📰 UPSC Editorial Notes — Daily Current Affairs

South Asian Power Balance | India-Pakistan Diplomacy | Prelims & Mains Ready

📅 Edition: May 2026  |  Source: The Hindu  |  GS-2 International Relations
THE HINDU | International Relations + Strategic Affairs

🌏 South Asian Power Balance Shifts Toward Pakistan

Pakistan's diplomatic momentum post-Operation Sindoor raises questions about India's regional standing and soft power decline

📚 Syllabus: GS-2: India's Neighbours GS-2: International Relations GS-2: Effect of Policies on India's Interests Prelims: IR + Current Events
🎯 Why Study This? Pakistan's rising diplomatic profile post-Operation Sindoor directly affects India's strategic interests. Power transition theory, Lowy Institute framework, soft power vs hard power = direct Mains GS-2 material. India's silence on Trump/Israel = strategic restraint debate = Essay + Mains answer enrichment.
Prelims: IR + Current Mains: GS-2 IR Essay: Power & Diplomacy

⚡ ONE-LINE SUMMARY (THE GIST)

Pakistan's diplomatic momentum — as mediator between US-Iran, partner to Saudi Arabia, and counterterrorism ally to USA — has blunted India's strategy of isolating Pakistan post-Operation Sindoor, raising broader questions about whether South Asia's regional power balance is shifting away from India.

📌 What Triggered This Debate?

  • Intense debate has emerged in India regarding Pakistan's rising diplomatic stature following its role as mediator and venue for US-Iran negotiations
  • US President Donald Trump publicly acknowledged Pakistan's leadership — specifically Field Marshal Asim Munir and PM Shehbaz Sharif — for their role in precipitating and sustaining the ceasefire
  • India's response was marked by silence — interpreted as caution toward Trump or strategic restraint
  • India has not criticised Israel or the US for their actions — creating a contrast with Pakistan's rising role
  • This has fuelled debate within India's strategic community about the shifting balance between the two countries

🚀 Pakistan's Diplomatic Gains — Key Points

  • Pakistan's diplomatic visibility increased due to expanding engagement with Washington and growing influence in Gulf security
  • Its relationship with the US under Trump has elevated Pakistan's profile
  • Defence partnership with Saudi Arabia and possibly Qatar has reinforced strategic relevance in the region
  • Saudi Arabia's pledge of billions of dollars highlights financial dividends of Pakistan's rising influence
  • Since Operation Sindoor, Pakistan secured several diplomatic wins denying India's efforts to portray it as a state sponsor of terrorism
  • Pakistan's growing alignment with US as a counterterrorism partner against al-Qaeda and ISIS
  • Its role in Gaza-related discussions and the Iran crisis further boosted its profile

🔺 Pyramid of Power — IR Theory (Key for Mains)

⭐ Power Hierarchy Framework — Scholar Muqtedar Khan
  • Superpowers (Apex): USA, China — project power globally, shape international order
  • Global Powers: Cannot unilaterally shape global order but project power across multiple regions — e.g., Russia
  • Middle Powers: Lack comprehensive global reach — exert influence through partnerships and economic/military capacity — e.g., Türkiye, South Korea, Indonesia, Brazil
  • Regional Powers: Dominate a specific geographic area but limited beyond — e.g., Saudi Arabia in Gulf
  • Minor Powers: Influence largely confined within own borders
  • Key Argument: India trending from Global Power → Middle Power; Pakistan trending upward toward Middle Power status

📊 Lowy Institute Framework — Hard vs Soft Power

  • Lowy Institute operationalises Comprehensive National Power by combining hard and soft capabilities
  • Assigns roughly 55% weight to material power — economic size, military capability, resources
  • Assigns 45% weight to softer dimensions — diplomacy, economic networks, institutional influence
  • Before Operation Sindoor: India = second tier from top (Global Power); Pakistan = second tier from bottom (Regional Power)
  • Now: Movements in opposite directions — India's performance in Operation Sindoor not commensurate with perceived stature

📉 India's Declining Soft Power — Key Observations

  • India's continued silence on Trump and major geopolitical developments = contributed to marginalisation from key global events
  • Economic and geopolitical shifts: India's ranking declined from 4th to 6th largest economy
  • Waning visibility of groupings: I2U2, BRICS, Quadrilateral Dialogue — platforms that elevated India's profile
  • India appears to be moving from a global power toward characteristics of a middle power
  • Pakistan, without change in material capabilities, has significantly enhanced its diplomatic profile and relevance

⚖️ Hard Power vs Soft Power — The Balance

⭐ Critical Analysis — Both Sides
  • India's Hard Power Remains Strong: Military capability, robust economy, demographic scale, cutting-edge technological capacity
  • Pakistan's Soft Power Gaining: Diplomacy, Gulf partnerships, US alignment, Iran mediation
  • Key Warning: Soft power elements can enhance or diminish influence but are NOT a substitute for hard power
  • Pakistan's Reality: Still nursing a fragile economy — while gaining in soft power
  • India's Advantage: Firm in elements of hard power — military + economy + demographics
  • Author's conclusion: "While India remains firm in hard power, Pakistan while gaining in soft power is still nursing a fragile economy. And that matters."

📅 Operation Sindoor — Context

  • India's performance during Operation Sindoor has not been widely seen as commensurate with its perceived stature
  • Pakistan secured diplomatic wins by denying India's efforts to portray it as state sponsor of terrorism
  • Post-Sindoor: Pakistan's diplomatic momentum has blunted India's strategy of international isolation
🔍 Extra Info — Prelims Value Addition
  • Lowy Institute: Australian think tank — publishes Asia Power Index annually measuring power of nations in Indo-Pacific
  • I2U2: India, Israel, UAE, USA — economic grouping; focuses on food, water, energy, transport
  • Quad: India, USA, Japan, Australia — security dialogue; Summit-level since 2021
  • BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa — now expanded to BRICS+ (2024)
  • Field Marshal Asim Munir: Pakistan Army Chief — promoted to Field Marshal rank
  • Operation Sindoor: India's military operation — precise strikes on terror infrastructure
  • Soft Power (Joseph Nye): Ability to attract and co-opt rather than coerce — culture, values, foreign policy
  • Comprehensive National Power (CNP): Overall strength of a nation combining military, economic, political, cultural power
📝 Extra Info — Mains Value Addition
  • Power Transition Theory (A.F.K. Organski): War most likely when a rising power approaches parity with dominant power — relevant to India-Pakistan dynamic
  • Strategic Restraint vs Strategic Silence: India's silence on Trump/Israel — is it principled restraint or strategic miscalculation? Key Mains debate
  • Middle Power Diplomacy: Using multilateral forums, mediation, coalition-building to punch above weight — Pakistan's current strategy
  • India's Neighbourhood First Policy: Needs recalibration if Pakistan gains ground with USA and Gulf states
  • Economic Diplomacy: Saudi Arabia pledging billions to Pakistan = economic soft power leverage India must counter
  • India's Counter-strategy: Strengthen Quad, deepen BRICS+, leverage G20 presidency legacy, accelerate ActEast + Gulf partnerships
🇮🇳 India Angle — For Mains Answers India must recognise that diplomatic visibility matters alongside military capability. The choices India makes regarding ideological alignment or dependence on defence technology will inevitably affect the softer dimensions of its power. India must strengthen its soft power — multilateral engagement, neighbourhood diplomacy, and Gulf partnerships — while its hard power foundation remains intact.

🗺️ Key Terms to Remember

Pyramid of Power Lowy Institute Comprehensive National Power Soft Power (Joseph Nye) Middle Power Regional Power Operation Sindoor I2U2 Quad BRICS+ Strategic Restraint Field Marshal Asim Munir

✏️ Probable Mains Questions

  • "Pakistan's recent diplomatic momentum appears to have blunted India's strategy in South Asia." Critically examine this statement in the context of post-Operation Sindoor geopolitics. (GS-2, 250 words)
  • "Soft power is not a substitute for hard power, but its absence can diminish even the strongest nation's global standing." Analyse with reference to India's current diplomatic challenges. (GS-2, 250 words)

🎯 Practice Questions — Click on options to check!

Prelims Q1

The Lowy Institute's Asia Power Index measures Comprehensive National Power by combining hard and soft capabilities. Which of the following is the correct weightage assigned?

  • (a) 70% material power; 30% soft dimensions
  • (b) 60% material power; 40% soft dimensions
  • (c) 55% material power; 45% soft dimensions
  • (d) 50% material power; 50% soft dimensions
View Explanation
The Lowy Institute assigns roughly 55% weight to material power (economic size, military capability, resources) and 45% to softer dimensions (diplomacy, economic networks, institutional influence). This framework is used to compare India and Pakistan's comprehensive national power. Answer: (c)
Prelims Q2

Consider the following statements about I2U2:
1. It is a grouping of India, Israel, UAE, and USA.
2. It focuses primarily on military cooperation and defence technology.
3. It was elevated to Summit level in 2022.
Which of the above is/are correct?

  • (a) 1 only
  • (b) 2 and 3 only
  • (c) 1 and 3 only
  • (d) 1, 2 and 3
View Explanation
Statement 1 is correct — I2U2 = India, Israel, UAE, USA. Statement 2 is incorrect — I2U2 focuses on food, water, energy, and transport (not primarily military). Statement 3 is correct — it was elevated to Summit level in July 2022. Answer: (c)
Mains Q1

"Pakistan's diplomatic gains post-Operation Sindoor have exposed the limits of India's soft power strategy." Critically examine. (GS-2, 250 words)

📝 View Answer Framework
Introduction: Briefly define soft power (Joseph Nye) — ability to attract, co-opt, influence without coercion. India's soft power traditionally strong — democracy, culture, Bollywood, diaspora, Yoga diplomacy.

Pakistan's Recent Gains:
• US-Iran mediation role — Trump acknowledged Asim Munir + Shehbaz Sharif
• Gulf security partnerships — Saudi billions
• Counterterrorism partnership with USA
• Gaza + Iran crisis engagement
• Denied India's "state sponsor of terrorism" narrative

India's Soft Power Challenges:
• Strategic silence on Trump/Israel — perceived as restraint or marginalisation
• I2U2, BRICS, Quad — waning visibility
• Economic ranking drop: 4th → 6th largest
• Operation Sindoor narrative not capitalised diplomatically

India's Strengths (Hard Power intact):
• Military capability, demographic scale, tech capacity
• Pakistan's economy remains fragile

Way Forward: Strengthen multilateral engagement, Neighbourhood First recalibration, Gulf diplomacy, leverage G20 legacy.

Conclusion: Soft power is not a substitute for hard power — but its decline can diminish even a strong nation's global standing. India must urgently recalibrate its diplomatic visibility.
Mains Q2

Explain the "Pyramid of Power" framework in International Relations. How does it help explain the current India-Pakistan dynamic? (GS-2, 150 words)

📝 View Answer Framework
Pyramid of Power (Muqtedar Khan):
States are understood within a hierarchy based on capacity to project influence beyond borders:
• Superpowers (USA, China) → Global Powers (Russia) → Middle Powers (Turkey, South Korea) → Regional Powers (Saudi Arabia) → Minor Powers

India-Pakistan Application:
• Before: India = Global Power tier; Pakistan = Regional Power tier
• Now: India trending → Middle Power characteristics (declining soft power, economic ranking drop)
• Pakistan trending → Middle Power aspirations (US partnership, Gulf relevance, Iran mediation)

Significance: This shift — though not in material capabilities — in diplomatic profile and perceived relevance is driving intense debate in India's strategic community and explains current geopolitical tensions.

Conclusion: Hard power foundation matters but perception and diplomatic visibility shape the hierarchy in practice.
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