Extended Neighbourhood — Basic Structure
Basic Structure
India's Extended Neighbourhood policy expands diplomatic engagement beyond immediate neighbors to include Central Asia, West Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Africa. The policy emerged from recognition that India's security and prosperity require engagement with regions that significantly impact its strategic interests despite not sharing direct borders.
Key components include energy security partnerships with Gulf countries and Central Asian republics, connectivity projects like Chabahar Port and INSTC corridor, cultural diplomacy leveraging civilizational ties, and security cooperation addressing terrorism and maritime threats.
The policy faces challenges from geographical constraints (Pakistan's transit denial), Chinese BRI competition, regional instability, and resource limitations. Major achievements include strengthened Gulf partnerships, operational Chabahar Port, enhanced Central Asian engagement through SCO membership, and successful cultural diplomacy initiatives.
The policy represents India's transition from reactive to proactive diplomacy, emphasizing multi-alignment and strategic autonomy while building partnerships based on mutual interests rather than traditional alliance structures.
Important Differences
vs Neighbourhood First Policy
| Aspect | This Topic | Neighbourhood First Policy |
|---|---|---|
| Geographical Scope | Central Asia, West Asia, Southeast Asia, East Africa | Immediate neighbors: Pakistan, China, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Myanmar |
| Strategic Focus | Energy security, connectivity, maritime routes, civilizational ties | Border management, trade facilitation, regional stability, bilateral issues |
| Key Projects | Chabahar Port, INSTC, IMEC corridor, Central Asian connectivity | Cross-border infrastructure, power projects, river water sharing, trade agreements |
| Implementation Challenges | Geographical constraints, Chinese competition, resource limitations | Historical disputes, trust deficits, domestic political considerations |
| Success Metrics | Energy diversification, trade route alternatives, regional influence | Border stability, trade volumes, dispute resolution, people-to-people ties |
vs Act East Policy
| Aspect | This Topic | Act East Policy |
|---|---|---|
| Regional Coverage | Multi-regional: Central Asia, West Asia, Southeast Asia, East Africa | Primarily Southeast Asia and East Asia, extending to Pacific |
| Historical Evolution | Emerged from strategic necessity and energy security concerns | Evolution from Look East Policy, economic integration focus |
| Key Partnerships | Iran, Central Asian republics, Gulf countries, Indian Ocean states | ASEAN, Japan, South Korea, Australia, Pacific Island nations |
| Primary Drivers | Energy security, connectivity alternatives, strategic depth | Economic integration, maritime security, China balancing |
| Institutional Framework | Bilateral partnerships, SCO membership, regional summits | ASEAN Plus mechanisms, EAS, ADMM-Plus, Quad partnership |