India’s Strategic Pluralism and Malaysia’s Indo-Pacific Leverage - Part 1
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Malaysia comes at a time when the Indo-Pacific is being reshaped not by a single rivalry, but by overlapping strategic architectures. The region is no longer defined solely by the binary competition between the United States and China. Instead, it is increasingly characterised by fluid alignments, minilateral groupings, and contested norms. In this complex landscape, India’s unique positioning across BRICS, the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (QUAD), and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) gives it an outsized strategic relevance for Malaysia and ASEAN. For Malaysia, acknowledging and leveraging India’s multidirectional presence is essential to preserving centrality, neutrality, and strategic autonomy in an era of mounting Indo-Pacific threats. India’s strategic pluralism as a stabilising force Unlike most major powers, India operates simultaneously across forums that are often portrayed as competing geopolitical camps. It is an...