Introduction
Since its independence in 1947, India has pursued a foreign policy of strategic autonomy, meaning it does not align itself with any one country or bloc. This has been facilitated by a pragmatic strategy, termed as multi-alignment, which has enabled New Delhi to engage with the United States through frameworks such as the Quad, maintain its traditional defence and energy ties with Russia, participate in China-adjacent groupings such as BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), and position itself as a key player of the Global South. It’s not a strategic ambiguity; it’s a planned architecture that has only grown more deliberate as India’s economic power and military profile have increased.
Such positions, however, have not gone without challenges. India signing all four foundational agreements with the United States – General Security of Military Information Agreement (GSOMIA), Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA), Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCASA) and Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement (BECA), combined with the Industrial Security Annex, is a new level of military cooperation that would have been hard to predict a generation ago.
Why would a state following a policy of multi-alignment engage itself within the defensive system of a single major power? The article argues that these agreements are not a departure from the multi-alignment approach but a force multiplier inside it.
Deepening Of Partnership Through The Foundational Agreements
LEMOA is the top example of the expanding India-US partnership. At its core, the agreement formalised what had already taken place: mutual access to military facilities for fuelling, logistical support and supply chains on a reimbursable basis. What changed was not the practice, but rather its legal and operational character. For India, the most tangible result is in terms of geographical reach. Historically, India has had limited capacity for sustained far-sea operations with only one operational aircraft carrier. LEMOA changes that calculus by providing access to US facilities in Djibouti and Diego Garcia, both critical nodes in the Indian Ocean. What LEMOA signals is a conscious strategic choice, driven to a large extent by China’s rising assertiveness in India’s immediate neighbourhood.
While LEMOA expands India’s geographic reach, COMCASA deepens its operational depth. The agreement leads to the transfer of high-end defence equipment fitted with encrypted communication systems, which was previously denied to India despite it operating at several major American platforms. Aircraft like the C-130J, C-17, and P-8I use encrypted radio and other critical equipment to operate, and they were substituted with indigenous workarounds. COMCASA filled this void.
The practical advantages go beyond existing inventory. Washington had explicitly conditioned the transfer of Sea Guardian armed drones under COMCASA, illustrating that the agreement is not merely retroactive but will also play an important role in future acquisitions. Furthermore, it positions Indian forces within a shared intelligence architecture, significantly raising the scope of interoperability.
The two other agreements are at the level of the intelligence and industrial architecture of this cooperation. The GSOMIA, signed in 2002, laid the core legal basis for securing classified military material exchanged between the two governments. In 2019, the agreement was expanded with the adoption of the Industrial Security Annex, which enhanced its relevance by extending information-sharing rights to defence industries and not only government departments. This led to an opportunity for joint development of high-technology equipment and, most importantly, made India a participant in the global defence supply chain.
BECA was signed in 2020, significantly boosting India’s precision-strike capabilities, providing access to American geospatial intelligence that includes high-end satellite imagery and nautical charts, as well as real-time targeting inputs. Within the maritime domain specifically, BECA has facilitated the sharing of intelligence on Chinese submarine activity in the Indian Ocean, with implications for China’s growing naval footprint in the region. GSOMIA and BECA jointly ensure that the operationalisation improvements achieved by LEMOA and COMCASA are backed by a robust intelligence backbone.
How Does India Maintain Strategic Autonomy Under These Pacts?
These pacts, especially LEMOA, have left a lasting impression that India has quietly abandoned its longstanding stance of avoiding military alliances with major powers. The concern, while understandable, is based on a conceptual misunderstanding. India’s foreign policy has always been against a military alliance, not a military agreement. It makes a difference. Over the decades, New Delhi has signed several operational military pacts with major powers, encompassing defence equipment, joint exercises, and the exchange of operational information.
Structurally, LEMOA is a tier-two agreement, which means that it takes effect only when India accepts a particular collaborative operation, whether an exercise, a port visit or a humanitarian mission. India is under no obligation to provide any logistical access and is free to reject any American proposal. Furthermore, the agreement does not permit the establishment of US military bases on Indian territory or direct access for Washington to Indian facilities. In this set-up, strategic autonomy is not undermined but is exercised through the conditionality governing the working of these agreements.
These agreements should also be seen within the context of India’s broader engagement with the rest of the globe. India’s simultaneous participation in the Quad and BRICS, its persistent defence reliance on Russia, and its functional relationship with China, despite it being competitive, are not indicators of strategic instability. Since 1947, the government has adopted a foreign policy that has considered formal alliances as a constraint rather than a guarantee. When India expanded its defence institutionalisation with Washington, it continued to buy Russian weaponry and energy. Despite unresolved border issues, it engages with Beijing diplomatically and economically. Therefore, these are not contradictions that degrade India’s position; they are viewpoints it intentionally defends. Thus, the foundational agreements function well within India’s multi-alignment framework.
In conclusion, what emerges is that India’s foreign policy of multi-alignment remains its defining instinct, even as the world around it grows more volatile. India continues to keep its doors open to Washington on defence and technology, manages an uneasy but workable relationship with Beijing, and retains historic ties with Moscow, while simultaneously not treating any of these ties as mutually exclusive. This is best captured in the Minister of External Affairs, Dr S. Jaishankar’s own framing: engage America, manage China, cultivate Europe, reassure Russia. This is exactly where the foundational agreements fit in; they deepen one partnership without shutting the door on others. As the global order grows less predictable, India bets that flexibility and not alignment will serve it best.










