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Nuclear Policy, Modern Foreign Affairs & Exercises

🎓 Class 12 Social Science CBSE Theory Chapter 4 — India’s External Relations ⏱ ~28 min
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Class 12 · Political Science · Politics in India Since Independence

India's Nuclear Policy, Pokhran Tests & Modern Foreign Policy

From Smiling Buddha in 1974 to Pokhran II in 1998, from Bhabha's vision to the Indo-US Civil Nuclear Deal — and the new compass of Act East, BRICS, Quad and the Indo-Pacific. Plus every NCERT exercise with model answers.

4.13 India's Nuclear Policy — The Bhabha Foundation

Another crucial development of the early independence period was the planning of India's nuclear programme. Nehru always put his faith in science and technology for rapidly building a modern India. A significant component of his industrialisation plans was the nuclear programme initiated in the late 1940s under the guidance of Homi J. Bhabha. India wanted to generate atomic energy for peaceful purposes. Nehru was personally against nuclear weapons, and so he pleaded with the superpowers for comprehensive nuclear disarmament.

The institutional architecture was put in place quickly. The Atomic Energy Commission of India was established in 1948 with Bhabha as its first chairman. The Department of Atomic Energy was created in 1954 and reported directly to the Prime Minister. Bhabha laid out a famous three-stage nuclear programme designed to give India energy security despite limited uranium reserves but enormous thorium reserves. Stage 1 used pressurised heavy-water reactors fuelled by natural uranium; Stage 2 would use fast-breeder reactors; Stage 3 would use the country's vast thorium reserves. Bhabha's vision was simple: India must master the atom — peacefully — for the same reason it had to master the steel mill and the dam.

🔬 Architect Profile — Homi Jehangir Bhabha (1909–1966)
Indian physicist; first chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission (1948); founding director of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research; the principal architect of India's three-stage nuclear programme; advocate of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes; killed in an air crash in 1966. The atomic research centre at Trombay was renamed the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) in his honour.

4.13.1 The Treaty India Refused to Sign — NPT 1968

The nuclear arsenal of the world kept rising even as Nehru pleaded for disarmament. When Communist China conducted nuclear tests in October 1964, the five nuclear-weapon powers — the US, USSR, UK, France and China (Taiwan then represented China) — also the five Permanent Members of the UN Security Council — tried to impose the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) of 1968? on the rest of the world.

India always considered the NPT as discriminatory and refused to sign it. The reasoning: the NPT created a permanent two-tier order — five "nuclear weapon states" with formal recognition, and everyone else permanently barred from acquiring weapons. India's position was that the only legitimate basis for non-proliferation was universal, verifiable, time-bound disarmament.

4.13.2 Pokhran I — Smiling Buddha (May 1974)

India conducted its first nuclear explosion in May 1974. The test, codenamed "Smiling Buddha", was carried out at Pokhran in Rajasthan. The Prime Minister was Indira Gandhi. India termed it a peaceful nuclear explosion (PNE) and argued that India was committed to using nuclear power only for peaceful purposes. The period was a difficult one in domestic politics. Following the Arab–Israel War of 1973, the entire world was affected by the Oil Shock due to massive price hikes by Arab nations. India faced economic turmoil with high inflation, and many agitations were already going on, including a nationwide railway strike. The 1974 test would lead to international sanctions and to India's effective exclusion from the global civil nuclear technology trade for decades — a 24-year hiatus before the next test.

4.13.3 Pokhran II — Operation Shakti (May 1998)

India had opposed the international treaties aimed at non-proliferation, since they were selectively applicable to the non-nuclear powers and legitimised the monopoly of the five nuclear weapons powers. India therefore opposed the indefinite extension of the NPT in 1995 and refused to sign the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT).

India conducted a series of five nuclear tests at Pokhran in May 1998, demonstrating its capacity to use nuclear energy for military purposes. Among these was a thermonuclear (hydrogen-bomb) device. The Prime Minister was Atal Bihari Vajpayee, leading the BJP-led NDA government. India formally declared itself a nuclear weapons state. Pakistan soon followed with its own tests, thereby increasing the vulnerability of the region to nuclear exchange. The international community was extremely critical and sanctions were imposed on both countries — although these were subsequently waived. India's nuclear doctrine of credible minimum deterrence professes "No First Use"? and reiterates India's commitment to global, verifiable and non-discriminatory nuclear disarmament leading to a nuclear-weapon-free world.

India's Nuclear Timeline — 1948 to 2008 1948AECestablished 1954DAEcreated Oct 1964China testsN-bomb 1968NPT — Indiarefuses May 1974POKHRAN-ISmiling Buddha 1995India opposesNPT extension May 1998POKHRAN-II5 tests; NWS 2005–08Indo-US Dealcivil nuclear From Bhabha's blueprint (1948) to recognition as a responsible nuclear power (2008) Doctrine: Credible Minimum Deterrence + No First Use
Figure 4.8 — Six decades of India's nuclear policy in one line.

4.13.4 The Indo-US Civil Nuclear Agreement (2005–2008)

For more than three decades after Pokhran-I, India was outside the global civil-nuclear trade. That changed with the Indo-US Civil Nuclear Agreement?. Negotiations began in 2005 between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and US President George W. Bush. The deal had three elements: India would separate its civilian and military nuclear facilities; civilian facilities would be placed under IAEA safeguards; in return, the US and the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) would lift the embargo on civil nuclear trade with India. The waiver came through in September 2008. For the first time, a nuclear-weapon state outside the NPT was admitted into the global civil-nuclear mainstream. India's nuclear doctrine remained unchanged — credible minimum deterrence with no first use — but its diplomatic footprint expanded enormously.

THINK ABOUT IT — Was Refusing the NPT a Wise Choice?
Bloom: L5 Evaluate

India has refused to sign the NPT (1968) and the CTBT — but did sign the Indo-US Civil Nuclear Agreement (2005–08). Some argue this was inconsistent; others say it was strategic.

  1. List two principles on which India consistently rested its nuclear position from 1968 to 2008.
  2. Was the 2008 deal a climb-down or a vindication? Argue both views.
  3. If you were Foreign Secretary in 2005, would you have signed? Why?
✅ Pointers
Two consistent principles: (a) non-proliferation must be non-discriminatory; (b) India will use nuclear energy for civilian purposes responsibly. The 2008 deal can be read as vindication because India was admitted into civil-nuclear trade without signing the NPT — recognition of its responsible nuclear behaviour. Critics call it a climb-down because IAEA safeguards now apply to civilian sites. Strong answers note: India accepted constraints in return for recognition, not in return for disarming.

4.14 Shifting Alliances After 1977

From 1977 onwards, many non-Congress governments came to power. World politics was also changing dramatically. The Janata Party government (1977) announced that it would follow "genuine non-alignment" — meaning that the pro-Soviet tilt in the foreign policy would be corrected. Since then, all governments — Congress and non-Congress — have taken initiatives for restoring better relations with China and entering into close ties with the US.

In Indian politics and the popular mind, India's foreign policy has always been very closely linked to two questions: India's stand vis-à-vis Pakistan, and Indo-US relations. In the post-1990 period, the ruling parties have often been criticised for their pro-US foreign policy. Foreign policy is always dictated by ideas of national interest. After 1990, Russia, though still a friend, lost its global pre-eminence; India therefore shifted to a more pro-US strategy. Besides, the contemporary international situation is more influenced by economic interests than by military interests. This has shaped India's foreign-policy choices.

Indo-Pakistan relations have witnessed many new developments during this period. While Kashmir continues to be the main issue between the two countries, there have been many efforts to restore normal relations — cultural exchanges, citizen movement and economic cooperation are encouraged by both. A train and a bus service even operate between the two countries. But this could not avoid the near-war situation in Kargil 1999. Since then, efforts at negotiating durable peace have continued.

4.15 The Modern Compass — Look East / Act East, Quad, BRICS, Indo-Pacific, G20

🌏
Look East → Act East (2014)
Begun as "Look East" in the 1990s, upgraded to "Act East" in 2014. Deepens India's economic, security and cultural ties with ASEAN, Japan, Korea, Vietnam and the wider Indo-Pacific.
🛡️
The Quad
Quadrilateral Security Dialogue between India, US, Japan and Australia. Revived in 2017 and elevated to leaders' summit-level from 2021. Focused on a free, open, inclusive Indo-Pacific.
🌐
BRICS (since 2009)
Grouping of Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa (joined 2010); first leaders' summit in 2009. India uses BRICS to shape global economic governance and represent the global South.
🤝
SAARC
South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation, founded 1985. India remains a key player but the platform has been hampered since 2016 by Indo-Pak tensions.
🌊
Indo-Pacific
India anchors the "SAGAR — Security and Growth for All in the Region" doctrine and the Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative. Maritime cooperation with the US, Japan, Australia, France.
🌍
G20 Presidency 2023
India hosted the G20 Summit in New Delhi in 2023 — the largest gathering of world leaders ever held in India — and pushed through the African Union's full membership in the G20.
The Quad and the Indo-Pacific — A Schematic Schematic only — not a map drawn to scale. Not an authentic depiction of national boundaries. INDIASAGAR · Act East JPJapan AUAustralia USUnited States QUAD — Quadrilateral Security Dialogue A free, open, inclusive Indo-Pacific. India retains strategic autonomy: also engaged in BRICS, SCO, NAM
Figure 4.9 — The Quad and the Indo-Pacific framework — schematic.
💡 Why India's Foreign Policy is Not Party-Political
Although there are minor differences among political parties on how to conduct external relations, Indian politics is generally marked by a broad agreement on national integration, the protection of international borders, and on questions of national interest. Therefore, in the decade of 1962–1971 when India faced three wars, and even later when different parties came to power from time to time, foreign policy has played only a limited role in party politics.

4.16 Summary

Chapter 4 — India's External Relations · Quick Recap

  • International context: India was born free in a world emerging from war, splitting into Cold-War blocs, and decolonising rapidly. Article 51 of the Constitution mandated peace, sovereignty-respect, and arbitration.
  • Six operational principles: sovereignty, equality, non-alignment, world peace, anti-colonialism & anti-racism, peaceful coexistence (Panchsheel — 29 April 1954).
  • Architects: Nehru (PM & FM, 1946–64), V.K. Krishna Menon, Vijaylakshmi Pandit. NAM was co-founded by Nehru with Tito, Nasser, Sukarno and Nkrumah at Belgrade 1961 following the Bandung Conference 1955.
  • China: Hindi-Chini Bhai-Bhai (1954) → Tibet 1950 / Dalai Lama 1959 → Aksai Chin road 1957–59 → 1962 invasion → restoration via Vajpayee 1979, Rajiv Gandhi 1988, accords 1993/1996, Wuhan 2018, Galwan 2020.
  • Pakistan: 1947–48 (Kashmir) → Indus Waters Treaty 1960 → 1965 (Tashkent Agreement Jan 1966 with Shastri-Ayub) → 1971 Bangladesh War (Indira Gandhi, Indo-Soviet Treaty Aug 1971, ~93,000 PoWs at Dhaka 16 Dec 1971, Simla Agreement 3 Jul 1972) → Kargil 1999 (Vajpayee, Operation Vijay).
  • Nuclear policy: AEC 1948, DAE 1954 (Bhabha) → NPT 1968 (refused) → Pokhran-I "Smiling Buddha" May 1974 → Pokhran-II May 1998 (5 tests) → No First Use doctrine → Indo-US Civil Nuclear Deal 2005–08.
  • Modern direction: Look East / Act East 2014, Quad (US-Japan-India-Australia), BRICS (since 2009), Indo-Pacific (SAGAR), G20 New Delhi Summit 2023.

4.17 Key Terms

Vocabulary at a Glance

Non-AlignmentIndia's foreign-policy posture of refusing to join either Cold-War military bloc and judging issues independently.
NAMNon-Aligned Movement; founded at Belgrade 1961 after Bandung 1955; India a co-founder.
PanchsheelFive Principles of Peaceful Coexistence enunciated by Nehru and Zhou Enlai on 29 April 1954.
Hindi-Chini Bhai-BhaiMid-1950s slogan of Sino-Indian friendship; collapsed with the 1962 war.
McMahon Line1914 boundary line in the eastern sector; accepted by India, rejected by China.
Aksai ChinDisputed plateau in eastern Ladakh; under Chinese occupation since 1957–59.
Tashkent AgreementJanuary 1966 agreement between Lal Bahadur Shastri and Ayub Khan ending the 1965 Indo-Pak war.
Simla Agreement3 July 1972 bilateral pact between Indira Gandhi and Bhutto formalising peace after the 1971 war.
Mukti BahiniThe Bengali liberation force of 1971 that fought alongside the Indian army to free Bangladesh.
KargilThe 1999 limited Indo-Pak war in Ladakh; India's Operation Vijay; first major war between two nuclear powers.
Smiling BuddhaCodename of India's first nuclear test, May 1974, Pokhran (Rajasthan); Indira Gandhi PM.
NPTNuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty 1968; India considers it discriminatory and has refused to sign.
No First UseIndia's nuclear doctrine — it will not be the first to use nuclear weapons.
Indo-US Nuclear DealThe 2005–08 civil nuclear agreement under Manmohan Singh and George W. Bush.
QuadQuadrilateral Security Dialogue between India, US, Japan, Australia.
BRICSGrouping of Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa; first leaders' summit 2009.
Krishna MenonIndian Defence Minister 1957–62; resigned after the 1962 China war.
BhabhaHomi J. Bhabha — first chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission (1948).
Wuhan Summit2018 informal summit between PM Modi and Xi Jinping marking a brief Sino-Indian thaw.
GalwanJune 2020 deadly border clash between Indian and Chinese soldiers in eastern Ladakh.

4.18 NCERT Exercises — All Questions with Model Answers

Q1. Write 'true' or 'false' against each of these statements.
(a) Non-alignment allowed India to gain assistance both from USA and USSR.
(b) India's relationship with her neighbours has been strained from the beginning.
(c) The cold war has affected the relationship between India and Pakistan.
(d) The treaty of Peace and Friendship in 1971 was the result of India's closeness to USA.
Model Answers:
(a) True — non-alignment allowed India to receive economic and technological assistance from both blocs (e.g. Bhilai steel from USSR; Bokaro and Durgapur projects with US/UK assistance; PL-480 food aid from the US).
(b) False — relations with all neighbours have not always been strained; India had cordial early relations with China, friendly relations with Bhutan, Nepal and Sri Lanka, and even cooperation with Pakistan on the Indus Waters Treaty (1960).
(c) True — the Cold War shaped Indo-Pak relations decisively. Pakistan joined US-led alliances (SEATO, CENTO), drew US military aid, and the late-1960s US–China rapprochement encouraged the US–Pakistan–China axis of 1971.
(d) False — the 20-year Indo-Soviet Treaty of August 1971 was signed precisely because the US had moved closer to Pakistan and China (Kissinger's secret July 1971 Beijing visit via Pakistan). It reflected India's distance from the US, not closeness.
Q2. Match the following.
(a) The goal of India's foreign policy in the period 1950–1964
(b) Panchsheel
(c) Bandung Conference
(d) Dalai Lama
   (i) Tibetan spiritual leader who crossed over to India
   (ii) Preservation of territorial integrity, sovereignty and economic development
   (iii) Five principles of peaceful coexistence
   (iv) Led to the establishment of NAM
Correct matches:
(a) → (ii) Preservation of territorial integrity, sovereignty and economic development.
(b) → (iii) Five principles of peaceful coexistence.
(c) → (iv) Led to the establishment of NAM.
(d) → (i) Tibetan spiritual leader who crossed over to India.
Q3. Why did Nehru regard conduct of foreign relations as an essential indicator of independence? State any two reasons with examples to support your reading.
Model Answer: In his Constituent Assembly speech of March 1949 Nehru argued that "independence consists fundamentally and basically of foreign relations" — once foreign relations pass to someone else, you are not really independent. Two reasons: (i) Strategic autonomy — a colonised country fights to determine its own destiny, and the most visible exercise of that autonomy is choosing one's own friends and allies. Example: India refused to join NATO or the Warsaw Pact in the 1950s and led the protest against the British attack on Egypt in 1956. (ii) Identity and dignity — independent foreign policy lets a new nation speak in its own voice in world fora. Example: Vijaylakshmi Pandit became the first woman President of the UN General Assembly in 1953, articulating positions India had chosen, not positions any bloc had assigned.
Q4. "The conduct of foreign affairs is an outcome of a two-way interaction between domestic compulsions and prevailing international climate". Take one example from India's external relations in the 1960s to substantiate your answer.
Model Answer: The clearest 1960s example is India's response to the 1962 Sino-Indian War. International climate: the Cuban Missile crisis distracted both superpowers; the Soviet Union remained neutral on the India–China conflict; Tibet's annexation (1950) and the Aksai Chin road (1957–59) had created a tense border. Domestic compulsions: India had built no army-grade infrastructure on the China border; the army budget was small; Hindi-Chini Bhai-Bhai had been politically popular. The two-way interaction produced consequences both at home and abroad: internally, V.K. Krishna Menon resigned, the first no-confidence motion was moved against Nehru, the Department of Defence Production was set up (Nov 1962), the Third Plan was disrupted, and the CPI split in 1964. Externally, India approached the US and UK for arms — a partial movement away from doctrinaire non-alignment. The episode shows that foreign policy is never made in a vacuum.
Q5. Identify any two aspects of India's foreign policy that you would like to retain and two that you would like to change, if you were to become a decision maker. Give reasons to support your position.
Model Answer (illustrative):
Two aspects to retain: (1) Strategic autonomy — the right to take independent positions on global issues regardless of bloc loyalty. Reason: a multipolar world rewards flexibility and India's voice carries because it is not seen as anyone's proxy. (2) No First Use nuclear doctrine — restraint reinforces India's image as a responsible nuclear-weapon state and contributed to the 2008 NSG waiver.
Two aspects to change: (1) The slow pace of regional connectivity — SAARC has been ineffective, and India should invest more in BBIN (Bhutan-Bangladesh-India-Nepal) and BIMSTEC. Reason: regional power requires regional integration. (2) Greater coherence in China policy — alternation between Wuhan-style summits (2018) and Galwan-style stand-offs (2020) makes long-term posture unclear. Reason: predictability strengthens deterrence and trade.
Q6. Write short notes on the following.
(a) India's Nuclear policy
(b) Consensus in foreign policy matters
(a) India's Nuclear Policy: Nehru's faith in science and technology produced the Atomic Energy Commission (1948) under Homi Bhabha and the Department of Atomic Energy (1954). India advocated peaceful use of atomic energy and pleaded for comprehensive disarmament. After China's 1964 test, the five nuclear powers tried to impose the NPT (1968), which India considered discriminatory and refused to sign. India conducted its first peaceful nuclear explosion ("Smiling Buddha") in May 1974 under Indira Gandhi. After 24 years of opposition (also opposing the 1995 NPT extension and the CTBT), India conducted five tests at Pokhran in May 1998 under Atal Bihari Vajpayee, declaring itself a nuclear-weapon state. India's doctrine is credible minimum deterrence with no first use, while remaining committed to global, verifiable, non-discriminatory disarmament. The Indo-US Civil Nuclear Agreement (2005–08) brought India into mainstream civil-nuclear trade.

(b) Consensus in Foreign Policy Matters: Indian politics shows a striking cross-party consensus on foreign-policy fundamentals — national integration, the protection of international borders, and questions of national interest. Even when different parties have come to power, the broad outlines of foreign policy have stayed remarkably stable. The Janata government in 1977 pledged "genuine non-alignment". Since then, every government — Congress and non-Congress — has worked to improve relations with both China and the United States. The 1962, 1965 and 1971 wars and the post-1990 economic opening were all handled with broadly bipartisan support. This consensus protects continuity and credibility in India's external relations.
Q7. India's foreign policy was built around the principles of peace and cooperation. But India fought three wars in a space of ten years between 1962 and 1971. Would you say that this was a failure of the foreign policy? Or would you say that this was a result of international situation? Give reasons to support your answer.
Model Answer: A balanced reading shows that the three wars were both a partial failure of policy and a product of the international situation. Failure of policy: India's diplomacy underestimated Chinese intentions despite the brewing border dispute and the Aksai Chin road of 1957–59; India sustained Hindi-Chini Bhai-Bhai rhetoric while ignoring military preparedness; the Tibet question was handled cautiously; Krishna Menon's resignation in 1962 reflected institutional shortcomings. International situation: the wars were not caused by India. China invaded under cover of the Cuban Missile crisis (October 1962). Pakistan invaded the Rann of Kutch and Kashmir in 1965. The 1971 war was forced upon India by the Pakistani crackdown on East Pakistan and a refugee burden of around 80 lakh people. The US–China rapprochement and Kissinger's secret July 1971 visit further constrained India's choices. Conclusion: The three wars expose the limits of pure idealism in foreign policy. India's response — including the Indo-Soviet Treaty of August 1971, Operation Vijay's restraint at Kargil 1999, and the rebuilding of relations with China after 1976 — shows that the principles of peace were preserved while learning hard strategic lessons. So it was both — a failure of pure principle, but also a successful adaptation to a hostile international environment.
Q8. Does India's foreign policy reflect her desire to be an important regional power? Argue your case with the Bangladesh war of 1971 as an example.
Model Answer: Yes, India's foreign policy clearly reflects a desire to be an important regional power. The 1971 Bangladesh War is the strongest single example. (i) Humanitarian leadership: India accepted approximately 80 lakh refugees from East Pakistan and provided shelter and material support — an act no minor power could have undertaken. (ii) Strategic balancing: India responded to the emerging US–Pakistan–China axis (Kissinger's July 1971 visit to China through Pakistan) by signing the 20-year Indo-Soviet Treaty in August 1971 — a classic balance-of-power move. (iii) Decisive military success: the Indian armed forces fought on two fronts simultaneously, surrounded Dhaka within ten days, and accepted the surrender of around 93,000 Pakistani prisoners of war on 16 December 1971. (iv) Diplomatic confidence: India then unilaterally declared the ceasefire and chose bilateral resolution through the Simla Agreement of 3 July 1972, refusing to internationalise the issue. The combination of moral leadership, strategic foresight, military capability and diplomatic confidence demonstrates a self-conscious regional power.
Q9. How does political leadership of a nation affect its foreign policy? Explain this with the help of examples from India's foreign policy.
Model Answer: Political leadership decisively shapes the style, priorities and direction of foreign policy.
(i) Nehru (1947–64): being his own Foreign Minister, he authored the doctrine of non-alignment, signed Panchsheel (29 April 1954), co-founded NAM at Belgrade (1961), and led India's mediating role in Korea, Indo-China and Suez. His personal idealism shaped two decades of foreign policy.
(ii) Lal Bahadur Shastri (1964–66): handled the 1965 Indo-Pak war with restraint and signed the Tashkent Agreement (Jan 1966) — a brief but consequential leadership.
(iii) Indira Gandhi (1966–77, 1980–84): took the toughest decisions of the 1971 war — the Indo-Soviet Treaty (Aug 1971), the liberation of Bangladesh, the Simla Agreement (Jul 1972), and the first nuclear test ("Smiling Buddha", May 1974).
(iv) Atal Bihari Vajpayee (1998–2004): conducted Pokhran-II (May 1998), then opened the Lahore Bus diplomacy with Pakistan, and led India through the Kargil War (1999) — Operation Vijay.
(v) Manmohan Singh (2004–14): negotiated the Indo-US Civil Nuclear Agreement (2005–08) — the biggest diplomatic recalibration since 1971.
The pattern shows that continuity in fundamentals (peace, sovereignty, autonomy) coexists with discontinuity in style (idealist vs. realist, restrained vs. assertive) according to the personality of the leader.
Q10. Read this passage and answer the questions below:
"Broadly, non-alignment means not tying yourself off with military blocs.... It means trying to view things, as far as possible, not from the military point of view, though that has to come in sometimes, but independently, and trying to maintain friendly relations with all countries." — Jawaharlal Nehru
(a) Why does Nehru want to keep off military blocs?
(b) Do you think that the Indo-Soviet friendship treaty violated the principle of non-alignment? Give reasons for your answer.
(c) If there were no military blocs, do you think non-alignment would have been unnecessary?
Model Answers:
(a) Nehru wants to keep off military blocs because membership in such alliances drags a member into other people's wars, surrenders the freedom of independent judgment on global issues, and reduces newly free nations to dependence on superpowers. He insists on viewing matters "independently" and on maintaining friendly relations with all countries — a posture incompatible with bloc loyalty.

(b) The 1971 Indo-Soviet Treaty did not violate non-alignment, though critics could plausibly argue it strained the principle. Reasons supporting this view: (i) India did not join the Warsaw Pact; (ii) India did not host Soviet bases; (iii) the treaty was a defensive instrument signed in response to the US–Pakistan–China axis revealed by Kissinger's secret July 1971 visit through Pakistan; (iv) it was a bilateral peace and friendship treaty, not a military alliance. Reasons against: critics argue it tilted India visibly toward Moscow and reduced India's "equidistance" image. On balance, non-alignment was preserved as independent judgment, even if the symmetry was disturbed for the duration of the crisis.

(c) No. Non-alignment was about much more than the existence of two military blocs. It was about strategic autonomy — the right to judge each issue on its merits — and that right is permanently relevant. Today, with the Cold War long over, India still practises non-alignment as strategic autonomy: it is part of the Quad and BRICS, friendly with both the US and Russia, engaged with China through Wuhan-style summits even after Galwan. The form has changed; the principle has not.

4.19 Pedagogy Components — Activity, Diagram, CBQ, ARQ

LET'S RE-SEARCH — Tracing India's Nuclear Doctrine
Bloom: L3 Apply

India's nuclear doctrine has remained "credible minimum deterrence + no first use" through five Prime Ministers since 1998.

  1. List the names of the five Prime Ministers who have held office since the May 1998 tests.
  2. Find one public statement per PM that affirmed the No First Use doctrine.
  3. Has any PM publicly hinted at changing the No First Use posture? Quote and assess.
✅ Pointers
The PMs since May 1998 are Atal Bihari Vajpayee, Manmohan Singh and Narendra Modi. Successive defence ministers have at times referred to NFU as "an evolving doctrine"; assess whether such statements amount to a change in policy or a rhetorical shift, citing the official Nuclear Doctrine document of January 2003.
📊 India's Defence Spending Since Independence (% of GDP, illustrative)

🧠 Competency-Based Questions — Part 3

Scenario: It is 18 May 1998. India has just conducted three nuclear tests at Pokhran (two more will follow on 13 May 1998 — wait, the dates collapse: read carefully). PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee is about to address Parliament. The world is angry; sanctions are likely. As an Indian foreign-policy analyst, you must explain what changed and what remained the same in India's nuclear doctrine.
Q1. State the year of the establishment of the Atomic Energy Commission of India, the year and codename of India's first nuclear test, and the month and year of Pokhran-II.
L1 Remember
Model Answer: The Atomic Energy Commission was established in 1948 under Homi J. Bhabha. India's first nuclear test was conducted in May 1974 and was codenamed "Smiling Buddha". Pokhran-II was conducted in May 1998 under PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
Q2. Apply the principle of "non-discrimination". Why has India consistently refused to sign the NPT (1968) and the CTBT, while accepting IAEA safeguards under the 2005–08 Indo-US Civil Nuclear Agreement? (80 words)
L3 Apply
Model Answer: India considered the NPT and the CTBT discriminatory because they froze the world into five "haves" and many "have-nots". The 2005–08 deal, by contrast, was non-discriminatory in the relevant sense: India accepted IAEA safeguards only on its civilian facilities, while its strategic programme remained outside the safeguards regime. In return, the US and the NSG lifted the embargo on civil-nuclear trade with India. The principle was preserved: equal treatment, not unequal accommodation.
Q3. Analyse the modern direction of India's foreign policy under the heads (i) Act East, (ii) Quad, and (iii) BRICS. How is each consistent with non-alignment redefined as strategic autonomy?
L4 Analyse
Model Answer: (i) Act East (2014): deepens economic and strategic ties with ASEAN, Japan and Korea — extending India's regional weight without subordinating to any bloc. (ii) Quad (revived 2017, summits from 2021): with US, Japan, Australia — focused on maritime security and the Indo-Pacific. India insists the Quad is not a military alliance, preserving autonomy. (iii) BRICS (since 2009): with Brazil, Russia, China, South Africa — a counter-balance to Western-dominated institutions. India is in the Quad and BRICS at the same time. Each is consistent with the redefined principle: India does not align permanently with any bloc; it judges each issue on its merits and uses multiple partnerships to expand its options.
Q4. Evaluate India's nuclear doctrine of "credible minimum deterrence + no first use". Has it served India well from 1998 to today? Give at least three pieces of evidence.
L5 Evaluate
Model Answer: The doctrine has served India well. (i) It deterred escalation during Kargil 1999, when India fought a limited war just one year after the 1998 tests without nuclear use. (ii) It earned international credibility — the 2008 NSG waiver and the Indo-US Civil Nuclear Agreement were possible because India was seen as a responsible nuclear-weapon state. (iii) It allowed India to declare itself a nuclear-weapon state without triggering a regional arms race comparable to those elsewhere; sanctions imposed in 1998 were later waived. Critics argue the NFU may be eroding rhetorically, but the formal doctrine remains. Conclusion: the doctrine is one of the rare cases where moral language and strategic interest reinforce each other.
HOT Q. Imagine India is asked to design a global "Climate Treaty" in 2040, just as the world once asked the five nuclear powers to design the NPT in 1968. Drawing on India's NPT experience, write a 5-point design brief that ensures the treaty is non-discriminatory.
L6 Create
Hint: Borrow India's five lessons from the NPT struggle: (1) rules must be universal — no permanent two-tier order; (2) historical responsibility matters — those who emitted most must cut most; (3) technology transfer must be unconditional for developing countries (analogous to civil nuclear access); (4) verification must be symmetric — major emitters cannot demand more transparency from small ones; (5) opt-out and review clauses must be built in so the treaty doesn't freeze power. Tie each point to one feature of the NPT that India found discriminatory.
⚖️ Assertion–Reason Questions — Part 3
Options:
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Assertion (A): India did not sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty of 1968.
Reason (R): India considered the treaty discriminatory because it created a permanent two-tier order — five recognised nuclear-weapon states, and the rest barred from acquiring weapons.
Answer: (A) — Both true and R is the explanation. India consistently held that any non-proliferation regime must be universal, verifiable and non-discriminatory; the NPT failed those tests, and India therefore refused to sign it.
Assertion (A): India conducted the Pokhran-II nuclear tests in May 1998 under Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
Reason (R): India had signed the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty in 1996 and the May 1998 tests violated India's CTBT obligations.
Answer: (C) — A is true; R is false. India did not sign the CTBT and considered it as discriminatory as the NPT. The 1998 tests therefore violated no Indian treaty obligation. India announced a unilateral moratorium on further testing thereafter.
Assertion (A): The Indo-US Civil Nuclear Agreement of 2005–08 ended India's three-decade exclusion from the global civil-nuclear trade.
Reason (R): Under the agreement India placed its civilian nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards while keeping its strategic programme outside the safeguards regime, and the Nuclear Suppliers Group granted India a waiver in September 2008.
Answer: (A) — Both true and R is the explanation. The civilian–military separation, IAEA safeguards on civilian sites, and the September 2008 NSG waiver together opened the door for India's return to mainstream civil-nuclear trade after Pokhran-I (1974) had triggered isolation.
⚠️ Memorise These Dates & Names
1948 — Atomic Energy Commission (Bhabha). 1954 — Department of Atomic Energy. Oct 1964 — Chinese N-test. 1968 — NPT (India refused). May 1974 — Pokhran-I "Smiling Buddha" (Indira Gandhi). 1995 — India opposes indefinite NPT extension. May 1998 — Pokhran-II 5 tests (Vajpayee); India declared NWS. 2005 — Indo-US Civil Nuclear talks begin (Manmohan Singh-Bush). Sep 2008 — NSG waiver. 2014 — Act East. 2009 — first BRICS leaders' summit. 2017→2021 — Quad revived; leaders' summit. 2018 — Wuhan Summit. Jun 2020 — Galwan. 2023 — G20 Summit, New Delhi.

Frequently Asked Questions

When did India conduct its first nuclear test?

India conducted its first nuclear test on 18 May 1974 at Pokhran in Rajasthan, code-named 'Smiling Buddha' or Pokhran-I. India described it as a 'peaceful nuclear explosion'. It demonstrated India's capability and prompted the formation of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) in 1975.

What was Pokhran-II?

Pokhran-II was the series of five nuclear tests conducted by India on 11 and 13 May 1998 at Pokhran, Rajasthan, under PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee. India formally declared itself a nuclear-weapon state, triggering temporary international sanctions and later strategic recognition.

What is India's No First Use nuclear doctrine?

India's No First Use (NFU) doctrine, declared after Pokhran-II in 1998 and formalised in 2003, commits India to use nuclear weapons only in retaliation against a nuclear attack. It emphasises credible minimum deterrence and a defensive nuclear posture.

Why did India refuse to sign NPT and CTBT?

India refused the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) as discriminatory — recognising only five Nuclear Weapon States and freezing the global nuclear order. India argued for universal, non-discriminatory disarmament.

What is the Quad?

The Quad (Quadrilateral Security Dialogue) is a strategic forum of India, the US, Japan and Australia. Originally formed in 2007 and revived in 2017, it works for a free, open and rules-based Indo-Pacific, particularly amid Chinese assertiveness.

How has Indian foreign policy evolved since 1991?

Since the 1991 reforms, Indian foreign policy has moved from idealist non-alignment to pragmatic multi-alignment — deeper US ties, continued Russian partnership, the Look East/Act East policy, BRICS, the Quad and active Global South engagement, while preserving strategic autonomy.

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Class 12 Political Science — Politics in India Since Independence
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