Biyon Sony Joseph
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India signs the guest book in the Roosevelt Room before a bilateral meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump in the Oval Office, Feb. 13, 2025.Credit: Official White House Photo by Joyce N. Boghosian
The present Trump administration’s approach toward India and the Indo-Pacific reflects a marked departure from the strategic framing that characterized its first term (2017-2021). While New Delhi finds itself navigating an increasingly strained phase in bilateral relations with Washington, the release of the latest United States National Security Strategy offers important insights into how a second Trump presidency views the Indo-Pacific and the role India is expected to play within it. For India, the document carries both signals of continuity and indications of a broader strategic recalibration that could have significant implications for its regional ambitions.
During the first Trump administration, the Indo-Pacific occupied a central place in American strategic thinking. The 2017 National Security Strategy explicitly positioned the Free and Open Indo-Pacific as the cornerstone of U.S. engagement with Asia, underlining the region’s importance for maintaining a balance of power, securing vital sea lanes, and upholding a rules-based order. The new strategy, however, reflects a noticeable downgrading of regional priority. Although the Indo-Pacific continues to be identified as an area of core American interest, it no longer commands the same strategic prominence. Instead, the document makes it clear that the administration’s principal focus will be on the Western Hemisphere, reinforced by the articulation of a so-called Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine.