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ID137121
Title ProperRegional cooperation in South Asia
Other Title Informationpresent is depressing and the future is gloomy
LanguageENG
AuthorSreenivasan, T. P.
Summary / Abstract (Note)SAARC has not really realised its full potential because conditions do not exist in the neighbourhood for economic cooperation. Bilateral disputes plague the association and, without mutual trust, no regional organisation can function effectively. India has gained more by its association with the ASEAN rather than with SAARC. Even the declarations of SAARC are rarely implemented
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vision of SAARC becoming a corner stone of India’s foreign policy has already suffered a setback. Pakistan raised bilateral issues on the floor of the United Nations even in September 2014, thus violating the spirit of bilateralism and regional cooperation. Other states in the region are also not ready yet to work in a spirit of cooperation. In the meantime, SAARC can operate only on the basis of the lowest common denominators among its members. India would continue to improve its relations with each of its neighbours so that SAARC could become a true regional organisation like the European Union or the ASEAN. In the current situation in the Asia Pacific, characterised by rivalry between the US and China, such a transformation may be hard to accomplish.
`In' analytical NoteIndian Foreign Affairs Journal Vol.9, No.4; Oct-Dec.2014: p.326-331
Journal SourceIndian Foreign Affairs Journals 2014-12 9, 4
Standard NumberIndia