The Uncertain Future of U.S. Relations With India

美国与印度关系的未定未来

The Foreign Affairs Interview

2025-07-31

1 小时 8 分钟
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In a recent essay in Foreign Affairs, the scholar and former U.S. official Ashley J. Tellis makes a provocative argument about India’s foreign policy. In a piece titled “India’s Great-Power Delusions,” Tellis argues that Indian policymakers have their priorities wrong. Instead of pushing for what they call “multipolarity” in the international system, Indian leaders should align more closely with the United States. Tellis insists that India will be able to fend off China, its far stronger rival in Asia, only with U.S. backing. But it may lose that support if it continues to express skepticism about U.S. leadership and courts U.S. adversaries. Tellis’s essay has provoked huge debate—in Washington, in New Delhi, and in the pages of Foreign Affairs. In this episode, Dan Kurtz-Phelan brings Tellis into conversation with two of his critics: the former Indian foreign secretary Nirupama Rao and the analyst Dhruva Jaishankar. Kurtz-Phelan spoke with them on July 25, a few days before the Trump administration announced 25 percent tariffs on India, the latest twist in ongoing negotiations with New Delhi over a new trade deal. Tellis, Rao, and Jaishankar debate India’s pathways to power in the September/October 2025 issue of Foreign Affairs. Their disagreements touch not just on the directions of Indian and U.S. foreign policies but also on the very nature of international order in the twenty-first century.
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  • I'm Dan Kurtz-Valen and this is the Foreign Affairs Interview.

  • India can pursue multi-alignment.

  • India can pursue relations with other states.

  • But I can't see how it can maintain a productive relationship with the US

  • if some of those relationships undercut core American objectives.

  • You have to understand that India is in the midst of a civilizational transition.

  • We are seeking to balance tradition with modernity, pluralism and nationalism.

  • Striving for a multipolar order in which Indian interests are to be defended and secured.

  • is a natural aspiration for a rising India.

  • In a recent essay in Foreign Affairs,

  • the scholar and former US official Ashley Tellis made a provocative argument about India's foreign policy.

  • In a piece titled India's Great Power Delusions,

  • Tellis argued that Indian policymakers have got their priorities wrong.

  • Instead of pushing for what they call multi-polarity in the international system,

  • Indian leaders should align more closely with the United States.

  • Telus insisted that India will be able to fend off China,

  • its far stronger rival in Asia, only with American backing.

  • But it may lose that support if it continues to express skepticism about U.S.

  • leadership and court's U.S.

  • adversaries.