German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock’s visit to India
7th Dec 2022
The Hindu(07-12-22)
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Intense engagement
- German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock’s visit to India and talks with External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar have set the stage for a more updated bilateral relationship.
Signing agreements
- The two sides signed an agreement on mobility and migration that boosts travel for students, researchers and investors and businesses, and the meeting was preceded by Germany’s agreement to fund renewable energy projects worth a billion Euros.
Intense engagement
- The year 2022 has seen intense highlevel engagement, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi made two visits to Germany — for the IndiaGermany InterGovernmental Consultations with Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Berlin and the G7 outreach summit in Bavaria.
- The leaders also met at the G20 summit in Bali. In 2023, Mr Scholz is expected to be in Delhi, in the spring, and again in September for the G20 summit in India.
Climate change & security
- On the multilateral stage, Ms Baerbock, a German Alliance 90/Green party leader, made countering climate change an important issue where New Delhi and Berlin can cooperate at the G20 under India’s presidency.
- Mr Jaishankar spoke of the need to keep pushing for UN Security Council reform, where India and Germany have been part of the ‘G4’ grouping since 2005.
Walking back on previous controversies
- Ms Baerbock also walked back previous controversial comments calling for the “United Nations track” to resolve the Kashmir dispute; she told The Hindu ahead of her visit that she believes Kashmir is a “bilateral dispute” to be resolved between India and Pakistan only.
Testing relationship
- The substance of the relationship will be tested in continuing differences over the war in Ukraine. Mr Jaishankar’s line to journalists was that India’s imports of Russian oil, a national interest necessity, remain a fraction of the fossil fuels Europe continues to buy.
- While this may be correct, it is also true that the European Union countries have cut all other links with Moscow, and falling fuel imports are likely to drop further once the December 5 launch of the “oil price cap” for seaborne imports kicks in.
- On the other hand, India’s imports of Russian oil have soared to a whopping 21-fold increase, making Russia India’s biggest supplier.
Facing a turning point
- Writing in the Foreign Affairs Journal, Chancellor Scholz said that the world was facing an “epochal, tectonic shift”, using the term Zeitenwende or “turning point” to describe the geopolitical transition post-Russia's war in Ukraine, and accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of “shattering” an international peace architecture.
- For India, which inherits the G20 presidency in the year of this Zeitenwende, it will be necessary to work more closely with Germany to bring all western partners on board with Mr Modi’s plans to forge “global unity”, without letting the deep divisions with Russia derail consensus on important tasks such as fighting climate change, inequality, poverty and the digital divide.
7th Dec 2022
The Hindu(07-12-22)
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