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US defence policy places India as a security partner in Asia

From the detachment of the Cold War era to a realignment, long-term interests are driving deeper security ties between the two countries

10 min read | Updated On : Jun 25 2025 | 9:25 PM IST
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Sumit GangulySumit Ganguly
The India-US joint military exercise Yudh Abhyas conducted in Rajasthan in September 2024.

The India-US joint military exercise Yudh Abhyas conducted in Rajasthan in September 2024. Photo: PIB

During the Cold War, depending on the administration in office, India was either seen at worst as a mildly antagonistic state or, at best, a country that was mostly irrelevant to US security concerns. Some administrations, especially in the early Cold War, viewed India’s commitment to non-alignment as downright unhelpful. In fact, President Eisenhower’s staunchly anti-Communist Secretary of State, John Foster Dulles, referred to the doctrine as “immoral”. Others thought of it as quaint and pointless. President Richard Nixon and his opportunistic National Security Adviser (and subsequently Secretary of State), Henry Kissinger, were openly hostile towards India, especially after

Written By

Sumit Ganguly

Sumit GangulyŠumit Ganguly is a senior fellow and director of the Huntington Program on Strengthening US-India Relations at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, US.

First Published: Jun 24 2025 | 8:17 PM IST

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Blueprint Defence Magazine US Military US India relations Indian military Indo-US relationship military history