International Relations & Security

India and FAO Celebrate 80 Years of Partnership

Context: On World Food Day 2025, India and the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) marked 80 years of partnership, highlighting India’s journey from food scarcity to self-sufficiency and global leadership in sustainable agriculture.
The collaboration symbolises India’s long-standing commitment to achieving food and nutritional security through innovation, inclusivity, and international cooperation.

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India’s Achievements in Food Security:

  • Resilient Agriculture Base: Despite having less than 4% of the world’s arable land and freshwater, India ensures food self-sufficiency and price stability through efficient policies and technological advances.
  • Public Distribution & Welfare: The National Food Security Act (NFSA) guarantees subsidised food to over 800 million beneficiaries, supported by MSP (Minimum Support Price) and public stockholding systems.
  • Empowering Small Farmers: With 146 million small and marginal cultivators, India’s targeted interventions — like PM-KISAN, Fasal Bima Yojana, and Soil Health Card Scheme — form the backbone of its agri-economy.
  • Agri-Tech & Sustainability: Digital platforms like eNAM, Kisan Drone Initiative, and Millet Mission are redefining productivity, market access, and climate resilience.

About the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO):

  • Founded: 1945
  • Headquarters: Rome, Italy
  • Membership: 194 countries; operations in over 130 nations
  • Motto: Better Production, Better Nutrition, a Better Environment, and a Better Life for all
  • Role: FAO acts as the custodian for 62 indicators of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), supporting data-driven policymaking and international coordination in food systems.

India–FAO Partnership Highlights:

  1. Founding Membership:
    India has been associated with FAO since its inception in 1945, actively shaping agricultural and food policies.
  2. Post-Independence Collaboration:
    FAO’s early technical assistance supported India’s Green Revolution and development of its agricultural research institutions.
  3. Recent Initiatives:
    • Blue Ports Initiative: Promoting sustainable fisheries and coastal livelihoods.
    • Millets Promotion: Jointly led the International Year of Millets (2023) campaign to global success.
    • Climate-Smart Agriculture: Collaborative projects for resilient crop systems and biodiversity conservation.

Significance:

  • Strengthens India’s global leadership in food and nutrition governance.
  • Reinforces SDG-2 (Zero Hunger) through inclusive, sustainable agricultural models.
  • Enhances South–South Cooperation, allowing India to share best practices with developing nations.

Conclusion:

The 80-year India–FAO partnership reflects a shared vision for a hunger-free, sustainable, and equitable world. As India transitions from food security to nutrition security, this collaboration will continue to drive innovations in agriculture, climate resilience, and rural development for decades to come.

India Elected to the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC): Strengthening Global Human Rights Diplomacy

Context: India has been elected unopposed to the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) for a three-year term (2026–2028).
This marks India’s seventh term on the Council, underscoring the country’s growing credibility and leadership in upholding human rights, democracy, and the rule of law on global platforms. (Source: News on Air – NOA)

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Election Significance

India previously served two consecutive terms (2018–2020 and 2021–2024) and voluntarily abstained from contesting in 2025, adhering to UN guidelines that prevent members from serving more than two consecutive terms.

Being elected again for 2026–2028 reflects the international community’s trust in India’s balanced, democratic, and inclusive approach to global human rights issues.

India’s re-election is not just symbolic — it highlights the country’s consistent efforts to promote pluralism, gender equality, and sustainable development, while advocating for a fair and impartial human rights discourse that respects national sovereignty and cultural diversity.

About the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC)

  • Established: 2006 (replacing the UN Commission on Human Rights)
  • Headquarters: Geneva, Switzerland
  • Composition: 47 Member States elected by the UN General Assembly for three-year terms.
  • Regional Distribution:
    • African States: 13
    • Asia-Pacific States: 13
    • Latin American & Caribbean States: 8
    • Western European & Other States: 7
    • Eastern European States: 6

The Council addresses human rights violations, conducts the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) of all UN Member States, and provides a forum for dialogue and cooperation on global human rights issues.

India’s Role and Priorities at the UNHRC

India’s stance in the UNHRC is guided by the principles of non-discrimination, inclusivity, and dialogue.

As a multi-ethnic, multi-religious democracy, India emphasizes that human rights and development are interlinked, advocating for a constructive, non-politicized approach to human rights promotion.

Key areas of India’s focus include:

  • Gender Equality & Women Empowerment
  • Right to Development
  • Digital Human Rights & Data Protection
  • Climate Justice and Human Dignity
  • Combating Racial and Religious Intolerance

India also supports capacity building in developing countries and encourages dialogue-based solutions rather than coercive interventions.

Significance for India and the World

India’s election reinforces its image as a responsible global actor and a voice of the Global South in shaping a fairer human rights agenda.

At a time of increasing polarization in global governance, India’s balanced approach — grounded in democracy, pluralism, and inclusivity — strengthens the credibility of the UNHRC itself.

India–Australia Renewable Energy Partnership (REP): Powering a Sustainable Future

Context: Australia’s Minister for Climate Change and Energy recently met with India’s Minister for New & Renewable Energy to advance cooperation under the India–Australia Renewable Energy Partnership (REP).
The meeting underscored the growing convergence between both countries in developing a clean, resilient, and diversified renewable energy ecosystem.

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About the India–Australia Renewable Energy Partnership (REP)

The REP is a strategic framework launched in 2024 under the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership (CSP) between India and Australia. It aims to deepen bilateral collaboration in the renewable and clean energy sector, combining Australia’s resource wealth and technology with India’s manufacturing scale and energy demand.

Objectives and Framework

  • Diversified Value Chain: REP seeks to build an integrated supply chain in solar PV, green hydrogen, and energy storage.
  • Technology & Resource Synergy: Australia provides critical minerals like lithium, cobalt, and rare earth elements, while India brings manufacturing capacity and market scale.
  • Dialogue Mechanism: A Track 1.5 Dialogue connects government officials, industries, and research bodies to convert policy intent into practical outcomes.
  • Supporting Agreements: The India–Australia Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (ECTA) underpins REP by reducing tariffs on clean energy commodities and critical minerals.
  • Implementation: The Ministry of New & Renewable Energy (MNRE) serves as India’s nodal agency for coordination.

Key Priority Areas

The partnership focuses on eight sectors:

  1. Solar PV manufacturing and deployment
  2. Green Hydrogen production and use
  3. Energy Storage Systems
  4. Solar Supply Chain resilience
  5. Circular Economy models
  6. Two-way Investments in renewables
  7. Capacity Building and training
  8. Shared Policy Priorities for sustainable transition

Significance for India

  • Mineral Security: Expands access to critical minerals, reducing dependence on China.
  • Skill Development: The Rooftop Solar Training Academy aims to train 2,000 technicians by 2027.
  • Industrial Integration: The Green Steel Partnership will link Australian raw materials with Indian low-carbon steel initiatives.
  • Energy Targets: Supports India’s Panchamrit goals, especially 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030, including 280 GW solar.
  • Ethical Supply Chains: Ensures adherence to ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) norms for transparent, responsible sourcing.

Challenges Ahead

  • Downstream Gaps: Australia lacks large-scale refining capacity for minerals.
  • Regulatory Mismatch: Divergent standards complicate certification and trade.
  • Capital Competition: The U.S. and EU’s subsidy-driven clean energy policies divert investments.
  • Grid Bottlenecks: India needs stronger grid infrastructure to integrate large-scale renewables.

Conclusion

The India–Australia Renewable Energy Partnership reflects a pragmatic model of climate diplomacy — balancing growth, sustainability, and strategic autonomy.

By linking resource-rich Australia with energy-hungry India, the REP not only accelerates the clean energy transition but also strengthens the Indo-Pacific’s green economic architecture, positioning both nations as pivotal players in the global net-zero movement.

US–China Rare Earth Tensions Escalate

Context: In October 2025, China announced export curbs on 12 rare earth elements (REEs), escalating existing trade frictions with the United States. In response, the US imposed 100% tariffs on Chinese rare earth exports, effective November 1, 2025. These developments underscore the strategic importance of rare earths in critical supply chains spanning clean energy, defence, and advanced technologies.

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About Rare Earth Elements

Rare Earth Elements (REEs) are a group of 17 elements, including 15 lanthanides plus scandium and yttrium. Although abundant in the Earth’s crust, they occur in low concentrations and are difficult to extract and process, making them strategically valuable.

  • Types:
    • Light Rare Earth Elements (LREEs) – more abundant (e.g. Neodymium)
    • Heavy Rare Earth Elements (HREEs) – scarcer and more critical (e.g. Dysprosium, Yttrium)
  • Applications: Widely used in EV motors, wind turbines, defence systems, electronics, and medical imaging equipment like MRI machines.
  • Global Distribution:
    • China: 61% of mining and 92% of processing (IEA 2024)
    • India: 3rd largest reserves (~6%) but <2% production (USGS 2024)

Impact on India

  1. Supply Risk:
    India imports nearly 90% of its rare earth compounds from China (DGFT 2024). Export restrictions could disrupt EV, semiconductor and defence supply chains, slowing key manufacturing sectors.
  2. Rising Costs:
    Tariffs and curbs are projected to increase input costs for electronics by 20–25% (IEA 2025), affecting both industry and consumers.
  3. Strategic Opportunity:
    With 6.9 million tonnes of REE reserves, India can expand domestic capacity through Indian Rare Earths Ltd (IREL) and the National Critical Minerals Mission (2023) to reduce import dependency.
  4. Geopolitical Leverage:
    India’s participation in the Quad Critical Minerals Partnership (2022) and the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) can help diversify global supply chains and strengthen strategic ties.

Global Consequences

  1. Supply Chain Disruptions:
    China’s dominance in processing (92%) makes global supply chains vulnerable to shocks.
  2. Price Surge:
    Following the export curbs, global rare earth prices surged by 35–40% (IEA Market Update, Sept 2025), affecting clean energy and defence manufacturing worldwide.
  3. Strategic Decoupling:
    The US, EU, and Japan are accelerating friend-shoring — relocating supply chains to trusted partners like Australia, Vietnam, and African nations under the Minerals Security Partnership (MSP).
  4. Environmental Challenges:
    Expansion of new mining hubs in regions such as Congo and Myanmar may lead to ecological degradation if not regulated under sustainable frameworks.

Way Forward

  • Diversification of Supply: Strengthen partnerships with Australia, Vietnam, and African nations under MSP to reduce reliance on China.
  • Sustainable Mining: Promote ESG-based standards through UNEP’s Global Mineral Governance Framework to ensure minimal environmental impact.
  • Strategic Stockpiles: Create rare earth reserves under the G7 Critical Minerals Agreement to stabilize supply and prices.
  • Recycling and Circular Economy: Expand e-waste recovery networks, similar to Japan’s Urban Mining Model, to recover key elements like neodymium and dysprosium from end-of-life electronics.

India–Mongolia Diplomatic Relations

Context: During the recent state visit of Mongolian President Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh to New Delhi, India and Mongolia signed 10 agreements, marking a new phase in their bilateral and strategic partnership. The visit reaffirmed both countries’ shared commitment to deepen cooperation in energy, defence, culture, and technology.

Key MoUs and Developments

1. Oil Refinery Project: India will finance Mongolia’s first oil refinery through a $1.7 billion Line of Credit extended via EXIM Bank. This is India’s largest overseas development partnership to date and aims to ensure Mongolia’s energy independence from imported crude.

2. Defence Cooperation: India will assist in training Mongolian armed and border security forces, and has appointed a Defence Attaché at its Embassy in Ulaanbaatar — a significant step to enhance strategic engagement and capacity building.

3. Cultural and Spiritual Bonds:

  • India will send a Sanskrit teacher to Gandan Monastery, Mongolia’s premier Buddhist centre.
  • Collaboration will begin to digitise one million ancient Buddhist manuscripts, preserving shared spiritual heritage.
  • The holy relics of Buddha’s disciples – Sariputra and Maudgalyayana – will be sent to Mongolia in 2026, symbolising deep civilisational ties.

4. Regional Collaboration: A new MoU between the Ladakh Hill Development Council and Arkhangai Province will promote cultural, academic, and tourism exchanges, fostering people-to-people connectivity across the Himalayas and the Steppes.

5. Economic and Technological Cooperation: India and Mongolia agreed to explore joint ventures in critical minerals, rare earths, clean energy, and digital technology, aligning with India’s pursuit of resilient supply chains and sustainable growth.

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Background of India–Mongolia Relations

  • Diplomatic Relations Established: 1955
  • Strategic Partnership: 2015
  • Trade Volume (2024): USD 110.8 million
  • Common Link: Shared Buddhist heritage and democratic values
  • Recent Focus Areas: Renewable energy, cyber security, mining, education, and cultural exchanges

India remains Mongolia’s “Third Neighbor”, promoting stability and economic diversification beyond its two geographic neighbours, China and Russia.

Significance

  • Enhances India’s Act East and Indo-Pacific vision.
  • Strengthens energy and resource security for both nations.
  • Reinforces soft power diplomacy through cultural and religious cooperation.
  • Expands defence and regional strategic alignment in Central and East Asia.

Way Forward

Both sides aim to translate these agreements into tangible outcomes by 2030 - particularly in energy, digital innovation, and education, ensuring a mutually beneficial partnership grounded in trust, culture, and development.

India to Host UNTCC 2025

Context: India will host the United Nations Troop Contributing Countries’ (UNTCC) Chiefs’ Conclave 2025 in New Delhi from October 14–16, 2025. The event, organized by the Indian Army in collaboration with the UN Department of Peace Operations (UNDPO), will bring together senior military leaders from 32 nations contributing troops to UN Peacekeeping missions worldwide.

About the UNTCC Conclave

The United Nations Troop Contributing Countries (UNTCC) Conclave serves as a global platform to:

  • Facilitate dialogue among nations contributing troops and police personnel to UN peacekeeping.
  • Discuss operational challenges, such as logistics, technology, and safety in mission areas.
  • Enhance interoperability among multinational contingents.
  • Promote inclusivity and transparency in UN peace operations’ decision-making processes.

The conclave also provides an opportunity to strengthen coordination between the UN Secretariat and troop-contributing countries, ensuring that field challenges and national perspectives are effectively represented.

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India’s Leadership in UN Peacekeeping

  • Legacy of Service: Since the first UN mission in 1948, India has been one of the largest and most consistent contributors to UN peacekeeping.
  • Contribution Scale: Over 2,70,000 Indian troops have served in 50 UN missions across continents.
  • High-Risk Deployments: Indian forces have operated in some of the most volatile conflict zones—Congo, Lebanon, Sudan, and Somalia, among others.
  • Humanitarian and Gender Leadership:
    • India deployed the first all-women peacekeeping contingent to South Sudan in 2023, setting a global example for gender equality in peace operations.
    • Indian peacekeepers are widely recognized for their discipline, compassion, and commitment to protecting civilians and supporting local communities.

Significance of Hosting UNTCC 2025

  • Strategic Diplomacy: Reinforces India’s image as a responsible global stakeholder and a credible voice for the Global South in UN affairs.
  • Operational Influence: Enables India to shape future UN peacekeeping reforms, including discussions on technology, training, and equitable burden-sharing.
  • Soft Power Projection: Highlights India’s values of peace, cooperation, and inclusivity, aligning with its commitment to “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam – One Earth, One Family, One Future.”

Way Forward

India advocates for:

  • Greater representation of troop-contributing nations in UN decision-making.
  • Enhanced safety, technology integration, and gender balance in peacekeeping missions.
  • Continued focus on capacity-building and training through platforms like the Centre for UN Peacekeeping (CUNPK), New Delhi.

Port of Pasni: Pakistan’s New Geostrategic Maritime Gambit

Context: In a significant geopolitical development, Pakistan has proposed allowing the United States to build and operate a commercial deep-water port at Pasni, Balochistan. The move is aimed at exporting critical minerals such as copper and rare earths, marking a strategic shift in Pakistan’s foreign and economic policy posture.

About the Port of Pasni

The Port of Pasni is a small but strategic deep-water harbour located in the Gwadar district of Balochistan. It houses a fish harbour, a cargo jetty, and a Pakistan Maritime Security Agency (PMSA) base.

Originally designed for fisheries and coastal trade, it has now gained attention as a potential mineral export terminal under Pakistan’s new proposal to the US.

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Location and Strategic Setting

  • Situated on the Arabian Sea, approximately 70 miles east of the China-operated Gwadar Port and 100 miles from the Iran-Pakistan border.
  • Roughly 300 km from India’s Chabahar Port in Iran, forming part of an emerging maritime triangle:
    • Chabahar (India–Iran)
    • Gwadar (China–Pakistan)
    • Pasni (US–Pakistan)

This triangle could redefine power dynamics in the North Arabian Sea, where regional and global interests intersect.

Aim of the Proposal

  • Reduce dependence on China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) by engaging US investment.
  • Promote commercial cooperation in the extraction and export of critical minerals like copper, antimony, and neodymium, which are essential for green technologies, electronics, and defence applications.
  • Position Pakistan as a critical-mineral transit hub, diversifying its economic partnerships beyond China and Gulf economies.

Key Features

  • Estimated investment: $1.2 billion through joint funding by the Pakistani government and US private investors.
  • Infrastructure plans: Rail and road connectivity to the Reko Diq mineral belt, along with modern cargo-handling terminals and logistics facilities.
  • Official stance: The project is described as purely commercial and non-military, intended to promote economic growth and regional trade.

Strategic and Economic Implications

  • For Pakistan: Offers a potential economic boost and strategic balance vis-à-vis China by attracting Western investment.
  • For the United States: Provides a foothold near China’s Gwadar and Iran’s Chabahar, enhancing its presence in the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean Region (IOR).
  • For India: Raises strategic and maritime concerns, as Pasni’s proximity to Chabahar could influence surveillance, logistics, and regional trade routes.
  • For the Region: Adds a new dimension to the Indo-Pacific strategic framework, where economic and security interests overlap.

Significance

If operationalised, the Port of Pasni could transform into a key node in global critical mineral supply chains, while also intensifying great-power competition in South Asia’s maritime sphere.

UAE Introduces Sugar Tax to Promote Public Health

Context: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has announced that it will implement a sugar tax on sweetened beverages starting January 1, 2026. The move aims to reduce high sugar consumption and associated health risks such as obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular diseases. This initiative aligns with the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)’s regional framework for a tiered excise on sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs).

About the Sugar Tax

A sugar tax is a fiscal measure that increases the retail price of sugary drinks through taxation to discourage excessive sugar intake and encourage healthier choices among consumers.
Globally, countries like the UK, Mexico, and South Africa have introduced similar taxes with measurable declines in sugary drink consumption.

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Objectives:

  • Reduce sugar-related health issues.
  • Encourage product reformulation by beverage companies.
  • Generate revenue for public health and awareness programs.

In the UAE, this step forms part of a broader “Healthier UAE Vision”, which also targets smoking and trans-fat consumption.

India’s Approach

India already imposes one of the world’s highest tax burdens on sugary drinks, including:

  • 28% GST,
  • 40% Sin Tax, and
  • 12% Compensation Cess.

Together, these aim to discourage consumption and offset healthcare costs linked to lifestyle diseases. India’s measures align with the World Health Organization’s (WHO) recommendation to use fiscal tools for improving public health outcomes.

About the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)

The GCC is a regional political and economic alliance formed in 1981 to strengthen political, financial, and security cooperation among its six members — Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE.

  • Security Arm: Peninsula Shield Force (established 1984).
  • Regional Policy: Increasingly focused on economic diversification, health, and sustainability.

India–GCC Relations

  • Trade: Reached $178.56 billion in FY2025, forming 15.4% of India’s global trade.
  • Energy Security: GCC supplies ~35% of India’s crude oil and ~70% of its imported natural gas.
  • Diaspora: Over 8.9 million Indians live in GCC nations, contributing 38% of India’s total remittances (FY2024).

Thus, UAE’s fiscal and health policies have indirect implications for India’s trade, employment, and economic engagement in the Gulf.

Significance

The UAE’s sugar tax reflects a growing global shift towards preventive healthcare through economic policy. For India and other developing nations, it underscores the importance of integrating fiscal instruments with public health strategies to curb non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and reduce healthcare costs.

International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)

Context: India has been re-elected to Part II of the Council of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). This reaffirms India’s growing role in shaping global civil aviation standards and policies.

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About ICAO

  • Established: 1944 under the Convention on International Civil Aviation (Chicago Convention).
  • Type: Specialized agency of the United Nations.
  • Headquarters: Montreal, Canada.
  • Members: 193 States.
  • Mandate: To ensure safe, secure, efficient, and sustainable international civil aviation.

Governance of ICAO

  • Assembly:
    • Sovereign body of ICAO.
    • Meets once every 3 years.
    • Comprises all 193 member states.
  • Council:
    • Governing body, elected by the Assembly.
    • 36 member states serve a three-year term.
    • India elected under Part II (states making the largest contribution to international civil aviation).

Functions of ICAO

  • Standard-Setting: Develops global aviation standards for safety, security, efficiency, and environmental sustainability.
  • Policy Platform: Provides a forum for discussion and cooperation among states on civil aviation issues.
  • Legal Frameworks: Helps establish rules of international aviation law, ensuring peaceful and safe use of airspace.
  • Economic & Environmental Role: Promotes liberalization of air transport markets and reduction of aviation’s environmental footprint.

Significance for India

  • Reinforces India’s standing as a key aviation hub and market.
  • Provides India with greater influence in shaping global aviation policies.
  • Aligns with India’s domestic aviation growth, projected to become the third-largest aviation market by 2030.

L1 vs H1B Visa Comparison: The Other Work Visa for the US

Context: The United States is still a popular place for skilled foreign workers to go, especially those from India. The H1B visa has always been the most popular way to get to the US. But things have changed recently, like a big fee increase for H1B applications in September 2025. Now, the L1 visa is getting more attention as a way for employees to move within the same company.

What does the H1B Visa mean?

  • Nature: A non-immigrant work visa that lets US companies hire foreign workers for jobs that require a lot of technical skill.
  • Requirements: Foreign professionals must have at least a bachelor's degree (or the equivalent) in a specific field.
  • Cap and Lottery System: There are 65,000 visas available each year, plus 20,000 more under the master's cap. Very competitive, chosen by lottery.
  • Validity: The first three years, with the option to extend for up to six years.
  • Employer Tied: Needs the employer's support and approval of the working conditions.

What does the L1 Visa mean?

  • Nature: This is a non-immigrant visa for managers, executives, or specialized knowledge staff who are moving from a foreign office to a US office of the same company.
  • Requirements: The employee must have worked in the foreign office for at least one year in a row in the last three years.
  • No Cap: The L1 visa does not have a yearly number limit like the H1B visa does.
  • Validity: L1A (Managers/Executives): Up to 7 years.L1B (Specialized Knowledge): Up to 5 years.
  • Specific to the employer: Limited to the same group of companies, can't easily switch jobs.

Important Differences: L1 vs. H1B

FeatureH1B VisaL1 Visa
PurposeEmployment in specialty occupationsIntra-company transfer
Cap65,000 + 20,000 (lottery)No cap
EligibilityBachelor’s degree or higher in relevant field1 year employment in company abroad (past 3 years)
SponsorshipAny US employerSame company with US & foreign offices
Validity3 years, extendable to 6L1A: 7 years, L1B: 5 years
Green Card PathwayPERM labour certification routeL1A offers smoother EB-1C pathway
L1 Vs H1B visa comparison

What this means for India

  1. Indian IT Sector: Indian IT companies like TCS, Infosys, and Wipro use L1 a lot to move employees without using the lottery system.
  2. Pressure to Raise Fees: The increase in H1B fees in 2025 (about $100,000 for each new petition) may make Indian companies use L1 visas more often.
  3. Impact on Migration Policy: This gives India another way to keep its large skilled diaspora in the US, even with strict H1B rules.
  4. Diplomatic Angle: Visa rules are a common source of tension in talks about trade and strategic partnerships between India and the US.

The Way Forward

  • Policy Engagement: India needs to keep pushing for a US visa system that is more predictable and less strict.
  • Diversifying skills: Indian companies can use both H1B for new hires and L1 for moving employees around within the company.
  • Long-Term Strategy: Making the innovation and startup ecosystems in the US stronger so that they don't rely too much on US visa rules.

Why was Indonesia rocked by Protests?

Context: Recently, Indonesia witnessed violent protests against a range of cost-of-living issues. The protests have generally been seen as an incitement of anger against the elites by the middle class. 

Relevance of the Topic : Prelims: India and its neighbourhood: Indonesia

Indonesia, Southeast Asia’s largest democracy and economy, was rocked by one of its most intense waves of protests in recent years. Protestors attacked public buildings, burned down and looted houses of public officials. 

Causes of the Protests in Indonesia

  • Public resentment against elite privileges: Members of Parliament in Indonesia receive a monthly housing allowance of 50 million rupiah (about $3000) which is almost ten times the national minimum wage.
  • Austerity measures introduced by the government: President Prabowo’s government announced budget cuts worth 306 trillion rupiah (approximately $18.8 billion) to fund the flagship school meals programme. This led to steep budgetary reductions in vital sectors such as public works, economic affairs, investment, and higher education. 
  • Tax hikes by regional governments: To offset the impact of reduced central funding, regional authorities imposed heavy tax increases. E.g., 250% hike in property tax in Pati, Central Java.
  • Income inequality: While the Gini coefficient of Indonesia has been declining, the country still registers one of the highest levels of inequality in the Southeast Asian region. As per an Oxfam report, Indonesia ranks sixth among countries with the greatest wealth inequality. 
  • Additional issues include low wages and job insecurity. Education also remains underfunded, with various barriers restricting higher education. 

Also Read: India-Indonesia Bilateral Relations 

At the regional and global level, Indonesia’s political stability is crucial for ASEAN and for global supply chains that depend on Southeast Asia’s largest economy. Continued unrest could therefore affect not just Indonesia but the wider region.

Saudi Arabia-Pakistan Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement 

Context: Recently, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed a Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement which formalised the defence and security partnership between the countries. 

Relevance of the Topic: Mains: Key provisions of the pact; Implications for India’s strategic interests.

The pact comes in the aftermath of Israel’s strike in Qatar and amid growing regional instability in West Asia, including threats from Iran, Yemen’s Houthis, and Israel’s assertiveness.

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Key Feature of the Defence Pact

  • Mutual Defence Clause: Any aggression against either country shall be considered an aggression against both.
  • Strategic Objectives: 
    • To enhance defence cooperation, joint training, and military exchanges.
    • To strengthen joint deterrence against regional adversaries.

Pakistan has announced that its nuclear programme will be made available to Saudi Arabia, if needed, under the new defence pact.

Saudi Arabia-Pakistan Defence Partnership: 

The partnership has deep historical roots shaped by shared security concerns and sustained military cooperation since the 1960s.

Historical Background of Defence Cooperation: 

  • 1960s:  Pakistani troops were stationed in Saudi Arabia to bolster internal and regional security.
  • 1979: Pakistan’s special forces assisted during the Grand Mosque seizure in Mecca.
  • 1982: A Bilateral Security Cooperation Agreement institutionalised defence ties, enabling training, advisory roles, and Pakistani arms supply to Saudi Arabia.

Historically, the Saudi-Pakistan defence equation, underpinned by religious commonality, has been defined by Saudi economic support and Pakistani military assistance. Pakistani military personnel have trained Saudi forces, while Riyadh has provided crucial financial and energy support.

Implications of the Saudi Arabia-Pakistan Defence Pact

For Saudi Arabia: 

  • Strategic Security: Strengthens deterrence against Iran and its proxies like Houthis, militias in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon.
  • Regional Balancing: It demonstrates Riyadh’s strategic autonomy, diversifying its defence alignments beyond exclusive reliance on the United States. 

For Pakistan: 

  • Military Benefits: Access to advanced weaponry (possibly via Saudi financing of the US arms purchases).
  • Economic Relief: Strengthens Pakistan’s bargaining power for financial aid and investments from Riyadh.
  • Geopolitical Leverage: Reinforces Pakistan’s role in Muslim world security architecture.
  • Domestic Prestige: Enhances the political capital of Pakistan’s civilian and military leadership.

India’s Position and Concerns: 

India is aware of the long-standing arrangement and will study its implications for national security and regional stability. The strategic concerns include: 

  • Saudi financing may indirectly bolster Pakistan’s military capabilities altering the regional balance of power to India’s disadvantage. 
  • The pact’s mutual defence clause could embolden Pakistan, complicating India’s security calculus in South Asia. 

For Saudi Arabia, its partnership with India continues to offer greater economic and strategic value. A core characteristic of India’s strategic autonomy has been to develop its own relationship with Saudi Arabia (and other countries) with a focus on leveraging India’s economic heft. 

Also Read: India-Saudi Arabia Relations