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Crude truth: India draws a red line on strategic autonomy amid Nato pressure

Crude truth: India draws a red line on strategic autonomy amid Nato pressure

First Post19-07-2025
Sovereignty cannot be traded for approval ratings in Brussels or Washington. Energy security, economic pragmatism, and strategic autonomy will continue to define India's foreign policy no matter who disapproves read more
In a sharp and measured response to Nato Secretary General Mark Rutte's recent threat of secondary sanctions, India made it unequivocally clear on Thursday that it will not compromise its national interest at the altar of Western political expediency. The Ministry of External Affairs cautioned against 'double standards' and defended its procurement of Russian crude oil as a decision rooted in market logic and sovereign responsibility. The West may be attempting to reassert control over the global order through pressure tactics, but India, along with other Brics nations, has outgrown the phase of bowing to moral lectures from the Atlantic alliance.
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Rutte's comments, delivered from Washington, marked a significant escalation. In what can only be described as a veiled threat, he warned India, China, and Brazil that continued commercial ties with Russia could 'hit them very hard'. His statement followed US President Donald Trump's announcement of 'very severe tariffs' on Russia if peace with Ukraine is not achieved within 50 days. Taken together, these remarks are not just an extension of Western frustration at the failure to isolate Moscow; they represent a deliberate attempt to bully large, independent powers that have dared to chart their course on the Ukraine conflict.
India's reaction was firm but diplomatic. 'We have seen reports on the subject and are closely following the developments,' said Randhir Jaiswal, the External Affairs Ministry spokesperson. 'Securing the energy needs of our people is understandably an overriding priority for us,' he added. Most critically, he warned against 'any double standards on the matter', a phrase that cuts to the heart of the global hypocrisy that defines Western foreign policy today.
Let's be clear: when Europe continued to import Russian gas in the initial months of the Ukraine war under the guise of 'energy dependency', it was considered a rational act. When India does the same with crude oil, it's branded as undermining the global order. Why should New Delhi entertain such selective outrage?
Rutte's remarks betray an old colonial instinct that the West still struggles to shed: that major non-Western powers are expected to play second fiddle to transatlantic dictates. However, the world of 2025 is not the unipolar, West-centric world of the 1990s. India today is not just the fourth-largest economy in the world but a key pole in the emerging multipolar world order—one that does not automatically align with Nato's geopolitical chessboard.
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India's energy diplomacy with Russia is grounded in pragmatism. With discounts on Russian crude offering a cushion against global price shocks, it has had to manage inflation, keep its fiscal deficit in check, and ensure the supply of affordable fuel to its vast population. For a country where hundreds of millions still live close to the poverty line, the idea of sacrificing energy security to satisfy Western foreign policy objectives is both irresponsible and morally indefensible.
Moreover, India's balanced and independent position on the Ukraine conflict has found resonance in the Global South. Far from isolating Russia, the West's sanctions regime has unintentionally strengthened the Brics and other alternative groupings. The Global South sees the Ukraine war not as a simple battle between good and evil, but as a proxy war between geopolitical blocs, with Europe dragging the world into an economic quagmire of its own making.
Rutte's suggestion that India should call up Russian President Vladimir Putin and urge him to negotiate peace is, frankly, laughable. Since when has Nato or the US needed moral nudging from countries like India to pursue diplomacy? Nato's track record in Afghanistan, Libya, and Iraq hardly makes it a credible champion of peace. Instead of lectures, the West should reflect on the consequences of its zero-sum approach that leaves no space for neutral positions or alternative diplomatic pathways.
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Equally concerning is Donald Trump's effort to portray India's ties with other Brics nations as 'anti-American'. This line of thinking is reductive and dangerous. India's membership in Brics does not make it anti-Western. Rather, it reflects its desire to be part of a diversified global architecture, one where financial systems, energy flows, and political narratives are not monopolised by a single bloc.
India's strategic autonomy has been a consistent thread in its foreign policy from Jawaharlal Nehru to Narendra Modi. Whether it was refusing to join Western sanctions during the Cold War or rejecting Chinese-dominated narratives today, India has always maintained a careful balance. The West must recognise that its geopolitical anxieties do not automatically become India's priorities.
Indeed, this episode exposes the growing tensions between the older order, represented by Nato, and the emerging realities of a multipolar world. The West, rather than expanding its coercive apparatus, should start investing in genuine partnerships that respect mutual interests and sovereignty. The language of threats and tariffs only hardens positions and alienates rising powers like India, which have long outgrown their role as passive rule-takers.
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India is not alone in this stance. Brazil and China, too, have deepened their economic engagement with Russia since the Ukraine war. Despite relentless pressure, they have refused to toe the Nato line. The result? An alternative ecosystem of trade, diplomacy, and energy cooperation is gradually but firmly taking shape, one that may soon rival the West's dominance of global systems.
In sum, Rutte's remarks and Trump's tariff threats only underline the West's growing desperation to maintain relevance in a rapidly changing world. India's response, by contrast, reflects the maturity, balance, and confidence of a rising power that knows where its interests lie. Sovereignty cannot be traded for approval ratings in Brussels or Washington. Energy security, economic pragmatism, and strategic autonomy will continue to define India's foreign policy no matter who disapproves.
Let the world take note: India is not a vassal state. It is a civilisational power that makes its own choices. And those choices will always put Indians first.
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The writer is a technocrat, political analyst, and author. He pens national, geopolitical, and social issues. His social media handle is @prosenjitnth. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely that of the author. They do not necessarily reflect Firstpost's views.
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