With Kautilya as Guide
India should learn to differentiate among its neighbours. Nepal and Sri Lanka cannot be spoken of in the same breath as Pakistan and Bangladesh.
A good policy, according to Kautilya, must achieve four things: to acquire what the nation does not have, to preserve what it has, to enhance what is preserved, and to use for the welfare of the people what is enhanced. Foreign policy, too, has to serve these ends. Kautilya also wrote that power was the only means to ensure friendly relations with other countries. This fundamental precept must serve as a guide to the foreign policy of a future central government in India. And, as power is best achieved by strengthening a country´s national security, this must be given top priority in India´s foreign policy.
Neighbouring countries, quite understandably, play a vital role in Indian foreign policy projections. At the same time, New Delhi has tended to judge all of India´s South Asian neighbours by the same yardstick. It has taken us a long time to realise that such a policy has stood on foundations that are patently shaky. To place Nepal and Sri Lanka in the same category as Pakistan and Bangladesh is simply absurd.