The US and India have become regional rivals

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By Brahma Chellaney

On his recent visit to India, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio predictably touted India as one of the US’ “most important strategic partners,” citing the two countries’ shared values, “people-to-people ties,” and strategic alignment on “all of the key issues that will define the new century.”

However, this familiar language of partnership rings increasingly hollow.

Much has been said about the impact US President Donald Trump’s public insults and weaponization of tariffs have had on the US’ relations with India. However, the bilateral relationship was under pressure well before Trump’s return to the White House last year.

In recent years, as India’s regional standing has been steadily eroded by China’s expanding strategic footprint, the US has pursued policies in India’s strategic backyard that have disregarded Indian interests — and sometimes run directly counter to them.

Bangladesh is a case in point. After the military-backed ouster of Bangladeshi prime minister Sheikh Hasina’s government in 2024, the US endorsed regime change. However, India knew this posed serious risks, which have since materialized: Bangladesh is now gripped by Islamist violence, jeopardizing stability on India’s eastern flank.

Then there is Myanmar. Since the military’s 2021 overthrow of a civilian government, the US has maintained a punitive approach toward the junta, including tough sanctions and “non-lethal” military aid for rebel groups, despite the security risks this has created along India’s sensitive northeastern frontier.

In March, a US citizen, along with six Ukrainian nationals, was arrested in India for allegedly entering the country’s northeast without permits and crossing into Myanmar to train and arm anti-junta fighters for drone warfare.

The US has also begun treating Nepal — a country bound to India through geography, culture, and economics — as a strategic priority in its own right, rather than as part of its India policy. In recent years, high-level US officials have visited Kathmandu more frequently, often without making the once-customary stop in New Delhi.

Trump has made matters much worse, not least by pursuing closer ties with Pakistan.

Never mind that Pakistan continues to provide safe haven, as well as military and intelligence aid, to terrorist groups, or that Pakistani army chief Asim Munir staged a constitutional coup in November last year.

Trump’s family members and business associates have struck lucrative deals in the country, and that is apparently good enough reason for the Trump administration to revive dangerous strategic dynamics on the subcontinent.

The US has even begun taking a more conciliatory approach toward China. Though the strategic competition between the two superpowers remains intense, Trump’s recent shift toward accommodation in some areas has created considerable uncertainty — not least for India, whose value to the US has long been rooted in its ability to act as a regional counterweight to China.

But while the US has long viewed India as a critical democratic bulwark against Chinese dominance in the Indo-Pacific, it also balks at the idea of Indian regional dominance.

As US Assistant Secretary of State Samir Paul Kapur explained in February, the US is seeking to prevent any single power from gaining too much influence in South Asia. Kapur’s remarks echoed the Trump administration’s National Security Strategy (NSS), according to which the US “cannot allow any nation to become so dominant” that it could “threaten [US] interests” and must maintain “global and regional balances of power.”

In the US’ view, a more pluralistic regional order is inherently more stable and favorable to US interests than one dominated by any country — even a close “strategic partner.” Unlike its 2017 predecessor, the NSS barely mentions India, noting only that the US wants to “improve commercial (and other) relations” with the country, in order to encourage it to “contribute to Indo-Pacific security.”

The US’ reservations are not just geopolitical. “We are not going to make the same mistakes with India that we made with China 20 years ago,” US Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau said on a recent visit to New Delhi, letting it “develop all these markets” and then start “beating” the US in “a lot of commercial things.”

The message is clear: the US now views India less as a strategic partner to be nurtured than as a regional and economic rival to be contained.

India must adapt to this new reality, which demands a fundamental shift in its strategic thinking. India can no longer count on its close relationship with the US to sustain its influence across South Asia and beyond.

Instead, it must cultivate regional influence through economic engagement, political sensitivity toward neighboring states, and the delivery of tangible public goods that appeal to smaller countries.

The US should rethink its approach as well. It might want a more diversified regional order, but this cannot come at the expense of its partnership with India, with which it continues to share important interests, from managing China’s rise to preserving stability across the Indo-Pacific. Policies that systematically weaken India’s position in its own neighborhood risk undermining these shared objectives.

The Trump administration seems to hope that the US and India can remain global partners, even as they become regional rivals.

However, this will be no easy feat, and the outcome will shape not only the future of the bilateral relationship, but also the strategic landscape in South Asia and beyond.
 
I did write in an essay in 2025 that the political changes in Bangladesh in 2024 and other countries in South Asia did indicate a new rivalry between India and the United States had started and Brahma Chellaney pretty much admits to this but now the BNP Government has put its whole stock in relations with Beijing adds a new challenge not only to India but even more so the United States which was also predicted in my essay-

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From a military point of view, especially around MPAs/Maritime choppers and jet engines India has limited room for manouvre here.

More importantly India has little in comparison to offer its neighbors but China is a different matter altogether and poses the greater challenge to American ingress into the region
 
Pakistan is Indias regional rival. It’s pretty established by the whole world. I don’t know this right wing Bollywood personality thinks Indians are on the same level as the US or China.

I think he may be implying there may come a time when there is military confrontation between US and India?
 
What is clear for those that at least live in Bangladesh is that India and the US are now at cross purposes after almost 15 years of cooperating with each other on regional matters
 
A weird article. This Chellaney figure has been around a very long time, he was a big proponent of the US India nuke deal. The Indians seem truly flummoxed over events in the last few years and unable to figure out why.

I think India is paying the price for being thoroughly exploitative towards the US and prematurely thinking of itself as some sort of tough guy. Jaishanker's Bollywood-esque dialogue and misbehavior at international conferences didn't help either.
 
The Indians wouldn't play ball and take on the Chinese so the Americans turned against India ...
Taking on China was the long term play. Even the Americans understood that about India. The Indian failure to tackle Pakistan , despite enjoying 30 years of courtship, praise and investment from America is what I think set the US against them.

The US feels India was scamming it the same way the Chinese promised America freedom and democracy reforms for a quarter century, in exchange for investment, and then finally grew enough to tell the US to get lost.
 
Taking on China was the long term play.

Well reality caught up fast and the Chinese have become a peer rival to the US in a very short time and while India has also become stronger the Americans are now trying to kill two birds with one stone
 
Unfortunately that stone was Bangladesh but the BNP with the PM's visit to China for now appears to have neutralized what the Americans were attempting to do ... It is interesting that PM Tarique Rahman's next foreign visit is to India ... The question is how the Americans will react to all this ...
 
Why closer ties between India, China could reshape global governance

bdnews24.com
Published : 29 Jun 2026

xi-modi-290626-1782746153.jpg

As the global balance of power shifts towards Asia, the relationship between India and China has become far more than a bilateral affair.

Together, the world's two most populous countries account for more than 40 percent of global economic growth, placing them in a unique position to influence the future of international governance, Xu Wei, consul-general of the People’s Republic of China in Kolkata, wrote in The Indian Express.

Supporters of closer engagement argue that cooperation between New Delhi and Beijing could help counter unilateralism and build a more balanced global order by drawing on the region's longstanding traditions of coexistence.

Xu argues that sustainable development and shared security should form the foundation of stronger ties between the two neighbours.

He says global progress depends on moving beyond zero-sum competition and embracing inclusive, sustainable development -- a vision he says aligns with India's long-term ambitions for 2047.

Development, he writes, should be recognised as a universal right rather than a privilege enjoyed by a few.

Xu also argues that lasting security cannot be achieved at the expense of neighbouring countries. Instead, it requires mutual trust, respect for sovereignty and the peaceful resolution of disputes.

He points to the principles of the historic Panchsheel agreement as a model for managing differences and strengthening bilateral confidence.

He says cultural diversity should be viewed as a bridge rather than a source of division. The idea, he notes, resonates with India's philosophy of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam -- the belief that the world is one family -- and encourages both countries to resist divisive narratives while expanding dialogue and institutional cooperation.

Ultimately, Xu argues, India and China have a shared responsibility to support a fairer system of global governance centred on the United Nations.

By respecting each other's core interests and pursuing common prosperity, he says, the two Asian powers could help turn the vision of an Asian century into reality.

 

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