As middle powers in the Indo-Pacific seek to balance their relationships with the United States and China, they have increasingly looked toward alternative forums for regional cooperation to advance their interests. SAV has published a collection of South Asian perspectives on how middle powers in the Indo-Pacific, having gained more economic and strategic leverage in recent years, can forge new bilateral and trilateral partnerships outside of U.S. or China-led groupings. This emerging trend has the potential to restructure and disperse the balance of power in the Indo-Pacific region.
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A Nation-Wide NRC: Potential Fallout for India-Bangladesh Relations
A shadow of doubt and anxiety hangs over Bangladesh about…
Resolving Balochistan’s Multidimensional Crisis: Reconciliation and Reforms
Pakistan is a fragile democracy, and the treatment of Balochistan…
Data Secrecy is Stymieing Climate Cooperation in South Asia
Two events in June 2023 highlighted how climate-induced disasters increasingly…
کواڈ کو انڈو پیسیفک میں جوہری خطروں سے نمٹنا ہو گا
کواڈ کے نام سے معروف چار فریقی سیکیورٹی ڈائیلاگ کے…
SAV Q&A with Amira Jadoon –Explaining the Broader Implications of Islamic State-Khorasan’s Moscow Attack
On March 22, 2024, Islamic State-Khorasan Province (ISKP) killed approximately 137…
India’s Electoral Bond Conundrum
On February 15, 2024, India’s Supreme Court struck down the…
Lakshadweep and Agalega: Implications of India’s Naval Dominance
In February 2024, India bagged two achievements in the Indian…
Integrating Climate Diplomacy and Water Management in South Asia
Water in South Asia has always had a complicated history,…