India Must Brace for Persistent US Interference, Warns Security Report

A report from the Vivekananda International Foundation cautions that India must seriously prepare for the possibility of persistent American interference in its domestic affairs. It argues that the U.S., particularly under a Trumpian framework, acts against nations it perceives as lacking capacity for reprisal. The document cites historical examples, including unfair Anglo-American propaganda targeting India during the Biden administration over Khalistani issues. It also highlights concerning neo-imperialist rhetoric from U.S. officials, such as Secretary of State Marco Rubio's speech at the Munich Security Conference.

Key Points: Report Warns India of Persistent US Interference Risk

  • US power threatens regional stability
  • Boost counterintelligence against US activities
  • Anglo-American propaganda targeted India
  • Europe's strategic autonomy is limited
  • Report warns of neo-imperialist US rhetoric
3 min read

India must seriously anticipate possibility of persistent American interference: Report

A security foundation report urges India to anticipate and counter potential US interference in its domestic affairs, citing a new era of American unilateralism.

"New Delhi must now seriously anticipate the possibility of persistent American interference - Vivekananda International Foundation report"

Washington/New Delhi, March 3 As the regional security implications continue to unfold in the Middle East, India must adopt a broader perspective and recognise that European strategic autonomy remains inherently limited compared to its own.

While diversifying its economic partnerships, India should not be under any illusions that continental Europe would intervene if the former's independent foreign policy attracts Anglo-American displeasure, a report said on Tuesday.

"The events of 28 February 2026 show how unbridled US power can prove threatening for any region's stability. From a national security perspective, New Delhi must now seriously anticipate the possibility of persistent American interference in its domestic affairs, both covert and overt, much as France had already begun to do within a week of Donald Trump's inauguration in January 2025," a report in New Delhi-based Vivekananda International Foundation detailed.

"Given that Trumpian America seeks to inflict on others whatever it perceives they lack the capacity to do by way of reprisal, boosting counterintelligence coverage of all US activities, official and unofficial (including media and NGO activism) is a prudent course of action for every state," it added.

According to the report, the roots of such unilateralism existed before the Trump administration, with India unfairly targetted by Anglo-American propaganda during former US President Joe Biden's tenure over the deaths of foreign-based Khalistanis.

"Those who were terrorists in India, became 'dissidents' in the Western media. As in the case of Iran, where there has recently been a choreographed parade of Iranian exiles endorsing the American action, so too were critics of India allowed to malign the country," it highlighted.

At the 2026 Munich Security Conference, the report said, the US Secretary of State Marco Rubio delivered a speech whose broadly conciliatory tone drew attention, particularly his description of the US as a 'child of Europe'.

"What some analysts noticed however, was the full-throated celebration which Rubio paid to Europe's history of colonial conquest, resource extraction and racially-motivated Western superiority over other civilizations. He seemingly presented Europe with a choice: join the American quest to rebuild Western hegemony, or risk irrelevance," it mentioned.

"His message projected white supremacy over non-white heathens in the latter's own homelands. It was a message not of xenophobia within American borders but of neo-imperialism and neo-colonial plunder at the international level, a return to 19th century gunboat diplomacy," it noted.

The report further said, "At a time when the European continent is being forced into energy dependence on the US through an extortionate trade deal (one that risks replacing over-reliance on Russian gas supplies with over-reliance on American ones), there is perhaps not much that Brussels or other EU capitals can do."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The point about Khalistani terrorists being rebranded as 'dissidents' in Western media hits home. The double standards are glaring. We need our own narrative strength, not just military strength.
R
Rohit P
While the warning is valid, we must also be careful not to swing to the other extreme. Complete isolation isn't the answer. It's about smart, multi-aligned diplomacy where we engage with everyone but are beholden to no one.
S
Sarah B
As someone living in the US, I see this shift firsthand. The rhetoric is becoming more confrontational. India needs to build strong economic and tech partnerships outside the traditional Western bloc to have real leverage.
V
Vikram M
The report is right. Look at how they treat their own allies in Europe! If they can strong-arm Brussels, they won't think twice about pressuring New Delhi. Time to seriously invest in our defense and intelligence apparatus. Jai Hind!
K
Karthik V
I appreciate the report's depth, but some of the language feels a bit alarmist. The US-India relationship has many pillars—trade, diaspora, shared democratic values. We should work to strengthen those, not just prepare for conflict.
M
Meera T
This isn't just about geopolitics. It's about

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