What neighbourhood?
It is easy to imagine the sensitive intellectual of Southasia wringing his hands in dismay at the peripheral place the region occupies in India's public discourse. You too would empathise with such an individual if you were to compare the Indian media's breathless, extensive reporting on the rise of Barack Obama in the United States to the relatively lacklustre, limited coverage accorded to the advent of democracy in Nepal and Bhutan, momentous developments both. Our sensitive intellectual would not be wrong in reaching a depressing conclusion: Indians have lost interest in their neighbourhood.
Policy wonks in New Delhi are likely to dismiss this perception as gross exaggeration, symptomatic of the neighbourhood's inferiority complex about India. Yet it cannot be denied that the middle-class Indian – the driving force behind India's foreign policy – has turned his gaze away from the impoverished neighbourhood, to look wistfully at those distant countries offering him opportunities to earn his millions. Globalisation and liberalisation has removed his fetters; his wealth and influence have grown exponentially; he struts around the world believing it to be his stage. The middle-class Indian has projected his aspirations as those of India's, exulting in the description of his country as an emerging power and an economic powerhouse of the future.