Social Sciences, asked by Rajnooka799, 9 months ago

What was our foreign policy and did that policy help us to avoid wars with our neighbours

Answers

Answered by gourav5842
3

Answer:

Yes Indian foreign policy helps to avoid wars with the our neighborhood.

Answered by smartbrainz
0

Our foreign policy's main purpose (the "preservation of world peace" and the "enlargement of human freedom") is to use diplomacy – or talk, meet, reach agreements – in order to resolve inter-nation problems. They try to avoid problems becoming conflicts that need military settlements

Explanation:

  • Yes, India's foreign policy has enabled to avoid wars with its neighbours, especially in the recent decades In addition to being the second-highest country in the world, India has the most popular democracy and one of the quickest growing economies, with the most formal diplomatic relations with many nations. While India has no big military coalition, we have gained strategic scope and mutual self-reliance on our relations with major powers, including the European Union.
  • In our approach to neighborhood foreign policy, India is the driver for the security and peace of the region and, through sovereign dignity and mutual respect, we have worked to create an outline for Asia and develop strategy for establishing good and cooperative ties with all communities, fostering interdependencies and participation.
  • As the largest country in the region and its strongest economy, we know that India is more responsible for this. The area is influenced by our strong economic growth and gives our neighbors more opportunities to benefit from the relationship with India. As with the "free markets" that India set up with Nepal, Bhutan &, we continue making unilateral gestures and extending economic and other concession. Similar arrangements have been made with our other neighbors and Indian investments in the construction and modernisation of cross-border infrastructure.
  • As close neighbours, India and Nepal engage in a special bond of solidarity and collaboration marked by open borders and deeply embedded relationships between cultures and families. In the political transformation to a democratic order, to a peaceful, stable, & prosperity Nepal, India naturally extended support for the people of Nepal. The political structure in Nepal remains weak and troubled, and our historically close bilateral relations have been temporarily slowed down, but India remains completely prepared to support Nepal in any way and wish the Nepalese people well.
  • Bangladesh is our biggest border. The proximity and the unstable boundaries present rebellion and illegal immigrant problems and others, compounded by reciprocal misunderstandings and false assumptions, which are effectively resolved by the promotion of conditions of acceptance of the valid interests of the others and the expansion of mutual cooperation around the spectrum.
  • With China problems remain, yet new convergences, such as on climate change and international trade agreements, have broken their potential for conflict in China.  The predicted outcome oft our attempts to find a solution to the border crisis has not been they way we expected, but we will continue to involve them in areas of discrepancies and issues outstanding. The Indian economy's sustained fast growth is the strongest response to China's upsurge. We have been trying in recent years to develop many facets of relations with China, even as competition and cooperation between us are always going to take place.
  • With Afghanistan, India has given extensive financial, humanitarian, & project support in every possible way for it in an amount of 1.5 billion dollars, to meet its needs of priority, to rebuild it and to build a pluralistic, prosperous society, even if we remain concerned about the security situation. India finds this important for peace & prosperity in the region and views its relations with Afghanistan as direct and bilateral.
  • In neighboring Myanmar, which is often plagued by an occasional violent uprising, we have increasingly formed alliances to stabilize the region and to create multi-modal transport links to Thailand and beyond. The relationship is based on a determination to stabilise this region. Indian-Maldivian relations continue to be close and friendly. We also assisted their historical democratic transformation and helped the Maldives build infrastructure in key ways, such as the growth of human capital, public health and tourism.
  • We have a multi-dimensional and integrated relationship with Bhutan, an essential neighbor, that arises from our vital strategic interests.  It is for our shared interest and has resulted in Bhutan 's enormous goodwill. Bhutan's connectivity, which benefits the whole of the country, is improved with the construction of a road and rail network and a network of transmission lines across borders, both with Indian cooperation. Our economic cooperation has been very successful over the years, mostly in developingthe huge hydropower potential of Bhutan and exporting surplus energy to India.
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