
Context
- India has recently moved to re-engage diplomatically with Turkiye and Azerbaijan after a phase of strained relations post-Operation Sindoor (2025). This reflects a shift from emotion-driven responses to pragmatic foreign policy recalibration.
Background: Strained Diplomatic Relations
- Tensions escalated after Operation Sindoor (May 2025), when some countries questioned India’s strikes on terror sites.
- India expressed dissatisfaction with Turkiye, Azerbaijan, and Malaysia for their perceived support to Pakistan.
- Diplomatic disengagement included excluding envoys, reduced engagements, and signalling strategic distancing.
- Informal measures like boycott calls, reduced trade and tourism, and altered evacuation routes deepened tensions.
- Strategic narratives suggested emerging counter-groupings (India–Armenia–Greece vs Pakistan–Turkiye–Azerbaijan).
Shift Towards Pragmatic Engagement
- India has resumed Foreign Office Consultations with Azerbaijan and invited Turkish leadership for dialogue.
- The move signals mutual recognition that continued disengagement harms long-term bilateral interests.
- It reflects a return to India’s traditional approach of maintaining strategic autonomy and balanced diplomacy.
Key Concerns Highlighted
- Foreign policy responses driven by emotional reactions and public outrage can damage long-term relationships.
- Escalation from diplomatic disagreement to economic and social backlash (boycotts) weakens engagement channels.
- Formation of rigid geopolitical blocs risks limiting India’s strategic flexibility.
- Overreaction to adversarial positions may lead to missed opportunities for dialogue and influence.
Way Forward
- Adopt a pragmatic and interest-based approach in dealing with both partners and adversaries.
- Carefully calibrate responses to avoid unnecessary diplomatic escalation.
- Maintain India’s traditional stance of strategic autonomy without entering rigid alliances.
- Strengthen diplomatic engagement even with adversarial nations to preserve communication channels.
- Avoid mixing public sentiment with official foreign policy decisions, ensuring professional diplomacy.
Conclusion
- India’s foreign policy must balance national interest with diplomatic maturity in an increasingly volatile global order. Thus moving from emotional responses to pragmatic engagement will enhance credibility and strategic space.

