The Underlying Logic of India-Nordic Engagement

 

Author : Harsh V. Pant

Originally Published Mint 

Published on: May 19, 2026

 

The India-Nordic Summit peaks of New Delhi’s attempt to acquire new strategic options through partnerships. In a fractured world, that’s what we need.

The third India-Nordic Summit in Oslo this week is significant not because it promises dramatic geopolitical theatre, but because it reflects the steady institutionalization of partnerships between India and some of the world’s most technologically advanced and innovation-driven democracies amid deep global uncertainty.

In an era marked by fragmentation, supply-chain anxieties and sharpening great-power rivalries, New Delhi is broadening its strategic options through pragmatic and low-friction partnerships that can deliver tangible economic and technological gains.

More importantly, the summit underlines the evolution of Indian foreign policy from a largely reactive framework to one that is selective, interest-driven and strategically diversified.

 

For full article, please open the link:

https://www.orfonline.org/research/the-underlying-logic-of-india-nordic-engagement

 

 

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Professor Harsh V. Pant is Honorary Member of the Romanian Institute for Europe-Asia Studies – IRSEA.

* Professor Harsh V. Pant is Vice President – Studies and Foreign Policy at Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi. He is a Professor of International Relations with King's India Institute at King’s College London. He is also Director (Honorary) of Delhi School of Transnational Affairs at Delhi University. Professor Pant has been a Visiting Professor at the Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore; a Visiting Professor at Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi; a Visiting Fellow at the Center for the Advanced Study of India, University of Pennsylvania; a Visiting Scholar at the Center for International Peace and Security Studies, McGill University; a Non-Resident Fellow with the Wadhwani Chair in US-India Policy Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC; and an Emerging Leaders Fellow at the Australia-India Institute, University of Melbourne. Professor Pant's current research is focused on Asian security issues. His most recent books include India and Global Governance: A Rising Power and Its Discontents (Routledge), Politics and Geopolitics: Decoding India’s Neighbourhood Challenge (Rupa), America and the Indo-Pacific: Trump and Beyond (Routledge), New Directions in India’s Foreign Policy: Theory and Praxis (Cambridge University Press), India’s Nuclear Policy (Oxford University Press), The US Pivot and Indian Foreign Policy (Palgrave Macmillan), Handbook of Indian Defence Policy (Routledge), and India’s Afghan Muddle (HarperCollins). Professor Pant writes regularly for various Indian and international media outlets including the Japan Times, the Wall Street Journal, the National (UAE), the Hindustan Times, and the Telegraph.

 

The opinions expressed in this article are the authors’ own and do not necessarily reflect the official policy, position or view of IRSEA