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4th India-Central Asia Dialogue

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: International Relations

Source: ET

Context: India hosted the 4th India-Central Asia Dialogue in New Delhi under the chairmanship of EAM Dr. S. Jaishankar.

• The conclave focused on regional security, critical minerals, connectivity, counter-terrorism, and economic integration with the five Central Asian nations.

About 4th India-Central Asia Dialogue:

What It Is? A multilateral platform for foreign ministers of India and Central Asian countries to engage in structured dialogue. Launched in 2019 (Samarkand) to deepen strategic, political, and economic cooperation.

• A multilateral platform for foreign ministers of India and Central Asian countries to engage in structured dialogue.

• Launched in 2019 (Samarkand) to deepen strategic, political, and economic cooperation.

Members: India, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan.

Objectives: Enhance cooperation in trade, transport, security, energy, IT, health, and people-to-people ties. Serve as a mechanism for regional stability and sustainable development.

• Enhance cooperation in trade, transport, security, energy, IT, health, and people-to-people ties.

• Serve as a mechanism for regional stability and sustainable development.

Major Outcomes of the 4th Dialogue:

Counter-Terrorism Cooperation: Condemned Pahalgam attack and called for early adoption of UN Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism.

Rare Earth & Critical Minerals: Expressed joint interest in exploration and investment in rare earths; Second India-Central Asia Rare Earth Forum to be convened soon.

Connectivity & Trade Facilitation: Emphasized optimum use of INSTC and Chabahar Port; supported Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan’s entry into INSTC.

Financial and Digital Integration: Agreed on enhancing digital payment systems, interbank cooperation, and trade in national currencies.

Health & Traditional Medicine: Discussed Universal Health Coverage, medical tourism, and support for traditional medicine integration.

Energy & Technology Partnership: Supported cooperation on India Stack, solar alliance, and biofuels, enhancing resilience in digital and clean energy sectors.

Support for India’s Global Role: Reaffirmed backing for India’s permanent UNSC membership and greater role in multilateral platforms like SCO and UN.

Challenges In India–Central Asia Relations:

Geographical Disconnect: Lack of direct land borders and Pakistan’s denial of transit limits overland connectivity.

Chinese Strategic Depth: China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and financial clout dominate infrastructure and trade corridors.

Security Volatility in Afghanistan: Instability in Afghanistan hinders trans-regional connectivity projects and cooperation frameworks.

Low Trade Volume: Bilateral trade is below potential (India–Central Asia trade was under $2 billion in 2022–23).

Language & Bureaucratic Barriers: Cultural and regulatory differences slow project implementation and policy coordination.

Way Forward:

Strengthen Chabahar and INSTC Integration: Enhance usage of Shahid Beheshti Terminal, streamline customs via TIR Convention for smooth transit.

Deepen Digital Diplomacy: Leverage India Stack and DPI models to build tech-based governance partnerships.

Strategic Energy & Minerals Partnership: Fast-track critical mineral agreements, encourage joint R&D and green energy investments.

Cultural and Academic Exchange: Expand ITEC programs, language training, and higher education scholarships to deepen soft power ties.

Institutional Mechanisms: Regularize Joint Working Groups on health, fintech, climate, and counter-terrorism for actionable outcomes.

Conclusion:

The 4th India-Central Asia Dialogue reaffirms India’s strategic vision for regional cooperation rooted in shared civilizational ties. To counter geopolitical constraints, India must strengthen multimodal connectivity, economic linkages, and institutional frameworks. A proactive, resilient approach can anchor India-Central Asia relations in long-term stability and mutual growth.

• A number of outside powers have entrenched themselves in Central Asia, which is a zone of interest to India. Discuss the implications, in this context, of India’s joining the Ashgabat Agreement, 2018. (2018)

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

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Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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