Christian Wagner

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Archive data: Person was Visiting Fellow at IDSA

Joined IDSA
September 2016
Expertise
Foreign Policy and Security in  South Asia, Regional Cooperation, Democracy and Ethnic Conflicts in South Asia
Education
Habilitation, University of  Rostock; Dr. phil. and M.A. (Political Science), Freiburg University
Select Publications
The Effects of the  China-Pakistan Economic Corridor on India-Pakistan Relations,SWP Comments,  April 2016
The Role of  India and China in South Asia,  Strategic Analysis, Vol.  40, No. 4, 2016, pp. 307’320
Western Europe, David M. Malone, C. Raja  Mohan, Srinath Raghavan (eds.), The Oxford Handbook on Indian Foreign Policy,  Oxford University Press, 2015, pp. 495-508
Introduction,  Wolfgang Taucher, Mathias  Vogl, Peter Webinger (eds.), Pakistan: Challenges & Perspectives, Vienna  2014 (Austrian Federal Ministry of the Interior, regiones et res publication  Country Analysis Reports), S. 7-17
Security Cooperation in South Asia: Overview, Reasons, ProspectsSecurity Cooperation in South Asia: Overview, Reasons, Prospects.

Visiting Fellow
Email: Christian[dot]Wagner[at]swp-berlin[dot]org
Phone: +91 11 2671 7983

Publication

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India’s Bilateral Security Relationship in South Asia

The article argues that the contours of a security architecture are becoming slowly visible in South Asia. This process is nurtured by two developments. First, since the 2000s, India has increased its security cooperation with nearly all its neighbours in South Asia. Second, since 2013 governments in New Delhi have promoted the concept of India as a security provider in the region and the Indian Ocean.

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The Role of India and China in South Asia

India is often perceived as a regional power, but a closer look reveals that it is in a disadvantageous position vis-à-vis China in South Asia. The first reason is that Indian governments never had the political, economic, and military capacities to pursue their regional power ambitions with their neighbours in the long run. South Asian countries could always play the China card in order to evade India’s influence. Second, India’s new South Asia policy with the focus on trade and connectivity has improved regional cooperation since 1991.