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Article
21 Mar 2026
Why in news?
As the West Asia conflict chokes global oil supplies and pushes prices sharply higher, the US is considering temporarily removing sanctions on Iranian crude oil already at sea — a move that could significantly benefit India, once a major buyer of Iranian oil.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- Background: How Did We Get Here
- Why This is Strategically Significant?
- Can India import Iranian oil
- India-Iran Oil Trade: A History of Sanctions, Deals, and Disruptions
Background: How Did We Get Here?
- In response to the US-Israel offensive that began on February 28, Iran effectively choked vessel movements through the Strait of Hormuz.
- The Strait accounts for one-fifth of global oil and LNG flows.
- Its effective closure, combined with attacks on energy infrastructure across the region, has caused a sharp surge in global oil prices.
- While some oil is being rerouted through alternative passages, the bulk of supply through the Strait has gone offline.
Why This is Strategically Significant?
- Amid rising oil prices due to the West Asia conflict, the US is considering easing sanctions on Iranian crude already at sea to stabilise supply.
- This would be a temporary and partial unsanctioning, not a permanent policy shift.
- The Iranian oil, if released, would primarily divert supplies that were previously heading to China — redirecting them to global markets.
- It mirrors the earlier month-long universal waiver on sanctioned Russian crude, suggesting the US is willing to use sanctions policy flexibly as an economic weapon.
Can India import Iranian oil
- With the US weighing a temporary suspension of sanctions on Iranian crude already at sea, the big question is — will India seize the opportunity?
- Industry analysts say Indian refiners are well-placed to act fast if a waiver is announced.
- India's Historical Ties with Iranian Oil
- India was once a major buyer of Iranian crude, importing significant volumes of Iranian Light and Heavy grades.
- Key reasons: strong refinery compatibility and favourable commercial terms (discounted pricing).
- Following US sanctions tightening in 2018, India stopped Iranian imports from May 2019, replacing those volumes with Middle Eastern, US, and other grades.
- Current Iranian Oil Availability
- Estimated 170 million barrels of Iranian crude currently on the water, including floating storage and in-transit cargoes (Kpler data).
- A portion of this remains unsold — representing potential incremental supply if sanctions ease or enforcement weakens.
- This is a significant swing factor in global crude flows.
- Can Indian Refiners Handle Iranian Crude
- Indian refiners retain the ability to re-integrate Iranian barrels with minimal operational adjustments, given:
- Prior experience in processing Iranian grades
- Presence of established trading setups
- The transition would be similar to how India rapidly scaled up Russian crude imports after Western sanctions created an opportunity.
- India's rapid pivot to Russian oil after Western sanctions offers a clear blueprint for Iran. Analysts say a similar rapid increase could be seen with Iranian crude if conditions align.
- Indian refiners retain the ability to re-integrate Iranian barrels with minimal operational adjustments, given:
- India's Oil Import Vulnerability — The Bigger Picture
- India depends on imports for over 88% of its crude oil requirement.
- 2.5–2.7 million bpd of India's crude imports — roughly half of total oil imports — have transited the Strait of Hormuz in recent months (longer-term average: ~40%).
- The Strait's effective closure has made diversification of supply sources — including potential Iranian crude — an urgent energy security priority for India.
India-Iran Oil Trade: A History of Sanctions, Deals, and Disruptions
- India has not imported any Iranian oil since May 2019, when the US sanctions waiver for major Iranian crude buyers expired.
- Complying was non-negotiable — non-compliance would have exposed Indian oil companies to US secondary sanctions.
- Pre-Sanctions Era: Iran as a Key Supplier
- In 2009-10, India imported 22.1 million tonnes of Iranian crude — 14.4% of India's total oil imports of 153.6 million tonnes.
- Iran was a regular and significant supplier even during earlier, milder sanctions periods.
- As international sanctions tightened — hitting payment channels and logistics — import volumes steadily fell during 2010-15.
- The Innovative Rupee Payment Mechanism (2012–2015)
- During the peak sanctions period, India and Iran devised a workaround:
- Indian refiners paid 45% of oil payments in rupees into accounts held by Iranian banks in India.
- Iran used these rupees to buy Indian goods — effectively a barter-linked arrangement.
- The remaining 55% was deferred until sanctions were lifted.
- Once the Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA) formally lifted sanctions, all pending payments were cleared.
- Major Indian buyers during this period: Essar Oil (now Nayara Energy) and MRPL (Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals).
- During the peak sanctions period, India and Iran devised a workaround:
- The Post-Nuclear Deal Boom (2015–2017)
- With sanctions lifted, Indian imports surged sharply:
- 2015-16: 13.6 million tonnes
- 2016-17: 27.1 million tonnes — Iran became India's third-largest oil source, behind only Saudi Arabia and Iraq
- Iranian oil accounted for 12.6% of India's total crude imports of ~215 million tonnes in 2016-17.
- Iran sweetened the deal by offering Indian refiners discounted shipping and extended credit periods.
- The Second Decline: Trump, Tensions & Diversification (2017–2019)
- Volumes began falling again from 2017-18 (22.6 million tonnes) due to three factors:
- India-Iran tensions over development rights of a gas field in Iran.
- India's deliberate diversification of oil supply sources.
- Trump's withdrawal from the JCPOA and reimposition of sanctions — the defining factor.
- A US waiver was granted to major buyers, but it expired in May 2019. Imports crashed to just 2 million tonnes in 2019-20 and went to zero thereafter.
- Volumes began falling again from 2017-18 (22.6 million tonnes) due to three factors:
Article
21 Mar 2026
Why in news?
The Union Home Ministry has asked WhatsApp to implement measures like blocking device IDs, detecting scams, and strengthening AI tools to curb the rising menace of “digital arrest” scams in India.
A high-level Inter-Departmental Committee (IDC), set up by the Union Home Ministry in December 2025, met with WhatsApp representatives and asked the platform to implement these measures.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- What is a Digital Arrest Scam?
- Background: Government’s Response
- Key Measures WhatsApp Has Been Asked to Implement
- SIM Binding Directive — A Separate but Related Order
- WhatsApp's Commitments to Law Enforcement
What is Digital Arrest Scam?
- In a digital arrest scam, fraudsters:
- Impersonate law enforcement officers (CBI, police, ATS, etc.) on video calls.
- Tell victims they are under investigation for serious crimes.
- Psychologically trap them and coerce them into transferring large sums of money to avoid "arrest".
- These scams are entirely fake — no real agency conducts arrests over video calls.
- How Big is the Problem?
- 1.23 lakh cases of digital arrest were recorded in 2024 alone — nearly three times the number in 2022.
- Total estimated losses: nearly ₹3,000 crore.
- The Supreme Court took suo motu cognizance (acted on its own) of the issue in October 2024, expressing "grave concern".
- Fraudsters use mule accounts (third-party bank accounts) to move crores across banks and state borders within minutes, making them hard to trace.
Background: Government’s Response
- The Inter-Departmental Committee (IDC) was constituted by the Union Home Ministry in December 2025
- It brings together multiple government departments to tackle digital arrest scams in a coordinated manner
- The third meeting of this committee took place recently, where WhatsApp representatives made detailed submissions about the platform's existing detection and enforcement mechanisms.
Key Measures WhatsApp Has Been Asked to Implement
- WhatsApp has been asked to implement various measures to tackle the threat of digital arrest, including the impersonation of law enforcement officers to perpetrate the scam.
- Blocking Device IDs of Repeat Offenders
- WhatsApp has been asked to assess and block the Device IDs (unique identifiers of phones/devices) used in digital arrest scams.
- This would prevent repeat offenders from simply creating new accounts on new or the same devices.
- A detailed proposal is expected within 45 days.
- Skype-like Safety Features
- WhatsApp has been asked to introduce safety features similar to Microsoft's Skype, including:
- More information about who is calling
- Warning signals for suspicious or unverified accounts
- Better detection of scam networks
- A proposal on these features is expected within 30 days.
- WhatsApp has been asked to introduce safety features similar to Microsoft's Skype, including:
- Retaining Deleted Account Data
- WhatsApp must ensure user data from deleted accounts is retained for at least 180 days, as required under IT Rules, 2021.
- This is critical for law enforcement agencies investigating fraud cases.
- Blocking Harmful APK Files
- APK files are Android app installation files — scammers often use malicious APKs to gain access to victims' devices.
- WhatsApp has been asked to strengthen its technology to detect and block such harmful files and similar content.
- Technical measures are expected within one month.
- AI & Machine Learning to Detect Impersonation
- WhatsApp is expanding its AI and machine learning systems to detect:
- Impersonation of law enforcement officers
- Misuse of official logos (Delhi Police, Mumbai Police, CBI, ATS, etc.)
- Synthetic or AI-generated/deepfake content used in video call scams
- The platform has already deployed logo detection and media matching systems to identify and remove impersonating accounts.
- Periodic progress updates will be shared with the government.
- WhatsApp is expanding its AI and machine learning systems to detect:
SIM Binding Directive — A Separate but Related Order
- In November 2025, the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) directed all app-based communication platforms — WhatsApp, Telegram, Signal, Snapchat — to implement SIM binding.
- SIM binding (SIM linkage) means the app can only be used with one specific, active SIM card, eliminating anonymous or multi-device misuse.
- This strengthens user traceability and national security compliance.
- WhatsApp has committed to implementing this within 4–6 months and submitting an Action Taken Report (ATR) by March-end.
WhatsApp's Commitments to Law Enforcement
- Timely response to flagged fraud networks and impersonation reports.
- Compliance with updated IT Rules for identification and labelling of AI-generated or deepfake content.
- Enhanced cooperation with investigative agencies on digital extortion cases.
Article
21 Mar 2026
Why in the News?
- The Union government has proposed the Central Armed Police Forces (General Administration) Bill, 2026, to codify IPS deputation and address recent Supreme Court directions.
What’s in Today’s Article?
- About CAPF (Basics, Existing System of Deputation, Issues, etc.)
- CAPF Bill 2026 (Key Provisions, Rationale Behind Bill, Concerns, etc.)
Central Armed Police Forces and IPS Deputation
- The CAPFs are key pillars of India’s internal security architecture.
- They include forces such as CRPF, BSF, ITBP, CISF, and SSB, which perform functions like border guarding, counter-insurgency, and maintaining internal security.
- Historically, leadership positions in CAPFs have been shared between:
- Cadre officers (direct recruits within CAPFs)
- Indian Police Service (IPS) officers on deputation
- IPS officers, being part of an All India Service under Article 312, have traditionally occupied senior leadership roles in CAPFs to ensure coordination between the Centre and States.
Existing System of Deputation
- Before the proposed Bill, IPS deputation in CAPFs was governed by executive orders.
- Around 20% of posts at the DIG level are reserved for IPS officers
- Around 50% of posts at the IG level are filled through IPS deputation
- There was no comprehensive statutory framework governing these appointments, leading to ambiguity and litigation.
Structural Issues in CAPFs
- The controversy also highlights deeper structural challenges:
- Around 10 lakh personnel in CAPFs
- Only about 13,000 Group A officers
- Nearly 93,000 vacancies across ranks
- These issues point to systemic gaps in manpower planning, promotions, and cadre management.
Key Provisions of the CAPF Bill 2026
- The proposed Bill seeks to formalise and expand IPS deputation in CAPFs.
- 50% of Inspector General (IG) posts to be filled by IPS officers
- At least 67% of Additional Director General (ADG) posts to be held by IPS officers
- All posts of Special DG and DG to be reserved for IPS officers
- The Bill aims to create an umbrella legal framework to regulate recruitment and service conditions of Group A officers in CAPFs.
Rationale Behind the Bill
- Administrative Clarity: The absence of a statutory law led to fragmented rules and multiple court cases. The Bill aims to bring uniformity.
- Reducing Litigation: Frequent disputes between CAPF cadre officers and IPS officers have resulted in prolonged litigation. The Bill seeks to “avoid unnecessary litigation.”
- Strengthening Coordination: Since CAPFs operate closely with State police, IPS officers are considered essential for maintaining Centre-State coordination.
- National Security Imperative: CAPFs perform critical roles such as Border security, Counter-insurgency operations and Internal security management.
- The government argues that experienced IPS leadership enhances operational efficiency.
Supreme Court Judgment and Policy Response
- The Bill comes in the backdrop of a May 2025 Supreme Court judgment, which directed progressive reduction of IPS deputation in CAPFs up to IG level.
- Additionally:
- CAPF officers were granted Organised Group A Services (OGAS) status
- The Court called for a cadre review and new service rules
- The government’s Bill is seen as a legislative response to balance judicial directions with administrative needs.
Concerns Raised by CAPF Officers
- The proposal has faced strong opposition from retired and serving CAPF officers.
- Career Stagnation
- Limited senior posts for cadre officers
- First promotion often takes 15-18 years
- Perceived Discrimination
- Cadre officers argue that reserving top posts for IPS officers undermines their career progression despite operational experience.
- Ignoring Judicial Intent
- Critics contend that the Bill contradicts the Supreme Court’s directive to reduce IPS deputation.
Significance of the Bill
- Institutionalising Administrative Practices: The Bill converts executive practices into statutory provisions, reducing ambiguity.
- Federal Balance: By emphasising IPS deputation, it reinforces Centre-State administrative linkages.
- Civil Services Reform Debate: The issue has reopened debates on:
- Role of All India Services
- Autonomy of specialised forces
- Career progression within uniformed services
Article
21 Mar 2026
Context:
- On the occasion of World Water Day (22 March), there is the need to highlight the deep contradiction in India’s relationship with water—culturally revered yet economically undervalued and environmentally mismanaged.
- With rising population pressure, urbanisation, and climate change, India faces a looming water crisis that threatens growth, sustainability, and human well-being.
The Water Stress Reality:
- Shrinking availability:
- India has 18% of the global population but only 4% of freshwater resources.
- Per capita water availability declined from 1,816 cubic metres (2001) to 1,486 cubic metres (2021).
- It is expected to approach the water scarcity threshold (1,000 cubic metres) by 2050.
- Demand-supply imbalance:
- Rapid urbanisation and industrialisation are pushing demand beyond sustainable supply.
- Water scarcity is emerging as a binding constraint on economic growth and investment.
Climate Change and Hydrological Uncertainty:
- Erratic monsoon patterns:
- For example, rainfall increased in 55% of tehsils, but in the form of intense short-duration events causing floods.
- 11% of tehsils, especially in the Indo-Gangetic Plains, face declining rainfall during critical sowing periods.
- Rising disaster vulnerability:
- 80% of India’s population lives in districts vulnerable to hydro-meteorological disasters.
- Extreme climate events (2019–2023) caused losses of around ₹5 lakh crore.
Reframing Water as a Strategic Resource:
- Recognising green water - The invisible asset:
- Focus has been on blue water (rivers, lakes, groundwater), neglecting green water (soil moisture).
- Around 60% of rainfall is stored in soil globally. Soil organic carbon enhances water retention.
- Policy imperatives: Promote regenerative agriculture (mulching, no-till farming, cover cropping), protect forest ecosystems for watershed stability, and need for a National Green Water Mission.
- Agricultural water use - Addressing structural distortions:
- Current issues: Agriculture consumes ~90% of India’s water. Low water productivity ($0.52 per cubic metre, far below global standards). Policy bias toward water-intensive crops (rice) due to MSP and subsidies.
- Reform strategy: Shift 3.6 million hectares from rice to millets and pulses. This will potentially save ~29 billion cubic metres of water annually.
- Triple dividend: Nutritional security, environmental sustainability, and fiscal savings.
- Circular water economy - From waste to wealth:
- Current status: Only 28% of urban wastewater is treated. This means reuse remains minimal.
- Potential gains: A treated used-water economy could unlock a market worth Rs 3.2 lakh crore by 2047, recover biogas and fertilisers, and create over 1 lakh new jobs.
- Key measures: City-level reuse targets, public-private partnerships (PPP), and behavioural shift - “wastewater as resource”.
- Urban water management - Sponge cities approach:
- Challenges: Expansion of built-up areas (increased by ~33% since 2005) reduces groundwater recharge. Urban flooding due to impermeable surfaces. Loss of water bodies (e.g., over half in Delhi).
- Solutions: Develop blue-green infrastructure (wetlands, urban forests, permeable surfaces). For example, Yamuna Biodiversity Park restoration.
- Additional measure: Proposal for Swachh Bharat Mission 3.0 focusing on peri-urban waste management.
- Water governance reforms:
- Key issues: Inefficient pricing and distorted tariffs. Poor regulation and fragmented institutional framework. Inequity - poor pay more via informal water markets (tankers).
- Reform agenda: Transparent water accounting using digital public infrastructure. Bulk water trading mechanisms. Rational pricing - cost-reflective tariffs for capable users, targeted subsidies for vulnerable groups.
Key Challenges and Way Forward:
- Policy inertia: In agriculture and subsidies. Integrate water-energy-food nexus into policymaking.
- Fragmented governance: Across states and sectors. Leverage technology for real-time monitoring and efficiency.
- Climate variability: Increasing unpredictability. Align economic incentives toward water conservation and efficiency
- Urban mismanagement: Encroachment of water bodies. Promote nature-based solutions and ecosystem restoration.
- Low public awareness: Behavioural issues. Encourage community participation and decentralised governance.
Conclusion:
- India stands at a critical juncture where water can either become a constraint or a catalyst.
- Moving from viewing water as a free and infinite resource to recognising it as a finite strategic national asset is imperative.
- A holistic approach—combining ecological wisdom, economic rationality, and institutional reform—can transform India’s water crisis into an opportunity for sustainable and inclusive growth.
Article
21 Mar 2026
Context
- The integrity of the judiciary is fundamental to democracy, yet it is not immune to arrogance, corruption, and inefficiency.
- Meaningful reform must extend beyond moral reflection to include structural reform.
- These concerns gain urgency in light of recent actions by the Supreme Court of India, where tensions between judicial authority and democratic freedoms have become increasingly visible.
Judicial Sensitivity and the Question of Censorship
- The ban on an NCERT Class VIII textbook raises serious concerns about censorship, procedural fairness, and natural justice.
- A complete blanket ban was imposed, and those responsible for the content were penalised without a hearing, undermining due process.
- The passages addressed issues such as judicial delay, case backlog, and judicial corruption, all widely acknowledged realities.
- References to ethical standards like the Bangalore Principles of Judicial Conduct and accountability mechanisms indicate informed critique rather than malicious intent.
- However, the Court viewed such discussion as an attack on its dignity, highlighting growing institutional sensitivity to criticism.
Freedom of Speech and Constitutional Boundaries
- The ban directly impacts the freedom of speech guaranteed under Article 19(1)(a).
- Restrictions are permissible only under Article 19(2) on specific grounds such as public order, defamation, or contempt of court, and must be imposed through law made by the state.
- Judicial orders do not fall within this definition, as clarified in Naresh Shridhar Mirajkar vs State of Maharashtra.
- Under the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971, contempt requires material that scandalises the court or obstructs justice.
- General references to systemic issues fail to meet this threshold. The absence of a rigorous constitutional scrutiny in determining contempt raises concerns about the misuse of judicial power.
The Paradox of Judicial Power
- Courts serve as the ultimate protectors of fundamental rights, yet when they impose restrictions such as book bans, citizens are left without effective remedy.
- This creates a paradox where the guardian of rights becomes the source of rights limitation.
- Such actions risk weakening judicial legitimacy and public confidence in democratic institutions.
Global Lessons on Judicial Reform
- Across democracies, judicial credibility is strengthened through transparency and accountability.
- Organisations like Transparency International have highlighted concerns about judicial corruption.
- In Kenya, reforms under Willy Mutunga introduced judicial ombudspersons, performance committees, and participatory mechanisms.
- These reforms significantly improved public trust, demonstrating that acknowledging problems, rather than suppressing criticism, leads to stronger institutions. Institutional reform thrives on openness, not silence.
Acknowledgment Within the Indian Context
- Indian courts have themselves recognized internal challenges. In K. Veeraswami vs Union of India, judges were held to fall within the scope of anti-corruption law, emphasising judicial integrity and accountability.
- The judgment stressed that even a single act of corruption can damage the entire system.
- The existence of in-house procedures for addressing misconduct reflects awareness of potential ethical breaches.
- Such mechanisms affirm that maintaining public trust requires continuous vigilance and accountability.
The Imperative of Introspection and Reform
- The argument that criticism must present a balanced view cannot justify censorship.
- Enforcing such a standard risk making free expression conditional and ineffective.
- Democracy depends on dissent, critical voices, and informed debate.
- Addressing issues like systemic corruption and judicial delay requires honest acknowledgment. Suppressing criticism obstructs reform and weakens institutional credibility.
- A judiciary open to scrutiny strengthens its own foundation and reinforces democratic values.
Conclusion
- The textbook ban reflects a deeper tension between institutional authority and constitutional freedoms.
- Protecting judicial dignity cannot come at the cost of civil liberties. Reform must be structural, intellectual, and moral, supported by transparency and accountability.
- A judiciary committed to self-correction, openness, and democratic principles becomes the true guardian of justice.
- By embracing criticism rather than silencing it, it reinforces the rule of law and sustains the vitality of democracy.
Article
21 Mar 2026
Context
- A largely civilised debate in India over its response to the Israeli-American war on Iran reveals deeper tensions within foreign policy: between pragmatism, morality, ideology, and national interest.
- The issue goes beyond a single conflict and reflects how India positions itself in an increasingly globalised and interdependent world.
Democratising Foreign Policy Discourse
- Foreign policy is no longer the exclusive domain of professional diplomats.
- While expertise is built through experience, research, and the ability to interpret complex developments, it is not an innate skill.
- Public engagement is both valid and necessary in a democracy, as citizens are directly affected by global decisions.
- Diverse opinions, even if not formally trained, contribute meaningfully to national debate and ensure that policy remains accountable.
The Centrality of National Interest
- Foreign policy fundamentally serves to protect and promote national interest, which includes sovereignty, territorial integrity, and economic development.
- The responsibility to define and pursue these interests lies with the government in power, making foreign policy inherently dynamic.
- Political actors often shift positions depending on whether they are in power or opposition, demonstrating the pragmatic and adaptive nature of international decision-making.
- Jawaharlal Nehru described foreign policy as essentially selfish, governed primarily by national priorities rather than universal moral principles.
- This realist perspective emphasises survival and growth over idealism.
Ideology vs Pragmatism
- Although ideological orientation can influence foreign policy, it should not dominate it.
- Effective policy requires objective decision-making, even when choices conflict with public sentiment or ethical considerations.
- Governments must sometimes act in ways that appear uncomfortable but are necessary for long-term national benefit.
- At the same time, transparency and public accountability remain essential. In a democracy, governments must explain their decisions clearly, allowing citizens to understand, evaluate, and respond to foreign policy actions.
Critique of Strategic Autonomy
- The term strategic autonomy is often used to describe India’s foreign policy but lacks clarity.
- The concept appears unnecessarily complex, raising questions about why simpler terms like independence are not preferred.
- Labels can obscure rather than clarify policy, creating distance between decision-makers and the public.
- Ultimately, the effectiveness of foreign policy lies in its outcomes, not in the terminology used to describe it.
India’s Calculated Response to the Iran Conflict
- India’s response to the Iran conflict reflects a careful calculation of its strategic and economic priorities.
- Strong ties with the United States, its largest trading partner, are crucial for technology, defence capabilities, and broader cooperation.
- Similarly, the Gulf states play a vital role due to the presence of millions of Indian workers, whose remittances significantly contribute to the economy, and as key suppliers of energy security.
- These considerations justify a cautious approach, avoiding direct confrontation or strong alignment with Iran.
- The government’s stance reflects a prioritisation of tangible interests over symbolic gestures.
The Limits of Pragmatism and Ideological Signals and Diplomatic Timing
- The Limits of Pragmatism
- Despite these constraints, a purely calculated approach can overlook the value of diplomatic sensitivity.
- Expressing condolences for the assassination of Ali Khamenei could have demonstrated goodwill without undermining strategic interests.
- Such gestures carry symbolic importance and help sustain long-standing relationships.
- Foreign policy need not be devoid of nuance; even within a realist framework, there is room for balance between interests and relationships. Small diplomatic actions can reinforce trust and preserve historical ties.
- Ideological Signals and Diplomatic Timing
- The timing of Narendra Modi’s visit to Israel raised concerns about perception and alignment.
- While the visit itself reflects growing bilateral relations, its proximity to the conflict created an impression of ideological affinity.
- In international relations, timing can significantly influence how actions are interpreted, sometimes overshadowing their intent.
Conclusion
- India’s foreign policy demonstrates the strengths and limits of a realist approach rooted in national interest.
- While strategic priorities, economic ties, and security concerns justify cautious decision-making, effective diplomacy also requires attention to perception, history, and symbolism.
- A successful foreign policy balances calculation with sensitivity, ensuring that immediate interests do not undermine long-term relationships.
- In a complex global environment, the challenge lies in maintaining independence, exercising strategic judgment, and communicating decisions clearly to both domestic and international audiences.
Online Test
21 Mar 2026
CAMP-GT-05
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
21 Mar 2026
CAMP-GT-05
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 60 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.
Online Test
21 Mar 2026
CAMP-HINDI-EVT-04
Questions : 50 Questions
Time Limit : 0 Mins
Expiry Date : May 31, 2026, 11:59 p.m.