Redefining India-Nepal Engagement Is Easier Said Than Done

India’s attempts to reach out to Oli have been a serious exercise towards course correction in its neighbourhood approach, but is that enough?

Upon his return from India, Nepal’s Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli said in Kathmandu that his visit was “significant and fruitful”. The visit was indeed significant as it sought to repair the serious rupture in the relations between the two neighbours since 2015.

It was also fruitful on all visible counts. India relaxed all protocols to send home minister Rajnath Singh to receive Oli at the airport. This was just short of Prime Minister Narendra Modi himself going there, as Manmohan Singh did in June 2006 when he welcomed then Nepali Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala.

Koirala had been put up in a hotel; Oli, on the other hand, was accommodated in the Rashtrapati Bhavan and offered a ceremonial guard of honour. He was also awarded an honorary doctorate degree by the Pantnagar Agricultural University. A long-pending proposal on linking Kathmandu with Raxaul through an electric rail track was inked and a new link, what Modi referred to as “Sagarmatha (Mount Everest) with the sagar (Indian Ocean)” through waterways was also promised this time around.

Oli also had a somewhat unscheduled, hour-long one-on-one discussions with Modi prior to official delegation-level talks. While the content of the meeting remains unknown, the Nepali side officially accepted that the discussion were serious and “any misunderstandings have already been eliminated”.

The explicit intent of Oli’s visit has been to redefine his country’s engagement with India. He said, “Nepal wants to develop a relationship with India and our neighbours (read China and Nepal) in line with the changing times in this 21st century”. The basis of this relationship, as Oli succeeded in spelling out in the joint statement issued on April 7, should be based on “equality, mutual trust, respect and benefit”. In his view, such a relationship could only develop through “friendship and trust” and not through treaties or/and agreements.

Throughout the discussions between Indian and Nepali interlocutors, the much-flaunted phrase of  ‘special relations between the two countries’ was not even uttered. Nor did the Nepali side come up with reassuring words when Modi said, “India and Nepal have close and deep connection on the matters of defence and security. We both agree to prevent the abuse of our open border, and to pursue our shared security interests.”

Oli discarded the widespread notion of Nepal’s dependence on India. He repeatedly underlined the importance of sovereignty, equality, non-interference and interdependence in Nepal’s dealings with India. Replying to Modi at the joint press conference after delegation level talks, Oli said: “Our countries…have many things to offer to each other. Interdependence takes many forms between our countries”. His foreign minister, on the eve of his visit to Delhi, had even calculated the amount of remittances that the Indian workers in Nepal send back home, without even referring to the reciprocal advantage accruing to Nepal from many more millions of the Nepalese residing and employed in India.

Oli left no one in India in any doubt that he had come to talk tough. He told Modi at the joint press conference, “I remember sharing this podium with Modiji two years ago. Since then, Nepal has experienced great transformation.”

The transformation he was referring to was the adoption of a new constitution, the defiance of India’s advise of accommodating the Madhes aspirations, the massive electoral victory for the Left Alliance forged under his leadership and the rise of China in Asia. His strongest political constituency is the rise of new Nepali nationalism under his leadership that seeks identity and comfort in asserting itself against India.

He is also backed by China’s generous economic support for infrastructure development in Nepal under the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), which India can never match in quantum and speed, as well as strong political support for the newly-forged Communist alliance. China’s support to Nepal, besides being an expression of the so-called neighbourly love, is an integral part of its strategic expansion in South Asia and the Indian Ocean.

Nepalese Prime Minister Khadga Prasad Oli inspects the guard of honour during his ceremonial reception at the forecourt of Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi. Credit: PTI

Oli’s assertion vis-à-vis India is to a great extent his emotional outburst in relation to his felt sense of hurt and humiliation by India. This was clearly evident in Oli’s address at the civic reception organised by the India Foundation where he recounted nearlt all of his complaints against India. While intervening in Nepal’s constitutional process and deploying economic coercion, India had also been seen as obstructing Oli’s personal access to power.

After the adoption of Nepali constitution, India prompted and supported the then prime minister and Nepali Congress leader Sushil Koirala to contest in October 2015 against Oli to deny him a pre-agreed prime ministership. Then, in July 2016, India welcomed the defection of the Maoist leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’ to become prime minister with the Nepali Congress support by toppling Oli’s government. In the December 2017 elections, India’s sympathies and support clearly lay with the forces pitted against the Oli-led Left coalition. It may not be too far off the point that Oli is asking for India’s trust and confidence not only for Nepal but in himself and his leadership. He is warning India against interference not only in Nepali affairs but also against him and his politics.

Pushpa Kamal Dahal ‘Prachanda’. Credit: Reuters

India realises that its moves against Oli-led Nepal have been excessive, unwarranted and counterproductive. It is also realising that there is a limit to its muscular and aggressive diplomacy, which has alienated one after another neighbour and been exploited by China to its advantage in South Asia. India’s attempts to reach out to Oli have, therefore, been a serious exercise towards course correction in its neighbourhood approach.

India is also willing to improve its project performance and enhance its economic support to Nepal in this exercise. Modi said publicly that “Both of us have agreed to speed up all possible connectivity projects, be it an oil pipeline, or integrated check posts, or the Terai roads”. However, it remains to be seen as to what extent India will succeed in delivering these projects expeditiously.

Modi’s promise of 2014 on connectivity hardly moved on the ground over the past four years, despite assurances of efficiency. Oli underlined this gap in his civic address. On the Kathmandu rail link project, first document has been signed only now, though the project proposal has been under discussion for over a decade. India will take a year to survey the project, then only will the two sides sit down to firm up the Indian commitment in terms of financial allocations and the timeline. Nepal wants this project to be completed in five years, but India is not ready to commit.

It may not come as a surprise to the Nepalese if China lays down the Kathmandu-Tibet rail link as promised by 2022, much before India makes a visible progress on the ground in its competing rail project. If India can establish smaller rail and road links and complete the petroleum pipeline project efficiently, much against its past record of delivery, its political standing in Nepal may surely improve. The project delays are not always and entirely politically driven. Real hurdles also come from lack of financial commitments, proper coordination amongst various Indian departments and agencies involved, and India’s diplomatic style. One wonders if there will be appropriate and early efforts to remove them.

But these changes may in no way suggest that India is prepared and willing to radically redefine its approach towards Nepal. India’s political security concerns were politely, gently, but firmly conveyed to Oli. Recall Modi’s references to security interests, abuse of open borders and “inclusive” democratic and federal order (reflective of Madhes concerns). A great deal of India’s response to Nepal in the coming months would depend upon the extent to which Oli will be able to moderate his dependence on the two most powerful sources of his political support, namely the India-assertive nationalist constituency and China.

In Delhi, Oli gave no indication of softening on these two counts. When asked about India’s apprehension on Chinese BRI, Oli said: “I think we are neutral. We are in centre between the two countries.” No one in Delhi’s strategic establishment wants to see Nepal at an equidistance between India and China. Even before coming to India, Oli had asked for equidistance between India and China and went to the extent to say that he would leverage his China policy to extract a better deal from India. China’s growing financial and political investments in Nepal behind Oli’s leadership may not even let Oli revisit his present foreign policy profile and priorities.

If Oli’s power permutations do not change in response to India’s sensitivities, there is no reason to assume that India will let its engagement with Nepal be redefined to its dislike and disadvantage. While Nepali leadership is charged with rising aspirations and confidence, so is its Indian counterpart, ambitious of playing a larger and assertive role in regional and world affairs. Keeping neighbours in its fold is a necessary precondition for the Indian policymakers with regard to their emerging role perception.

S.D. Muni is professor emeritus at Jawaharlal Nehru University and former special envoy and ambassador, government of India.

Oli Wants Level Playing Field for Chinese Companies in Power Trade With India

Nepal’s prime minster cites 2014 bilateral agreement to buttress argument that Indian power ministry guidelines are discriminatory.

New Delhi: Nepali prime minister K.P. Oli reiterated on Saturday that cross-border electricity trade with India has to be on the basis of the 2014 bilateral agreement, and not as per the guidelines framed by the Indian power ministry.

Oli is currently on his second visit to India as prime minister of Nepal. This is his first foreign trip since taking over the office again in February this year.

After arriving on Friday morning, he met with Congress president Rahul Gandhi and held discussions with captains of Indian industry.

On Saturday, the 66-year-old veteran communist leader held formal talks with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, following which they inaugurated an integrated check post and launched the construction of a petroleum products pipeline.

In his media statement after the discussions, Oli brought up the issue of not restricting cross-border electricity trade due to the nature of ownership of the power plant.

I appreciated the government of India’s initiative to have guidelines and rules for cross border trade of electricity. It is definitely a step ahead. However, I conveyed Nepal’s desire to see an early realisation of the open market provision of the power trade agreement which was concluded between us in 2014, thanks largely to Modiji’s positive direction.

Oli was referring to the Indian power ministry’s guidelines issued in December 2016 for cross-border trade in electricity. According to those rules, power plants owned or with majority stake by Indian public-sector companies and host government will require a one-time approval for electricity trade. All other projects can take part in cross-border power trade with India, but will be approved only on a case to case basis. This provision effectively shuts out all power plants in India’s neighbourhood operated by the private sector or by third countries.

After the 2016 guidelines were announced, Nepal had argued that the new rules were discriminatory and went against the spirit of the power trade agreement signed with India in 2014. This was reiterated publicly by Oli on Saturday.

The reference was to article 2(b) in the 2014 agreement on electric power trade, cross-border transmission interconnection and grid connectivity

The parties shall allow non-discriminatory access to the cross-border interconnection(s) for all authorised/licensed participants in the common electricity market.

While India has been involved in the hydropower sector in Nepal, Chinese firms have also picked up several contracts. India is certainly not keen on Chinese firms being able to take advantage of Kathmandu’s relationship with New Delhi so as to get a market for the power produced, even as Indian firms faced political roadblocks in completing projects.

The Indian foreign secretary emphatically told the media that China “did not figure in the talks” between the two leaders.

The last time that Oli was here in February 2016, he visited New Delhi in the aftermath of the ‘blockade’ in which Madheshis effectively shutdown cross-border trade to protest what they said were discriminatory provisions in the newly-promulgated constitution. People in Kathmandu were  convinced the blockade was backed, if not engineered by India, a charge New Delhi denied.

Since then, Oli has returned to the helm on the basis of a strong mandate at the federal elections, which has arguably put the Nepal government on a stronger footing vis-à-vis its giant neighbour to the south.

“I think the circumstances in 2016 and today are different. The government of Nepal has been elected on the basis of constitution that has been passed,” said foreign secretary Vijay Gokhale on a question about the takeaways from India’s strained ties with Nepal during Oli’s last trip to New Delhi.

“Efforts of both leaders at today’s meetings were to have a forward-looking approach and to see how we can deepen and strengthen the relationship not only by completing, progressing existing initiatives but also some game-changing initiatives to build those relations,” he added.

There was, however, a slight feeling of déjà vu as the two prime ministers remotely inaugurated the integrated check post at Birgunj in Nepal and the ground-breaking ceremony for the Motihari-Amlekhgunj cross-border petroleum products pipeline at Motihari, India.

The nine-month long blockade in 2016 had impacted the border post at Birgunj severely, with long lines of trucks waiting for clearance for days as Madheshi activists picketed the trade junction. The blockade had led to a severe fuel shortage in Nepal as India was the sole source of petroleum products transported through tankers.

Agreements on railway, waterway links

Oli also raised the issue of the trade deficit with India, which a top Indian diplomat said will be discussed during the next meeting of the commerce secretaries of both countries.

The initiatives approved during this visit is a new agreement on use of India’s waterways and a rail link from Raxaul to Kathmandu.

“An important result of our commitment to this cooperation is the decision of cooperation in inland waterways. With our assistance, Nepal will get an extra connectivity to the sea. And the country of Sagarmatha (Everest) will be able to connect directly to the sagar (ocean). I believe that this is a historical beginning,” said Modi.

The protocol for the Treaty of Transit between India and Nepal will be modified to include inland waterways as an additional means of transport.

For the new line from Raxaul in India to Kathmandu in Nepal, a preparatory survey will be carried out within one year, following which the two sides will finalise the implementation and funding modalities for the project.

Further, a new partnership in agriculture was also launched, which will include cooperation in organic farming and soil health.

The Nepali prime minister apparently raised the issue of resuming the SAARC summit. Pakistan was supposed to host the summit in 2016, but it was postponed after India, Bangladesh and Afghanistan refused to take part. The Indian prime minister made clear that New Delhi was still not ready to participate in a Pakistan-hosted summit.

“…the views expressed by the [Indian] prime minister were that that Prime Minister Oli is aware of the circumstances… The prime minister mentioned that he had very enthusiastically participated in the Kathmandu summit. Given the current state of play where there is cross-border terrorism and where this is a disruptive force in the region, it is difficult in such circumstances to proceed with such initiatives. There was some discussion on this, yes,” said Gokhale.

On the issue of security, Modi said that both leaders agreed “to prevent the abuse of our open border, and to pursue our shared security interests”. Oli also accepted that security concerns of both sides should be taken into consideration.

Before leaving for India, Oli had said that he would take up the matter of finding a solution to the long-standing unresolved issue of exchange of demonetised Indian currency. However, this topic did not come up during discussions, as per Gokhale.

Fixing Idiosyncrasies in Nepal’s Energy Projects

The Indian PM should recognise the phenomenal rise of his Nepali counterpart and both parties should concentrate on framing transparent policies to serve both their best interests.

Nepal’s newly elected Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli’s upcoming India visit (April 6-8) has deep strategic significance. Although, not very different from his past India visits, prime minister Oli’s imminent trip appears to be more politically-oriented in priorities than shaped through the commitments for enhancing economic cooperation between two countries.

However, this time around, Oli will be compelled to push for the stalled energy projects, a front on which India has been performing very poorly and earning a bad reputation. As a set of systems, the Joint Steering Committee (JSC) at Nepal-India energy secretary-level is supposed to have a major say in finalising the development modality of the power line project. But as is obvious, the stalled and the troubled projects call for a higher-level intervention to make things work on ground.

In sync with the growing demands from industry, regulators and Investment Board of Nepal (IBN), Nepal’s energy ministry had made the prime minister’s office include the stalled project on the agenda for bilateral talks during the prime minister’s forthcoming visit to India. Insiders in Kathmandu’s ruling establishment think that, given the welcome that India is extending Oli, it would be well-timed to leverage this and make India revisit the reasons for the stalled old projects and existing bottlenecks for financing the new power line against the originally envisaged plans of the policymakers.

The existing financing model, initially proposed by the Government of Nepal, makes it clear that both India and Nepal will build the 400 kV power line in their identified respective territories. Of the total 135 km-long transmission line, 20 km falls in Nepali territory. However, the proposed plan has been in troubled waters, with the Indian side cold-shouldering the desired modality offered from Nepal.

Further, India rejected the proposal and questioned the project’s commercial viability. Since the proposal was not made in isolation, without keeping the Indian side informed, it was strange that the latter was reciprocating with doubts about the transmission line at such an advanced stage. Now the hopes of the Nepal’s energy ministry are on Prime Minister Oli to convince the Indian side during his visit to find a workable government-to-government financing modality.

Contrary to Nepal’s expectations, India will be tempted to opt for the financing model used during the construction of the Muzzafarpur (Bihar)-Dhalkebar (Nepal) cross-border transmission line. This modality means that Nepal will be required to pay a certain amount in ‘rent’ until the project achieves the predetermined return on investment. This is the official position. However, especially in Nepal’s policy circles, it is believed that this scheme is not sustainable for Nepal – particularly because there’s a clause that necessitates it to pay rent even when the cross-border power line is not used to import or export electricity.

With the existing scenario, Nepal’s energy ministry is currently prioritising the construction of the New Butwal-Gorakhpur transmission line, as this line can efficiently distribute imported power to comparatively high energy-consuming cities like Bhairahawa, Butwal, Pokhara and Narayangadh. Reportedly, the energy ministry is also considering using the power line to transmit surplus energy produced in the Budhi Gandaki, Marshyangdi and Trishuli corridors where most of the country’s hydropower projects are located.

Nepal’s energy ministry has to execute the project as the funds have been already arranged to build the infrastructure of its portion of the transmission line. Noticeably, Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), an independent US government agency, has given a grant for building the transmission line. An agreement to this effect has been signed, but the Nepal government must get the Indian government’s consent over the financial terms for the construction to proceed, as per one of the preconditions set by MCC. And for this to materialise, both governments need to resolve their issues.

For bringing synergy at the bilateral front, India and Nepal should act in greater coordination for realising their goals through the old and new projects. Also, both parties should frame policies in a transparent manner and without allowing communication lapses.

Linking rivers not feasible

The level of cooperation between India and Nepal on the water management and judicious uses of resources front  needs to increase even further for bringing a massive turnaround in the energy sector. But to succeed on the mostly unexplored idea of river basin cooperation, we need to acknowledge the structural issues that catchment areas in Terai and North Bihar (among others, Kosi Belt – Saharsa, Supaul, Madhubani, Sitamarhi) are gripping with.

The inter-linking of rivers is an idea that is neither feasible nor desirable knowing the unpredictable nature of rivers which flow in both India (North Bihar) and Nepal. It has to be noted that over two decades have been spent on assessing the feasibility of such a project, but rarely has an expert panel voiced a positive opinion. In North Bihar, former Indian Union agriculture minister Chaturarnan Mishra, tried to experiment on this front but failed miserably and a vast mass of land acquired for this is lying unused today. In a nutshell, it is simply not possible to mix waters of different rivers and hope to use it for agricultural purposes. For example, streaming of water from Ganga and Kosi in same loop can be disastrous for the environment and even against the commercial interests of farming.

Oli’s India visit seeks to table the long-pending issues of Kosi Project and Joint Energy Projects and find a practical and speedy way out which will serve the interests of both sides. In fact, a point-wise analysis of pending issues and subsequent efforts to solve them will be a truly fruitful act. If either of them desire to add any agenda on the water front, both parties should mindstorm on the crucial topic of infrastructure, and review existing plans for ’embankment & dams’. The proportions for sharing and contributions have not been planned well so far. To do some damage control, a far-sighted framework should be made based on ground-level necessities.

Treat each other as equals

Writing for the Indian Express, Jyoti Malhotra’s prediction for the possible course of action for these bilateral talks is reflected in her article’s header, “If China builds your dams, India won’t buy energy: PM Narendra Modi to tell KP Oili.” It’s an open secret among those who keep track of India-Nepal affairs that the $2.5-billion Budhi Gandaki dam project, on “a river by the same name in central-western Nepal, is increasingly becoming the centrepiece of this tug-of-war between Delhi and Beijing.”

If Modi adopts such a stern attitude, it is unlikely that Oli will be able to convince him to change his mind. This is rather unfortunate and will not improve Modi’s record in neighbourhood.

The Indian side needs to acknowledge the politics of these economic bilateral talks. In Oli, they are dealing with the leader of the party which won not just the absolute majority in recently held elections but also succeeded in unifying the communist forces under a single canopy. Having united Maoists as well as seasoned politicians like Prachanda and Baburam Bhattarai, Oli’s rise has been truly phenomenal.

For now, Nepal’s political fundamentals are stable – and the government is steadfast in revisiting the economic policies that were pursued by the previous governments and kings. While complete socialisation of means will be not possible in a short to medium time periods, the efforts will be concentrated on making the state’s economy much stronger than what it is today.

The ruling regime in Kathmandu is not averse to experimentation in the matter of foreign affairs. On both the counts, China will have a larger role to play. To maintain India’s traditional edge in Nepal, the Indian side should rely on the basics and let the main channel work in its favour. Only time will tell how the deliberations are going to be translated into action, but for sure, India has to look at Nepal in new light – based on terms of equality.

Thakur is a public policy professional and columnist based in New Delhi. He can be reached on: atulmthakur@gmail.com

When it Comes to Nepal, Personal Charm Cannot Drive India’s Foreign Policy

Does the Indian government have the vision to build and bolster regional institutions through which South Asian countries can forge stronger ties, create conditions for prosperity and develop a more integrated identity?

Many Nepal watchers would have been relieved to know that K.P. Oli, the new prime minister of the country, is making India his first port of call. After fuelling his election campaign with ultra-nationalist rhetoric, he was able to lead the coalition of Left parties to a landslide majority. For the first time in decades, an Indian prime minister has a counterpart in Kathmandu who commands a stable government.

If anything, it is Oli’s host in Delhi whose stock has depleted somewhat. Perhaps no other Indian prime minister has been able to generate a substantial amount of goodwill and manage to lose it as well. The undeclared Indian blockade of 2015-16 eventually created the basis for Oli’s ultra-nationalist populism and consolidation of power.

While this trip is mostly a matter of established ritual – no Nepali prime minister is seen as having the confidence of India if the individual is not invited on a visit soon after assuming office – it is an opportunity to examine two issues: what Oli’s election suggests for India’s role  vis-à-vis domestic politics in Nepal, and India’s vision for the region.

India in Nepali politics

In the run up to the general elections in Nepal, Indian commentators largely portrayed the two sides in the fray – the Nepali Congress and the united communists – as either pro- or anti-India. This constant framing of domestic political choices in South Asia as a referendum on loyalty to India betrays the lack of understanding of these countries and ends up raising the geopolitical temperature in the region.

Political actors in Nepal do display certain ideological proclivities; however, political calculations reign supreme. The notion that India has permanent allies and enemies reduces the political agency that parties and leaders actually have and disregards the fluid nature of politics.

Elections are one, albeit major, part of a democracy. Delegitimising institutions that form the basis for the rule of law will only invite naked opportunism. If anything, preserving the rule of law will be the most solid bulwark against extreme forces capturing power. The government in Nepal is already starting to display a consolidation of power that is in many ways a reaction to earlier instances of intervention and influence. Therefore, it is in India’s interest to protect the legitimacy of these institutions.

In other words, a key challenge for the Modi government will be to go beyond score-keeping and build a larger narrative framework than simply labelling politicians and parties as pro- or anti-India. By refusing to put forward such a vision, India may be unwittingly creating greater space for other actors to operate.

Regional institutions

Security has been the primary lens through which India views its neighbours. This frame has long included China. While there is no denying that China has recently entered the neighbourhood in a qualitatively different way, India seems wedded to its past approach – bilateralism with a strong assumption of interference – as the guiding principle.

In response to China’s intensified engagement, New Delhi believes all it needs to do is double-down on existing policy. By continuing to raise China as the spectre by which India’s neighbours are judged, India is locked in a security-centric paradigm that has not proven to be very effective in addressing its own core security concerns.

Modi’s invitation to the leaders of neighbouring countries to attend his swearing-in ceremony signalled a potential step-change in how India approached the region. However, the grounds for this initial optimism have been lost. India is yet to articulate a serious vision for the region. Instead, SAARC, the existing regional institution, has faced total relegation.

Given the differences between India and Pakistan, the 2016 SAARC summit in Pakistan could not be held. SAARC was an easy scapegoat and isolating Pakistan may have seemed like an attractive option. However, reducing such a regional institution to matters of bilateral interest between two countries has robbed the region of the possibility of serious regional integration.

In the speech that Oli made to foreign diplomats after assuming office, it is notable that he clubbed together SAARC and the Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation (BIMSTEC) and described them as economic organisations. As the chairman of SAARC, he should be far more invested in breathing new life into the political aspects of SAARC. However, Oli’s position on SAARC essentially reflects his acceptance of India’s traditional hub-and-spokes model of engaging with the neighbourhood. By downplaying SAARC, the Modi government will be repeating its preference for bilateral deal-making.

Beyond the immediate resuscitation of SAARC, the question that Modi needs to tackle is this:  Does the Indian government have the vision to build and bolster regional institutions through which South Asian countries can forge stronger ties, create conditions for prosperity and develop a more integrated identity?

India’s policy on this question remains hazy at best. For example, from the vantage point of neighbouring countries, India has not offered an alternative to China’s Belt and Road Initiative. In the absence of a competing strategy, there really is no basis to question – or even assess – the enthusiasm with which its neighbours are signing up for Belt and Road projects. The call for strong regional institutions is not simply an expression of idealistic preferences. The region is poorer, more fractious, more vulnerable to the effects of climate change, and less culturally vibrant due to the absence of a robust regional framework.

Until now, the Modi government has worked on the assumption that personal charm can drive a country’s foreign policy. Modi has displayed a tendency to swing from tight bear hugs to total inattention. The BJP’s resolute focus on elections may deliver them the Rajya Sabha, but it may also cost them the neighbourhood. The sooner Modi realises that the ‘myth of the strong’ is really just a myth, the sooner India can escape the personalist approach to foreign policy and enter the realm of grand strategy.

Rishikesh Ram Bhandary is a PhD candidate at the Fletcher School, Tufts University.