

An examination of New Delhi’s policy and programmatic responses to President Trump’s Afghanistan strategy and its greater role for India.

India’s engagements in the emerging Indo-Pacific security architecture should be reexamined to reflect new regional realities.

The Korean Peninsula is a large source of volatility in the geopolitical situation of East Asia.

India and South Korea have had different development trajectories and contrasting attitudes toward military alliances, yet both countries have similar regional environments and a growing potential to be stronger players in the international community.

In the face of a more assertive Russia, a distracted United States, and an active China, the Baltic region’s strategic significance to India has grown rapidly.

Inside the tightly controlled society of North Korea, the demise of state socialism, creeping market forces, and an increased social openness to the outside world is altering the country.

Religious tourism, maritime and air connectivity, power grid links, and energy security can boost connectivity between India and Sri Lanka.

As Carnegie India completes its first year in New Delhi, they hosted a reflection on the extraordinary turbulence in the international system today and the policy challenges that it presents for India

President Trump’s rhetoric on U.S. policy toward China and India present uncertainties for the future of the Indo-Pacific region.

The 2016 U.S. presidential election campaign has caused mounting concern and skepticism about American foreign policy commitments toward Asia.