migratory birds visit Chhari Dhand.

Livestock

  • Buffaloes, sheep, goats, horses, camels (camels from across Kutch come to Banni for grazing and breeding).

Key Terms for Prelims

  • Banni Grassland: Largest grassland in Asia (Kachchh, Gujarat)
  • Chhari Dhand: Ramsar site (January 2026) – wetland within Banni
  • Kutch Desert Wildlife Sanctuary: Protected area within Banni
  • Maldharis: Pastoralist communities (Fakirani Jat, Rabaris, Jats, Mutwas, Meghwals)
  • Kiro Hill: Extinct volcano; fossil-rich; compass for herders
  • Ramsar site: Wetland of International Importance (Chhari Dhand designated January 2026)
  • EIA Notification, 2006: Does not apply to solar PV projects (MoEFCC OM, August 2017)
  • Forest Rights Act (FRA), 2006: Recognises rights of forest-dwelling tribal communities
  • Prosopis juliflora: Invasive weed dominating Banni vegetation (also known as gando baval)
  • Sacred grove concept: Kiro Hill serves as refuge and compass – cultural ecology

Possible Prelims MCQs

Q1: Banni Grassland is located in which district of Gujarat?

  • Kachchh

Q2: Which Ramsar site is located within the Banni Grassland?

  • Chhari Dhand

Q3: The pastoralist communities of Banni are collectively known as:

  • Maldharis

Q4: As per the MoEFCC office memorandum (August 2017), which of the following is NOT required to undergo Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)?

  • Solar photovoltaic power projects

Q5: Kiro Hill, which serves as a compass for Maldhari herders, is an:

  • Extinct volcano

Q6: Which invasive weed species dominates the vegetation of Banni Grassland?

  • Prosopis juliflora

Source/Reference:

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/gujarat/gujarats-banni-grasslands-a-heap-of-broken-images-where-the-sun-beats/article71032681.ece#google_vignette


Logistics Port Performance Index (LPPI): India's First National Benchmarking Framework for Ports

Subject: Economy – Port Performance; Logistics; Maritime India Vision; PM Gati Shakti; Sagar Aankalan; JNPA.

Why in News?

  • Union Minister for Ports, Shipping and Waterways Sarbananda Sonowal launched India’s first Logistics Port Performance Index (LPPI) during the 37th Foundation Day celebrations of the Jawaharlal Nehru Port Authority (JNPA) in Mumbai.
  • The index is a national benchmarking framework aimed at improving operational efficiency at ports across the country.

About LPPI

Developed Under

  • Sagar Aankalan framework.

Purpose

  • Assess port performance across three cargo segments:
    • Dry bulk
    • Liquid bulk
    • Container cargo

Key Performance Parameters

  • Cargo handled
  • Vessel turnaround time
  • Berth idle time
  • Pre-berthing waiting time
  • Container dwell time
  • Ship berth day output

Weightage

  • Equal weightage to absolute performance and year-on-year improvement.

Alignment with National Plans

  • PM Gati Shakti National Master Plan
  • Maritime India Vision (MIV) 2030
  • Maritime Amrit Kaal Vision (MAKV) 2047

First LPPI Rankings

Category Top Performer
Dry bulk cargo Paradip Port Authority
Liquid bulk cargo Sikka Port and Terminals
Container cargo (ports handling >0.5 million TEUs) Mundra Port
Container cargo (major ports – second position) JNPA

Four Digital Initiatives Launched Alongside LPPI

Module Purpose
24×7 grievance redressal system (e-Navik platform) Allows seafarers to submit complaints through multiple channels (portal, toll-free helplines, email, messaging)
Ship registration module (e-Samudra) Simplifies vessel registration procedures
Medical practitioner module Streamlines registration and monitoring of doctors authorised to certify seafarers
Unified ship recycling credit note module Supports ship recycling under the Ship Recycling Credit scheme

Key Terms for Prelims

  • LPPI (Logistics Port Performance Index): India’s first national port benchmarking framework (launched May 2026)
  • Sagar Aankalan: Framework under which LPPI was developed
  • JNPA: Jawaharlal Nehru Port Authority (formerly JNPT) – India’s largest container port
  • TEU (Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit): Standard unit for measuring container traffic
  • Vessel Turnaround Time: Time taken from arrival to departure (key efficiency metric)
  • Berth Idle Time: Time a berth remains unoccupied (indicator of congestion)
  • Container Dwell Time: Time container stays at port before being picked up
  • PM Gati Shakti: National master plan for multimodal connectivity (launched 2021)
  • Maritime India Vision (MIV) 2030: Long-term vision for India’s maritime sector
  • Maritime Amrit Kaal Vision (MAKV) 2047: Vision for India’s maritime sector for 2047
  • Hong Kong Convention: International convention for safe and environmentally sound ship recycling (not yet in force)

Possible Prelims MCQs

Q1: India’s first Logistics Port Performance Index (LPPI) was launched under which framework?

  • Sagar Aankalan

Q2: What is the full form of TEU, a unit used to measure container traffic?

  • Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit

Q3: The 24×7 grievance redressal system for seafarers was launched under which platform?

  • e-Navik

Q4: Which of the following is NOT a parameter used in the LPPI for assessing port performance?

  • Air cargo volume

Source/Reference:

https://www.businessworld.in/article/india-gets-first-port-performance-index-as-centre-expands-digital-maritime-services-608835


White-Bellied Heron: Sentinel of Himalayan Rivers

Subject: Environment, Biodiversity Conservation, Species in News

Why in News?

  • Forest clearance granted to the Kalai-II Hydroelectric Project on the Lohit River in Arunachal Pradesh has raised concerns over its impact on the critically endangered White-Bellied Heron and its riverine habitat.

White-Bellied Heron (Ardea insignis)

  • One of the world’s rarest and largest herons; second-largest heron species globally. 
  • Family: Ardeidae
  • Found in eastern Himalayan river systems of India, Bhutan, Myanmar, and China
  • In India, mainly recorded in Arunachal Pradesh, including Namdapha Tiger Reserve and Kamlang Tiger Reserve
  • Prefers free-flowing, fast-flowing riverine habitats with minimal human disturbance; feeds largely on fish. 
  • IUCN Status: Critically Endangered. 
  • Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972: Schedule I species (highest legal protection). 
  • Estimated global population: fewer than 60 individuals

Threats

  • Hydropower projects and river regulation. 
  • Habitat fragmentation and loss. 
  • Hunting and human disturbances. 
  • Decline in fish-rich river rapids. 

Prelims Significance

UPSC frequently asks questions on 

  • IUCN categories, 
  • endemic and threatened species, 
  • protected areas, and 
  • Wildlife Protection Act schedules

White-Bellied Heron can be linked with previous UPSC themes on Great Indian Bustard, Jerdon’s Courser, Hangul, and species-specific conservation measures.

The White-Bellied Heron exemplifies the conservation challenge of balancing infrastructure development with biodiversity protection. 

Its survival depends on preserving undisturbed Himalayan river ecosystems and scientifically informed environmental assessments.

 

Source/Reference:

https://indianexpress.com/article/india/kalai-ii-hydroelectric-project-white-bellied-heron-arunachal-forest-clearance-10712252/


Hog Deer: Grassland Sentinel Species

Subject: Environment, Biodiversity, Protected Areas, Species in News

Why in News?

A rare albino Hog Deer was recently sighted in Kaziranga National Park, highlighting Assam’s rich biodiversity and renewed attention on the conservation status of this threatened grassland deer species. 

Hog Deer (Axis porcinus)

    • Medium-sized deer named for its hog-like running posture with head held low. 
    • Native range: India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, and Himalayan foothills. 
    • Habitat: Tall riverine grasslands, floodplains, swampy meadows, and forest edges. 
    • Usually solitary; males are territorial and possess antlers, while females lack antlers. 
  • Major populations occur in Assam, particularly in Kaziranga National Park and other Brahmaputra floodplain ecosystems. 
  • IUCN Red List: Endangered. 
  • Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972: Schedule I protection. 
  • Threats include habitat loss, grassland degradation, flooding pressures, poaching, and fragmentation. 

Albino Hog Deer

  • Albinism is a rare genetic condition caused by absence of melanin pigment. 
  • Characterized by white fur, pink eyes, and pale hooves. 
  • Reduced camouflage makes survival in the wild difficult due to higher vulnerability to predators. 

Prelims Significance

UPSC frequently asks about 

  • IUCN status, 
  • endemic fauna, 
  • protected areas, 
  • grassland ecosystems, and 
  • Wildlife Protection Act schedules

Hog Deer is important for linking species conservation with Brahmaputra floodplain ecology, similar to previous UPSC themes involving Hangul, Swamp Deer, Great Indian Bustard, and One-Horned Rhinoceros.

The Hog Deer symbolizes the ecological importance of India’s vanishing grasslands. The rare albino sighting underscores both the genetic diversity and conservation value of protected ecosystems like Kaziranga. 

 

Source/Reference:

https://indianexpress.com/article/lifestyle/pets-animals/assam-cm-albino-hog-deer-sighting-kaziranga-10709936/


BSF: Expanding India’s Border Shield

Subject: Polity, Internal Security, CAPFs, Border Management

Why in News?

The Union Government is considering expanding the operational mandate of the Border Security Force (BSF) while introducing a broader “territorial security” framework to strengthen integrated border management. 

Border Security Force (BSF)

  • Raised on 1 December 1965 after the 1965 India–Pakistan War. 
  • Functions under the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA)
  • Governed by the Border Security Force Act, 1968
  • World’s largest border-guarding force with nearly 2.7 lakh personnel
  • Guards India’s borders with Pakistan and Bangladesh
  • Roles include preventing infiltration, trans-border crimes, smuggling, illegal migration, and assisting during internal security duties. 
  • BSF jurisdiction was expanded in certain border states from 15 km to 50 km inside Indian territory for search, seizure, and arrest powers. 

Recent Developments

  • Government is examining expansion of BSF’s operational responsibilities into new sectors and domains. 
  • Proposed “territorial security” model integrates BSF, Army, local police, civil administration, and border communities. 
  • Under the Smart Border Project, technologies such as drones, radars, sensors, and surveillance systems are being deployed. 
  • Security strengthening in vulnerable areas like Sir Creek and Harami Nala is reportedly about 70% complete. 

Prelims Significance

UPSC frequently asks about 

  • Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs), 
  • border agencies, ministries, 
  • and strategic border locations

BSF can be linked with previous questions on ITBP, Assam Rifles, SSB, coastal security, India’s international borders, and internal security architecture.

The proposed expansion of BSF reflects India’s shift from conventional border guarding to technology-driven, multi-agency territorial security, highlighting the growing importance of integrated border management in national security. 

 

Source/Reference:

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/government-mulling-expansion-of-bsfs-operational-mandate-amit-shah/article71037517.ece#google_vignette


(MAINS Focus)


PM SVANidhi: From Survival to Self-Reliance

GS Paper II – Governance (Social Justice; Urban Development) | GS Paper III – Economy (Financial Inclusion)
Street Vendors; Informal Economy; Micro-Credit; Digital Payments; Social Security

 

Introduction

PM SVANidhi, launched in June 2020, is a first-of-its-kind micro-credit scheme providing collateral-free, government-backed loans to street vendors to promote Swarozgar, Svavlamban, and Swabhimaan. Since inception, it has disbursed over 1.12 crore loans worth ₹17,800 crore, benefiting 75 lakh+ vendors. The scheme has enhanced digital adoption, financial inclusion, and social security coverage, and has been extended till March 2030.

 

Main Body

Key Features of PM SVANidhi

Working Capital Loans:

  • Collateral-free loans of ₹15,000, ₹25,000, and ₹50,000 in three progressive tranches.
  • Interest subsidy and credit guarantee support.

UPI-linked RuPay Credit Cards:

  • Vendors successfully repaying the second tranche are eligible for UPI-linked RuPay Credit Cards with limits up to ₹30,000.

Digital Adoption Incentives:

  • Cashback incentives of up to ₹1,600 for retail/wholesale digital transactions.
  • Encourages digital adoption and financial literacy.

SVANidhi se Samriddhi (SSS):

  • Socio-economic profiling of beneficiaries and their families.
  • Linkage with eight selected Central welfare schemes to create a holistic social security net.

Capacity Building:

  • Training in financial literacy, digital literacy, and food safety & hygiene (in collaboration with FSSAI).

Scale and Reach

Overall Numbers (as of May 2026):

  • More than 75.5 lakh beneficiaries availed over 1.12 crore loans.
  • Loans amounting to more than ₹17,800 crore disbursed.
  • Over 55 lakh beneficiaries onboarded digitally.
  • Over 841 crore digital transactions worth nearly ₹8.96 lakh crore carried out.
  • Beneficiaries received nearly ₹800 crore through digital cashback incentives and interest subsidies.

Inclusive Outreach:

  • Nearly 46% of beneficiaries are women (strong gender inclusion).
  • Around 70% belong to marginalised communities (SC/ST/OBC).

Impact: Economic Empowerment

First-Time Access to Institutional Credit:

  • Nearly 95% of beneficiaries accessed formal institutional credit for the first time under PM SVANidhi.
  • Around 30% later accessed additional credit beyond SVANidhi loans (improved creditworthiness and financial inclusion).

Income Growth:

  • Beneficiary incomes recorded an average annual increase of nearly 20%.

Business Sustainability:

  • Strengthened business sustainability and improved earnings.
  • Vendors expanded from street vending to packing, local shop supplies, and dedicated stalls.

Impact: Household Welfare and Social Inclusion

Living Standards:

  • Greater housing stability.
  • Improved access to nutritious food, healthcare, and education.
  • Children re-enrolled in school (as seen in case studies).

Social Inclusion:

  • Nearly 46% women beneficiaries.
  • Around 70% from marginalised communities.
  • Vulnerable urban communities gained access to institutional support.

Case Study Highlights

Babita Sharma (Ghaziabad):

  • Small shop selling puja items. Used first loan to purchase additional stock; second loan to purchase a cart and improve vending setup. Increased daily sales and income.

Santhi R (Thiruvananthapuram):

  • Dry fish business. Previously depended on high-interest microfinance loans. Received three tranches (₹10,000 → ₹50,000) and a SVANidhi Credit Card (January 2026). Expanded into dry fish packing and local shop supplies.

Sewali Kalita (Guwahati):

  • Pan stall owner. Used first loan (₹10,000) to start selling organic vegetables. Received additional loans (₹20,000, ₹50,000). Opened a dedicated vegetable stall with her husband. Monthly profits now nearly ₹8,000. Children re-enrolled in school.

Yograj Mali (Gandhinagar):

  • B.Com. student running Cholaphali street food business. Severely affected by COVID-19. Loan under PM SVANidhi reignited business. Embraced digital payments, benefited from cashback rewards. Linked to PM Suraksha Bima, PM Jeevan Jyoti Bima, and Shramyogi Man Dhan Yojana.

Beyond Credit: Changing Urban Landscape

What PM SVANidhi Has Achieved:

  • Enabled vendors to return to work and expand small businesses.
  • Encouraged digital transactions (841 crore digital transactions worth ₹8.96 lakh crore).
  • Promoted safer, more organised business practices.
  • Widened access to institutional support for underserved communities.

Changing Vision of Urban Governance:

  • Small vendors are no longer seen as part of the margins.
  • Increasingly recognised as contributors to India’s economic growth story.
  • PM SVANidhi reflects a larger shift in development and inclusion.

Extension and Future Outlook

Extension until March 2030:

  • Scheme extended based on strong achievements and measurable impact.

Continuing Objectives:

  • Provide collateral-free working capital loans.
  • Encourage digital adoption through cashback incentives.
  • Link beneficiaries to central welfare schemes (SVANidhi se Samriddhi).
  • Provide capacity building in financial literacy, digital literacy, and food safety.

Challenges:

  • Scheme extended until March 2030, but coverage of 75 lakh beneficiaries is still a fraction of India’s total street vendor population (estimated 1-1.5 crore).
  • Digital adoption requires smartphone and network access (not universal).
  • Training in financial literacy, digital literacy, and food safety needs sustained effort.
  • Coordination with Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) varies across states.

The Core Reality:

  • Street vendors keep India’s urban economy moving every day but had limited access to formal credit.
  • PM SVANidhi has evolved from a simple loan programme to a nationwide movement for financial empowerment, digital inclusion, and social security.
  • The scheme reflects a changing vision of urban governance: small vendors as contributors, not margin-dwellers.

 

Conclusion

PM SVANidhi, launched in June 2020, has become a key support scheme for urban street vendors. Over 1.12 crore loans worth ₹17,800 crore have been disbursed to 75 lakh+ beneficiaries, with 95% accessing formal credit for the first time. The scheme offers collateral-free loans (₹15,000–₹50,000), digital cashback incentives, UPI-linked RuPay Credit Cards, welfare linkages, and capacity-building support. With strong gains in income, digital transactions, and inclusion of women and marginalized communities, the scheme has evolved from a relief measure to a pathway for self-reliance and has been extended till March 2030.

 

UPSC Mains Practice Question

  1. Assess the role of PM SVANidhi in promoting financial empowerment and social security among street vendors. What challenges limit its effectiveness? (250 words, 15 marks)

 

https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2266920&reg=3&lang=1


India-US Relations: From Estranged to Engaged to Restrained Democracies

GS Paper II – International Relations (Bilateral Relations)
India-US Strategic Partnership; Transactionalism; Trade; Energy Security; Diaspora

 

Introduction

American diplomat Dennis Kux described India and the US as “estranged democracies” during the Cold War. The 2008 India–US civil nuclear deal, led by George W. Bush and Manmohan Singh, transformed ties into “engaged democracies.” However, growing US emphasis on transactional interests, including trade and economic measures, has raised concerns in India about their impact on its economic growth, strategic autonomy, and global standing.

Main Body

The Three Phases of India-US Relations

Phase 1: Estranged Democracies (Cold War Era):

  • India’s close ties with the Soviet Union; US closeness to Pakistan.
  • Divergent views on non-alignment, decolonisation, and economic systems.
  • Limited trade, defence, and technology cooperation.

Phase 2: Engaged Democracies (2000-2016):

  • Historic India-US civil nuclear agreement (2008) – the landmark shift.
  • President Bush and PM Manmohan Singh as architects.
  • President Obama called it the “defining partnership of the 21st century.”
  • Defence Framework Agreement (2005) opened Indian defence market to US business.
  • India reduced dependence on Russian defence equipment and Iranian/Venezuelan oil.

Phase 3: Restrained Democracies/Transactional (Trump era onwards):

  • Trump downgraded strategic partnership to purely transactional (“America First”).
  • Unilateral actions on trade, support to Israel destabilising the Gulf, pushing oil and gas prices up, and new relationship with Pakistan.
  • Weaponisation of trade, finance, and energy flows by the US.

The Transactional Foundation: Quid Pro Quos

The Nuclear Deal Negotiations:

  • India’s willingness to sign “A New Framework for the US-India Defence Relationship” (June 2005) opened the door to nuclear deal negotiations.
  • The framework established a Defence Policy Group to expand two-way defence trade.
  • Objective: open Indian defence market to US business, reduce India’s dependence on Russia.
  • India was also required to reduce dependence on oil imports from Iran and Venezuela.

Bush’s Long-Term View:

  • Bush viewed India’s rise as a global public good and in itself serving US strategic interests.
  • Restricted the element of transactionalism in the partnership.
  • Required a presidential veto to get the agreement signed.

Trump’s Upended Perspective:

  • Made the relationship mainly transactional.
  • US establishment no longer willing to give India a free pass.

How US Actions Have Hurt Indian Interests

Trade Front:

  • Unilateral actions (tariffs, trade barriers) affecting Indian exports.
  • India slipped from the world’s third-largest economy back to sixth rank.

Energy and Gulf Stability:

  • US support to Israel in destabilising the Gulf.
  • Pushed oil and gas prices up; reduced Indian access to these.
  • Adverse geopolitical and geo-economic consequences for India.

Relations with Pakistan:

  • New relationship with Pakistan under Trump administration.
  • Directly impacts India’s national security.

The Core Reality:

  • The weaponisation of trade, finance, and energy flows by the US has deeply hurt Indian economic interests.
  • Impacting India’s economic rise, national security, and global standing.

The Diaspora: From Bridge to Limited Role

The Facilitating Role (1990s-2000s):

  • Indian American community played a positive role in strengthening bilateral partnership.

The Changed Reality:

  • Two aspects limit the diaspora’s positive role:

First: Assimilation into MAGA:

  • Indian American community, especially second- and third-generation immigrants, have become an integral part of “Making America Great Again” (MAGA).
  • Their role in “making India great” is increasingly limited.
  • Elite emigration has come to define exit from India to the West.
  • As US Congressman Jim Himes put it candidly, Indian Americans are “a secret weapon for (American) economic growth.”

Second: People-to-People Connect Means Little:

  • Larger geopolitical and national interests define Trump’s “America First” policy.
  • NRIs have become “non-returning Indians.”
  • Communalisation of Indian diaspora and growing Western concerns about direction of Indian domestic politics (minority rights) limit diaspora’s “soft power.”

India’s Response: Multi-Alignment and Atmanirbharta

EAM S. Jaishankar’s Framework:

  • India’s approach to new realities of the world is “multi-alignment.”
  • Full meaning and implications of multi-alignment have not sunk into minds of analysts and media.

The Realist Recognition:

  • Actions taken by both the US and China are hurting Indian economic interests.
  • Neither power is going to help build India as a third pole of the global economy.

Nehru’s Foundational Principle (Constituent Assembly, December 1949):

  • India’s foreign policy would have to be defined by her economic policy and interests.

Modi Government’s Atmanirbharta:

  • Defined by the same approach.
  • India’s external relationships must once again give precedence to our national economic interests.
  • Not be defined only by concerns about defence and security.

 

Conclusion

India–US relations have evolved from “estranged democracies” (Cold War) to “engaged democracies” (2000–2016) and now “restrained democracies”, marked by growing transactionalism. While the 2008 civil nuclear deal deepened ties, recent US trade, finance, and energy policies have heightened economic frictions. In response, India is prioritising multi-alignment and Atmanirbharta, placing national economic interests at the centre of its foreign and security policy.

 

UPSC Mains Practice Question

  1. Trace the evolution of India–US relations from strategic engagement to transactionalism. How should India respond to the emerging challenges in the partnership? (250 words, 15 marks)

 

https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/india-us-relations-transactional-diplomacy-analysis-10714578/

 

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