logo
Conference of the disoriented: How an Indian event was a window into Western decline

Conference of the disoriented: How an Indian event was a window into Western decline

Russia Today26-03-2025

Every spring, New Delhi becomes a global hotspot – at least for a few days. Politicians, analysts, think tankers, and journalists flock to the Indian capital for the Raisina Dialogue, South Asia's premier geopolitical conference. It aspires to be the region's answer to the Munich Security Conference – high-level, influential, and agenda-setting.
Over the past decade, Raisina has grown steadily in stature, faithfully reproducing the trappings of a major global event: the same luxury hotel, plenty of panel sessions, and a cast of international VIPs flown in to weigh in on the world's most pressing problems. But, as in Munich, Raisina's inclusivity has clear limits. While the German conference has barred Russians since 2022, the Indians quietly exclude Chinese delegates – a revealing nod to the tensions between BRICS' two largest powers.
India is not just a host. It's also the first line of engagement – if not confrontation – between the global North and South. And it plays this double role with confidence. Raisina is India's showcase: a platform to present itself to the West as the intellectual and technological leader of the South, and to the South as a country that can hold its own in global forums.
To underline its distinct identity, each Raisina Dialogue is built around a concept drawn from India's civilizational heritage. In 2024, it was Chaturanga, the ancient precursor to chess, symbolizing strategic depth. This year's theme was Kalachakra, the
'wheel of time'
– a Buddhist metaphor for interconnectedness and the idea that changing yourself can change the world. Poetic, yes – but quickly overtaken by the less elevated realities of contemporary geopolitics.
In truth, the stage was dominated by Western institutions and voices. Raisina is funded by the likes of Meta, the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, Lockheed Martin, and Palantir. And their priorities – military, commercial, ideological – make clear that most of the guests came to talk about changing the world, not themselves.
Read more
Orban makes a daring bet as the West weakens
Western Europeans, in particular, struck a peculiar note. Emotionally agitated and politically adrift, many of their delegates stuck to familiar talking points:
'Putin's Russia'
is the number one threat to Europe's peace and security. Some added
'Trump's unpredictability'
to the mix, highlighting fears that the next US administration may walk away from global commitments. The shared solution? A call for
'European strategic autonomy.'
But no one could explain how that's possible without cheap Russian energy or Chinese goods – the twin pillars of the EU's post-Cold War prosperity.
The Western Europeans wanted to sound brave. But they came off as disoriented.
By contrast, the Gulf states were self-assured. Iran is contained, Gaza is winding down, Trump is back in the picture, and the Abraham Accords are quietly returning to the agenda. Confidence radiated from their delegates.
The Americans? Not so much. Most came from hawkish, right-leaning think tanks – once champions of liberal interventionism, now adjusting to the new mood in Washington. Their rhetoric was more muted this year. Less preaching, more explaining. Fewer calls for
'democracy,'
more realpolitik. It was an awkward adjustment – and many European guests found it unsettling.
Some of the most revealing moments weren't in the sessions, but in the sniping between Western delegates. Old disputes between
'globalists'
and
'nationalists'
resurfaced in side conversations. A reminder that the so-called
'collective West'
is far from united.
Read more
The Americans want Zelensky out – Is this woman their Plan B?
Meanwhile, India played its host role with aplomb. It indulged some speakers and quietly ignored others. And it never missed a chance to remind the audience that it is the world's
'oldest democracy'
– albeit on its own terms.
The broader picture from Raisina is that the world is in flux –
'multipolar and non-polar at once,'
as some described it. It's a world where a Yemeni analyst offers insights on US-China tensions; a Luxembourg minister speaks on the Ukraine conflict; and advisers from Romania and Moldova pronounce confidently on the future of the Middle East. Ministers from Latvia and Liechtenstein weighed in on global security. It was the illusion of seriousness – panels of people speaking on matters they barely influence.
There was also, as usual, a linguistic and philosophical confusion. Asian delegates were visibly puzzled by the semantic divide between
'rules-based order,'
as Westerners call it, and
'international law,'
as Moscow prefers. Aren't they the same thing? Not in today's world.
It's worth remembering what Raisina is not. It's not a venue for compromise or diplomacy. Russia wasn't represented officially. China wasn't welcome. It's a stage – a place to display power, posture, and polish. But also a mirror, reflecting how different regions interpret the world order's transformation.
At Raisina, many talk about turning the
'wheel of time.'
Few realize it may roll right over them.
Mahatma Gandhi once said,
'Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from an indomitable will.'
Perhaps that's the most relevant piece of Indian wisdom for this moment. Because many delegates at Raisina came with the illusion that they were steering global change – when in fact, they were simply trying not to get crushed beneath it.
This article was first published by the magazine
Profile
and was translated and edited by the RT team
.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Musk deletes Trump-Epstein post
Musk deletes Trump-Epstein post

Russia Today

time11 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Musk deletes Trump-Epstein post

Elon Musk has deleted an X post claiming that US President Donald Trump's name was in the sealed Jeffrey Epstein files, suggesting that this is the real reason they remain classified. On Thursday, Musk wrote: 'Time to drop the really big bomb: @realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public.' He added: 'Have a nice day, DJT! Mark this post for the future. The truth will come out.' In another inflammatory post no longer visible in the entrepreneur's X account, Musk responded 'yes' to a message that said 'Trump should be impeached' and Vice President JD Vance 'should replace him.' The businessman has not commented on the issue yet. Both posts became part of a public feud between Trump and Musk. During last year's election, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX set up and funded a pro-Trump political group, donating over $260 million, and was appointed in January to co-lead the newly established Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), tasked with reducing federal bureaucracy and wasteful spending. Musk stepped down last week. The rift started after the billionaire condemned Trump's massive tax-cut bill, which is estimated to add $2.4 trillion to the $36.2-trillion US debt over 10 years, calling it a 'disgusting abomination.' The US president then threatened to cancel federal contracts with Musk's companies. The clash then escalated into a series of jabs on social media. Musk accused the president of 'ingratitude' and threatened to paralyze the US space program by decommissioning the Dragon spacecraft. Trump, for his part, said that the tech billionaire had gone 'crazy' and claimed that Musk was actually upset because he 'took away his EV Mandate.' Following the feud, Tesla's shares dropped by about 14.2% on Thursday at market close, wiping roughly $152 billion off the value of the company. Trump Media stock also fell 8%. Trump had previously pledged to declassify the Epstein files, and in February, US Attorney General Pam Bondi announced the release of the 'first phase' of documents. However, key materials – including flight logs, client names, and contact lists – have remained under seal, fueling speculation about who could be implicated. Epstein, an investment banker with deep connections to political and business elites, was arrested in July 2019 on federal sex trafficking charges. He died the following month in a New York jail in what was officially ruled a suicide, though his death instantly sparked widespread controversy and conspiracy theories.

NATO to limit Ukraine discussions to avoid provoking Trump
NATO to limit Ukraine discussions to avoid provoking Trump

Russia Today

time13 hours ago

  • Russia Today

NATO to limit Ukraine discussions to avoid provoking Trump

NATO is going to keep discussions of Ukraine 'short' at its upcoming annual summit in the Netherlands in order to avoid provoking US President Donald Trump, Reuters has reported, citing the organizers of the event. The summit is scheduled to take place in The Hague on June 24 and 25. Ukraine's Vladimir Zelensky, who had once been a regular guest of honor at NATO events following the escalation of the conflict between Moscow and Kiev in February 2022, has not been officially invited to attend yet. The European NATO members are 'desperate to avoid upsetting a volatile Trump' during the summit, Reuters said in an article on Friday. According to the sources, the written statement summarizing the results of the event is expected to be 'unusually short' in order to reduce the chance of disagreements. Whether the document 'will even identify Russia as a threat or express support for Ukraine is still up in the air,' they said. Unlike the two previous years, the leaders of the bloc's member states do not plan to hold a formal meeting of the NATO-Ukraine Council as part of the summit, the officials said. According to a diplomat from the bloc, it could be replaced by a working dinner with either foreign or defense ministers. Another senior NATO diplomat told Reuters that it would be 'at least a PR disaster' if Zelenskiy does not attend the summit in some form. According to the sources, the Ukrainian leader would have to settle for an invitation to a pre-summit dinner, hosted by Dutch King Willem-Alexander. This way, he could travel to The Hague without angering Trump, they explained. The US president, who is trying to broker an end to the fighting between Moscow and Kiev, had previously ruled out the possibility of Ukraine joining NATO. Russia has repeatedly stated that moves towards admitting the country into the bloc would be crossing a red line and have been one of the key reasons for the conflict, insisting that Ukraine should adopt a neutral status as a key condition for a lasting peace. The New York Times reported earlier this week that Trump, who had a public spat with Zelensky at the Oval Office in February, 'reserves special animosity' for the Ukrainian leader and considers him 'a bad guy.'

Musk's father urges him to admit defeat
Musk's father urges him to admit defeat

Russia Today

time18 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Musk's father urges him to admit defeat

Errol Musk has said that his son, Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, will end up losing in his conflict with US President Donald Trump, who has the overwhelming support of the American people. The clash between the two former allies over Trump's 'Big and Beautiful' tax and spending bill escalated into a series of jabs on social media on Thursday. Musk, who stepped down as the head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) last week, accused the president of 'ingratitude,' supported the idea of impeaching him and threatened to paralyze the US space program by decommissioning the Dragon spacecraft. Trump, for his part, said that the tech billionaire had gone 'crazy' and claimed that Musk was actually upset because he 'took away his EV Mandate.' Errol Musk told Al Arabiya on Friday that in the conflict with his son, 'Trump, of course, will prevail because he has been voted in by the majority of the people in America. I have just been three weeks in America - the people are, I would like to say, 80%, but actually 100% behind Trump.' The elder Musk said that after the rift broke out, he sent a message to Elon 'telling him to make sure this fizzles out now.' 'What has happened is, you know, the alphas have sort of… cleared the opposition and like most animals, elephants... lions and so forth, and humans, are now looking to take on each other. It seems a bit silly to me,' Errol Musk said. Both Trump and Elon Musk 'have been through a great deal of stress… You can expect this kind of thing, you know, when you are the focus of attention day and night. Eventually, people reach a point where they lash out... I think there is a bit of tiredness here,' he said, explaining the spat. If his son is able to end the conflict swiftly, it will be just 'a bump in the road' in his relationship with the president, the 79-year-old said. When asked if there is a chance that Trump and Musk will be friends again, he replied: 'Yes, of course. Yes, of course.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store