• About us
  • Contact us
Thursday, June 4, 2026
No 1 epaper in Sri Lanka
  • News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Foreign
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Political Analysis
  • Inside Politics
  • EPAPERPDF
  • සිංහලSINHALA
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Foreign
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Political Analysis
  • Inside Politics
  • EPAPERPDF
  • සිංහලSINHALA
No Result
View All Result
Mawratanews.lk | Sri Lanka Latest Sinhala News and Headlines
No Result
View All Result
Home News

India and Europe’s Strategic Convergence in an Unpredictable Global Order

January 15, 2026
in News
Reading Time: 18 mins read
A A
India and Europe’s Strategic Convergence in an Unpredictable Global Order
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

In 2025, India’s foreign and economic policy reflected a steady consolidation of long-term strategic thinking enabled by domestic political continuity under Prime Minister Narendra Modi. As global politics became increasingly fragmented and power-driven, relations with the European Union emerged as a central pillar of New Delhi’s international engagement.

India’s strong economic performance, expanding trade footprint, defense modernization, and rising defense exports reinforced its global standing. At the same time, Europe’s growing awareness of its own structural vulnerabilities—exposed by prolonged inflationary pressures and stress on the euro—created a shared imperative: preserving economic sovereignty and strategic autonomy in an increasingly unpredictable international system.

Rather than pursuing rigid alignments, India continued to follow a policy of strategic autonomy, engaging all major powers while avoiding exclusive blocs. In 2025, this approach evolved beyond passive non-alignment. New Delhi actively expanded partnerships, invested in institutional continuity, and leveraged economic resilience and multidimensional diplomacy as tools for development and influence.

This posture gained international visibility at the 17th BRICS Summit held in Rio de Janeiro in July 2025. Leaders of the BRICS focused on strengthening cohesion within the group and advancing the interests of the Global South. Discussions centered on global governance reform, development financing, technology, and structural inequalities in the international system. Despite internal differences and external pressures, the summit’s joint declaration reaffirmed BRICS as a key platform for emerging economies and strengthened India’s position ahead of its assumption of the bloc’s presidency in 2026.

India also played an active role within the G20, particularly at the 2025 summit in Johannesburg. Amid ongoing geopolitical tensions and the absence of several leaders, India participated in deliberations on climate change, economic resilience, and development. The summit’s final declaration emphasized multilateral cooperation and support for developing countries—priorities consistently advanced by India and other emerging economies. Hosting the G20 in Africa for the first time underscored the growing importance of broader regional representation in global decision-making.

Domestically, governing cohesion provided the foundation for India’s strategic patience. The Modi government continued to implement reforms aimed at sustaining economic stability and political continuity, enabling long-term foreign policy planning even amid global volatility.

Within this context, relations with Europe assumed heightened strategic importance. New Delhi increasingly viewed European states as like-minded partners capable of balancing major powers while offering investment capital, advanced technologies, and meaningful defense cooperation. Europe’s rising defense spending and renewed geopolitical seriousness reinforced this convergence, positioning the EU as a credible strategic partner in India’s global calculus.

Economic growth remained the cornerstone of India’s international influence. In 2025, India sustained one of the fastest growth rates among major economies, with GDP expanding by approximately 6.7% and exceeding 8% in one quarter. Growth was driven by strong domestic demand and investment, while exports demonstrated notable resilience despite global headwinds.

Total exports of goods and services reached an estimated $73.99 billion in November 2025, a year-on-year increase of 15.5%. Cumulative exports from April to November stood at approximately $562 billion, up 5.4%. The government presented these figures as evidence that its focus on manufacturing, skills development, and supply-chain resilience was transforming trade policy into a flexible instrument of foreign policy.

India also expanded market access through free trade agreements with New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and Oman, while deepening ties with Gulf states and Southeast Asia. Preparatory work continued for future agreements, including a prospective trade deal with the United States in 2026.

On the security front, 2025 marked a decisive acceleration in defense reforms. The government approved approximately $4.6 billion in emergency military procurement, advanced the development of an indigenous stealth fighter, expanded the acquisition of armed drones, and finalized a $7 billion agreement with France for the purchase of 26 naval Rafale fighter jet aircraft. Designating 2025 as the “Year of Defense Reforms” underscored India’s push to reduce reliance on foreign suppliers and establish itself as a defense exporter, with exports rising 12% to $2.76 billion.

Ultimately, the strengthening of India and the resilience of Europe in 2025 were not parallel developments but interlinked responses to the same strategic challenge: safeguarding economic management and sovereignty in a volatile global system.

In this context, deeper India–EU cooperation is no longer optional. Enhanced trade integration, technological convergence, and substantive security collaboration offer both sides a means to counter the growing weaponization of economic power by major actors. For India and Europe alike, strategic convergence is not an act of confrontation, but a necessary form of stability in an international environment where uncertainty has become institutionalized.

Share51Tweet32Send
Previous Post

UNDP Highlights Key Barriers Slowing Post-Cyclone Ditwah Reconstruction in Sri Lanka

Next Post

Bangladesh Minorities Face Surge in Killings Amid Systemic Violence, HRCBM Report Warns

MORE NEWS

People Queued Up and Donated Billions of Rupees to the ‘Rebuilding Sri Lanka’ Fund, But Not Even 5 Cents Have Yet Been Paid to Anyone Affected by Cyclone Ditwah! There Isn’t Even a Fund Called ‘Rebuilding Sri Lanka’! Shocking Revelation from the Auditor General’s Department at the Finance Committee! (VIDEO)
News

People Queued Up and Donated Billions of Rupees to the ‘Rebuilding Sri Lanka’ Fund, But Not Even 5 Cents Have Yet Been Paid to Anyone Affected by Cyclone Ditwah! There Isn’t Even a Fund Called ‘Rebuilding Sri Lanka’! Shocking Revelation from the Auditor General’s Department at the Finance Committee! (VIDEO)

June 4, 2026
Germany Warns Sri Lanka: End Corruption and Policy Instability to Attract European Investment
News

Germany Warns Sri Lanka: End Corruption and Policy Instability to Attract European Investment

June 3, 2026
Children Who Don’t Even Know Their Father Is a Powerful Minister..! This Is the Kind of Politics the Country Needs! VIDEO | Sri Lanka Latest News
News

Children Who Don’t Even Know Their Father Is a Powerful Minister..! This Is the Kind of Politics the Country Needs! VIDEO | Sri Lanka Latest News

June 3, 2026
Concerns Raised Over Proposed Changes to the Retirement Age of Superior Court Judges
News

Concerns Raised Over Proposed Changes to the Retirement Age of Superior Court Judges

June 3, 2026
Three-Wheeler Drivers Plan Major March to President’s Office Over App Company Exploitation
News

Three-Wheeler Drivers Plan Major March to President’s Office Over App Company Exploitation

June 3, 2026
US Targets Sri Lanka and 59 Other Economies in Forced-Labor Tariff Plan
News

US Targets Sri Lanka and 59 Other Economies in Forced-Labor Tariff Plan

June 3, 2026
Load More

One of the best Sri Lanka Latest News Website and Sinhala language newspaper with Sunday editions, published by Free Media Independent Networks Pvt Ltd.

  • About us
  • Contact us

Copyright © 2019–2025 Free Media Independent Networks Pvt Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Developed by Turn Global.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Foreign
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Political Analysis
  • Inside Politics
  • EPAPER
  • සිංහල

Copyright © 2019–2025 Free Media Independent Networks Pvt Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Developed by Turn Global.