India’s
‘Neighbourhood First Policy’ under scrutiny

(L-R) Former External Affairs Minister
Salman Khurshid, Lt Gen Kamal Davar, Montek Ahluwalia (an Indian economist and former Deputy
Chairman of the Planning
Commission
of India)
and Bharat Karnad (an
emeritus professor in National Security Studies at the Centre
for Policy Research,
Delhi and a national security expert).
The DFSS January 2026 conclave critically examined the erosion of India’s strategic influence in its neighbourhood, concluded that goodwill based diplomacy must give way to a recalibrated mix of hard power, technology and youth centric engagement. Experts warned that terrorism, emerging warfare technologies, foreign influence and doctrinal rigidity demanded urgent policy renewal if India was to reclaim strategic heft in South Asia.
The Delhi Forum for Strategic Studies
(DFSS), under the leadership of Lt Gen Kamal Davar, held its
annual January conclave on 17 January 2026, at New Delhi. The
theme, “India’s Neighbourhood and the Evolving Security Paradigm,” was
highly relevant given the current flux, friction and foreign intrusion shaping
India’s regional environment, making the discussions timely and impactful.
During a concise 2.5 hour session, the
forum critically assessed whether India’s ‘Neighbourhood First’ policy had
adapted to changing geopolitical realities. The consensus was clear:
goodwill alone no longer guaranteed influence in India’s immediate strategic
periphery, underscoring the need for strategic recalibration.
The conclave assembled a diverse group
of strategic thinkers, including former ministers, diplomats, senior military
commanders and regional experts. The forum enabled candid discussions, with
notable attendees including Mr Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Ambassador
KC Singh, Air Vice Marshal Kapil Kak (Retd), retired Generals, Ambassadors and
senior Bureaucrats with extensive regional experience, thereby enhancing the
forum’s credibility.
Gen Kamal Davar’s opening frame- Intent vs Outcome: In his opening remarks, Lt. Gen. Davar offered a balanced
assessment of India’s Neighbourhood First policy. He acknowledged its original
intent, ie, fostering regional goodwill through connectivity projects,
humanitarian assistance, disaster relief and economic cooperation. For years,
India’s rapid response as a first responder in crises from earthquakes to
floods had reinforced its leadership image. That advantage, he warned, was
eroding. China’s systematic use of debt trap diplomacy, Pakistan’s
sustained proxy warfare and the growing footprint of extra-regional powers,
most notably the United States, in countries such as Bangladesh and Nepal, had
narrowed India’s strategic room for manoeuvre. Gen Davar observed that
India’s “heft had waned,” partly because assistance was
now viewed transactionally rather than emotionally.
He argued for recalibrating
neighbourhood engagement, blending hard power with economic leverage,
technological outreach and youth centric diplomacy. Influence, he stressed,
must be earned continuously, not assumed.

Terrorism’s persistent shadow- Ajay Sahni’s assessment:
Mr Ajay Sahni, one of India’s foremost counter-terrorism
analysts, set the tone for the substantive discussions. His presentation
underscored a sobering reality: despite shifts in global attention, South Asia
remained fertile grounds for terrorism and unrest. Sahni traced how
neighbourhood instability directly fed terror ecosystems. Bangladesh, once
viewed as having decisively rolled back extremist networks under Sheikh Hasina,
was now showing signs of renewed radicalisation along its fringes. Porous
borders, weak institutions and political churn were magnifying these
vulnerabilities. More worrying, Sahni argued, was the rise of hybrid threats.
Digital radicalisation, often amplified through encrypted platforms and foreign
hosted infrastructure, demanded urgent technological innovation to empower
counter-terrorism efforts and instill confidence in security agencies. India’s
response, Sahni insisted, must move beyond reactive policing. He advocated for
technology driven border hardening, including AI enabled fencing, predictive
analytics and real-time intelligence fusion.
Lt Gen RS Pannu (Retd), former GOC of 14
Corps, shifted the conversation to the future of warfare. His
presentation, “Employment of UAVs, AI and Quantum Computing in
Future Wars,” traced the transformation of conflict over the past
seven decades—from manpower heavy engagements to data dominated
battlefields. Modern warfare, Gen Pannu argued, was no longer about
linear engagements but about “web kill chains,” where
adversaries were drawn into layered sensor and shooter networks. In
such environments, unmanned aerial vehicles, artificial intelligence and
quantum-enabled systems offered decisive advantages.

China’s dominance in this domain was
presented in stark terms. With roughly 26 per cent of global
R&D output, Beijing enjoyed an overwhelming edge in drone swarms,
electronic warfare and quantum decryption. India’s contribution,
Gen Pannu noted bluntly, remained negligible by comparison. This disparity
forces India into import dependence, often leading it to acquire platforms
already nearing obsolescence. “We inherit others’ discards,” he remarked.
Using the example of SpaceX’s 8,000
satellites within an orbital environment of 12,000 to 15,000 objects, he
illustrated how space had become a contested operational domain. Yet,
Gen Pannu cautioned against technological determinism. Human judgment, he said,
remained critical. AI can process volumes of data, but the human mind retains
the agility to detect anomalies and intent. For India, the path
forward lies in a dramatic expansion of indigenous R&D, driven by
public-private partnerships, that fosters a sense of national pride and
confidence in developing cutting edge defence technologies like Israel’s Iron
Dome, especially in high altitude regions like Ladakh.
Maj Gen Ashok Mehta (Retd), drawing on
recent fieldwork and extended engagement with Nepal, examined the country’s
internal churn through the lens of youth politics and foreign influence. His
presentation focussed on how Nepal’s Gen Z was increasingly alienated from
traditional political elites and dynastic structures. Economic stagnation,
unemployment and growing disillusionment with governance had created fertile
grounds for protest. China’s infrastructure led engagement, often underwritten
by opaque BRI loans, had deepened Nepal’s debt exposure while expanding
Beijing’s political leverage.

At the same time, Gen Mehta highlighted the expanding role of US soft power. Initiatives such as leadership programmes, educational exchanges and funding for civil society were shaping narratives and aspirations among Nepal’s youth. He drew parallels with earlier generational engagements, noting how early exposure could have long term political impact.
India, he warned, risked being perceived
as complacent or transactional. Cultural affinity and historical ties were no
longer enough. “New Delhi must invest in targeted development assistance,
digital engagement and people-to-people programmes that speak directly to
younger audiences. Failure to do so could see Nepal’s Gen Z drift decisively
toward external poles of influence”. One of the most contentious analyses was delivered by Mr Bharat Karnad, who called for a fundamental re-examination of India’s nuclear doctrine. He argued that India’s continued reliance on a singular ‘No First Use’ posture ignored the asymmetry between its two principal adversaries. Against China, with an arsenal exceeding 500 warheads, India’s deterrence posture risked being perceived as weak or symbolic. Against Pakistan, whose tactical nuclear weapons are designed to offset conventional inferiority, NFU may offer little restraint.
Bharat Karnad proposed dual doctrines: one centred on massive retaliation against China, the other tailored to deter Pakistan’s battlefield nuclear use. He also criticised constraints arising from the Indo-US nuclear deal, particularly the prohibition on further testing. India’s six nuclear tests, he argued, were pale against China’s 43 nuclear tests. Without renewed testing and modernisation, India’s deterrent credibility could erode. Karnad urged accelerated development of the nuclear triad, including MIRV capable systems such as the Agni-VI, to restore strategic balance. Former External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid closed the conclave with a broader diplomatic lens. He framed the upheavals in Bangladesh and Nepal as symptoms of generational transitions rather than isolated crises. Elections, he noted, would serve as crucial tests of institutional resilience and leadership legitimacy. Khurshid cautioned against the corrosive role of social media in bilateral relations. Misinformation and performative outrage often outpace diplomacy, constraining governments even when national interests align. Mature statecraft, he argued, required resisting public pressure when necessary and communicating intent clearly.

Lt Gen Kamal Davar
Pathways forward: Reclaiming strategic heft
The DFSS 2026 conclave converged on a clear conclusion: India’s ‘Neighbourhood First’ policy requires renewal, not abandonment. Gen Davar’s opening framework set the tone, calling for a blend of economic statecraft, security preparedness and youth engagement. Sahni’s emphasis on counter-terrorism
highlighted the need for technological vigilance. Gen Pannu’s focus on future
warfare underscored the cost of R&D neglect. Gen Mehta’s neighbourhood
analysis revealed the stakes of youth diplomacy. Karnad’s nuclear critique
challenged long held assumptions. Khurshid’s closing remarks reminded
participants that diplomacy is as much about restraint as it is about resolve.
The forum’s consolidated report, to be
shared with policymakers, carries both warning and opportunity. As Gen Davar’s
stewardship of DFSS once again demonstrated, strategic clarity begins with
honest diagnosis. Whether India acts on these insights will determine the
future credibility of its neighbourhood leadership.
By Lt Col Manoj K Channan, Armoured Corps, Indian
Army