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India will be a dominant player in South Asia, Middle East

March 17, 2010 08:24 am | Updated 08:26 am IST - Washington

File Photo shows Pentagon police officers patrol a parking lot ouside the Pentagon. India will be a dominant player in South Asia, Middle East, says a report from Pentagon. Photo: AP

India’s strategic location in the Indian Ocean and proud martial traditions will make it a dominant player in South Asia and the Middle East in the next 25 years, a Pentagon report has said.

US Joint Forces Command in its latest report of emerging geopolitical and technological trends, which estimates their potential impact on future military operations, said it will likely have a role to play as America encourages the growth of India as a regional and even global power.

“India has a special place in the future international environment. Few countries in the world may figure as prominently in future US strategic calculations,” a ‘Joint Operating Environment (JOE) 2010’ report released on Tuesday said.

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“India’s military will receive substantial upgrades in the coming years. That fact, combined with its proud martial traditions and strategic location in the Indian Ocean, will make India the dominant player in South Asia and the Middle East,” the report said.

In the next 25 years, the report said relative balance of power between states will shift, some growing faster than the US and many states weakening relative to the US.

Noting that India could more than quadruple its wealth over the course of the next two decades, but large swaths of its population would likely to remain in poverty through the 2030s, it said “like China, this will create tensions between the rich and the poor.”

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Such tension, added to the divides among its religions and nationalities, could continue to have implications for economic growth and national security, the report said.

India would grow by 320 million during the next quarter of a century. The tensions that arise from a growing divide between rich and poor could seriously impact its potential for further economic growth, it added.

“While China’s rise represents the most significant single event on the international horizon since the collapse of the Soviet Union, it is not the only story.

Steady, if not rapid, economic growth appears to be the norm for much of the world over the coming decades, providing that sufficient energy remains available to fuel that growth and the financial crisis can be resolved,” it said.

“Russia and India are both likely to become richer, although Russia’s strength is fragile, resting as it does on unfavourable demographic trends, a single-commodity economy based on hydrocarbon extraction, and a lack of serious investment in repairing its crumbling infrastructure,” the report said.

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