Showing posts with label Opinion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Opinion. Show all posts

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Why It Took The India–EU Free Trade Deal 19 Years To Happen? Its Pros And Cons

YouTube

On 27 January 2026, India and the European Union announced the political conclusion of what leaders on both sides called the “mother of all trade deals.” After nearly nineteen years of negotiations marked by long pauses, revived talks, and shifting geopolitical realities, the India–EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA) emerged as one of the most consequential trade accords of the decade. It links a combined market of roughly two billion people, accounting for close to a quarter of global GDP, and commits both sides to unprecedented levels of market access.

The timing of the agreement is as significant as its scale. The deal arrives in an era defined by rising protectionism, fractured supply chains, sanctions-driven trade, and strategic rivalry between major powers. Against this backdrop, the India–EU FTA stands out as a deliberate assertion that deep, rules-based trade cooperation remains possible between large, pluralistic democracies—even when domestic sensitivities and political risks are high. Yet its importance lies not merely in tariff schedules or export projections, but in how it reshapes economic incentives, redistributes gains and losses, and repositions both partners within a rapidly changing global order.

A Nineteen-Year Journey: From Early Optimism to Strategic Necessity

The origins of the India–EU FTA can be traced to the early 2000s, when optimism about globalisation still prevailed. In 2004, India and the European Union elevated their relationship to a Strategic Partnership, reflecting growing political engagement and expanding trade ties. Formal negotiations for a Broad-Based Trade and Investment Agreement began in 2007, driven by complementary economic interests. India sought greater access to Europe’s affluent consumer markets for its textiles, pharmaceuticals, and services, while the EU aimed to enter India’s fast-growing economy with automobiles, machinery, chemicals, wines, and high-end manufactured goods.

Initial rounds of negotiation revealed ambition but also deep fault lines. The European Union pressed for sharp tariff reductions, strong intellectual property protections, and binding commitments on labour and environmental standards. India, wary of exposing sensitive sectors, resisted sweeping liberalisation in agriculture, dairy, automobiles, and small-scale manufacturing. By the early 2010s, disagreements over India’s high tariffs on cars and alcohol, European demands on regulatory alignment, and concerns over sovereignty brought talks to a standstill.

By 2013, negotiations had effectively collapsed. India turned inward to focus on domestic economic reform, while the EU became preoccupied with the Eurozone crisis and, later, Brexit. For almost a decade, the FTA remained dormant—invoked rhetorically but lacking political urgency.

The revival after 2022 was driven less by commercial enthusiasm than by geopolitical shock. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine exposed Europe’s vulnerability to concentrated supply chains, particularly in energy and raw materials. At the same time, growing US–China rivalry and renewed American tariff threats underscored the fragility of the global trading system. For both India and the EU, diversification ceased to be optional and became a strategic imperative.

Negotiations were relaunched in 2022 with a new framing: resilience, strategic autonomy, and supply-chain security. Technical talks intensified through 2024 and 2025, backed by strong political signalling  from both sides. The final breakthrough came in late 2025, culminating in the January 2026 announcement that the agreement had been politically concluded, pending legal vetting and ratification.

What the Agreement Delivers—and Why It Matters

Substantively, the India–EU FTA is the most ambitious trade agreement India has ever concluded. It commits both sides to eliminating or substantially reducing tariffs on approximately 96.6 per cent of EU exports to India and about 99 per cent of Indian exports to the EU by value. For the EU, this opens access to one of the world’s largest and fastest-growing consumer markets. For India, it secures near-complete duty-free access to its largest trading partner.

European firms gain unprecedented entry into India’s industrial and consumer markets. Tariffs on automobiles—long a symbol of India’s protectionist posture—will fall sharply over a phased period, subject to quotas. Duties on machinery, chemicals, and industrial inputs will be reduced or eliminated, lowering production costs for Indian manufacturers and infrastructure projects. European wines and spirits, once prohibitively expensive, will gradually become more competitive in India’s urban markets.

Indian exporters, in turn, benefit from expanded access to the EU for textiles, apparel, leather goods, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, gems and jewellery, marine products, and engineering goods. Given the EU’s size and purchasing power, even marginal gains in market share could translate into substantial export growth. Services commitments—particularly in IT, professional services, finance, and maritime transport—go further than in most of India’s previous FTAs, reinforcing India’s comparative advantage in skill-intensive sectors.

Economically, the upside is significant. European officials estimate annual tariff savings of up to €4 billion for EU companies, with EU exports to India potentially doubling by the early 2030s. For India, cheaper imports of machinery, technology, and chemicals support its manufacturing ambitions under “Make in India” and related industrial policies. The agreement is also expected to stimulate foreign direct investment, as European firms seek to integrate India into diversified supply chains.

The Other Side of the Ledger: Who May Lose and Why It Matters

Yet the gains from the India–EU FTA will not be evenly distributed, and ignoring its potential losers would weaken any serious assessment of the agreement.

In India, agriculture remains the most politically sensitive sector. Although major commodities such as dairy, rice, sugar, and poultry are excluded or heavily protected, indirect pressures persist. Increased imports of European processed foods, wines, spirits, and agri-based products may affect domestic producers at the margins. Small farmers and informal agri-processors, already vulnerable to price volatility and limited access to credit, could feel exposed even to partial liberalisation. For them, trade agreements often symbolise an urban, export-oriented bias that overlooks rural insecurity.

India’s micro, small, and medium enterprises face a more subtle challenge. While the agreement includes provisions aimed at supporting SMEs, exposure to high-quality European competition in machinery, chemicals, and manufactured goods may squeeze firms that have long relied on tariff protection rather than productivity. Those unable to upgrade technology, meet EU standards, or integrate into global value chains risk losing domestic market share, at least in the short to medium term.

Labour adjustment costs also loom large. Trade-induced restructuring rarely produces immediate, visible winners, while job displacement in import-competing sectors can be swift and politically salient. Without robust reskilling programmes, social safety nets, and regional adjustment policies, the agreement risks fuelling economic anxiety—even if net employment effects are positive over time.

European resistance, meanwhile, is likely to concentrate in agriculture and civil society. Farmers’ groups in several EU member states have already demonstrated their capacity to stall trade agreements, as seen with the EU–Mercosur deal. Even limited access for Indian agricultural or agri-processed goods may provoke opposition from constituencies already under pressure from climate regulations and rising costs.

Environmental and labour groups within the EU may also remain sceptical. Although the agreement contains sustainable development chapters, critics argue that such provisions are often weakly enforced. There is concern that regulatory asymmetries could allow firms operating under looser compliance regimes to undercut European producers, particularly in emissions-intensive industries.

The EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism crystallises this tension. From Europe’s perspective, CBAM is essential to climate credibility. From India’s perspective, it risks neutralising some of the FTA’s benefits by imposing new costs on steel, aluminium, and cement exports. This unresolved friction underscores a broader truth: as tariffs fall, regulatory measures increasingly shape the real terms of trade.

Strategic Meaning in a Fragmented World

Beyond economics, the India–EU FTA is a strategic document. It reflects Europe’s effort to diversify partnerships beyond the United States and China, while reinforcing its presence in the Indo-Pacific. For India, it strengthens its position as a central pole in a multipolar order, reducing overdependence on any single partner and enhancing strategic autonomy.

The agreement also complements parallel initiatives, including the India–EU Trade and Technology Council, cooperation on clean energy and climate finance, and expanding dialogue on security and supply-chain resilience. Together, these frameworks elevate the relationship from transactional trade to structural partnership.

How the India–EU FTA Compares with India’s Other Trade Pacts

Compared with India’s other major trade agreements, the EU deal stands apart in scale and ambition. The India–UK FTA, while deep and politically significant, covers a far smaller market and lacks the systemic reach of the EU’s single market. The India–EFTA agreement is notable for its investment commitments but involves economies with limited trade volumes relative to the EU.

India’s ASEAN FTA, by contrast, offers a cautionary lesson. While it expanded trade, it also generated persistent concerns about trade deficits and limited gains for Indian manufacturing. Learning from this experience, India negotiated the EU agreement with greater emphasis on safeguards, phased liberalisation, and strategic reciprocity.

Conclusion: A Transformative Deal, If Managed Wisely

The India–EU Free Trade Agreement is both a landmark achievement and a calculated gamble. It promises significant economic gains, deeper supply-chain integration, and a powerful geopolitical signal in favour of rules-based trade. At the same time, it redistributes risk and reward unevenly, creating adjustment pressures that will test domestic politics on both sides.

Its ultimate success will depend less on tariff schedules than on governance: how effectively governments manage transitions, cushion vulnerable groups, enforce standards, and align trade policy with broader social and environmental goals. If handled well, the agreement could become a cornerstone of a durable India–EU partnership and a model for large-scale cooperation in a fractured global economy. If mishandled, it risks reinforcing the very trade scepticism it seeks to counter.

In that sense, the “mother of all deals” is not an endpoint, but an opening—one that will be judged not by its ambition on paper, but by its outcomes in practice over the coming decade.



India EU FTA, India EU deal, India EU trade, India EU agreement, India EU summit, India EU 2026, India EU economy, India trade news, India foreign policy, India exports, EU India relations, global trade, free trade agreement, economic diplomacy, trade geopolitics, India manufacturing, supply chains, world economy, geopolitics explained, international trade

India geopolitics, global power shift, multipolar world, deglobalization, China plus one, global trade war, supply chain shift, Europe India ties, US China rivalry, India rising power, economic nationalism, sanctions economy, energy geopolitics, climate politics, carbon tax CBAM, Indo Pacific strategy, great power competition, global south, world order 2026, geopolitics today


Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Pollution: India’s Silent Saboteur of Economic Development and Human Life

YouTube

In January 2026 at the World Economic Forum in Davos, renowned economist Gita Gopinath highlighted a stark but under-acknowledged threat to India’s long-term development: pollution. She argued that pollution imposes a far deeper and more persistent economic burden on the country than trade tariffs—whose effects, while noteworthy, are temporary and negotiable. Her remarks come as India pursues the ambitious goal of becoming the world’s third-largest economy by 2028, targeting annual growth of 6-7%. Yet behind this optimistic growth narrative lies a looming crisis—environmental degradation that is both a public health catastrophe and a drag on economic progress. Pollution undermines India’s economic development through losses in human capital, productivity declines, escalating healthcare costs, disruptions in key sectors like agriculture and tourism, and intergenerational impacts. So, the costs of pollution today may outweigh the harms caused by trade barriers.

The Lethal Grip: How Pollution is Killing People in India

Air pollution in India stands among the worst globally, measured through fine particulate matter aka PM2.5. These are tiny particles that penetrate deep into lungs and enter the bloodstream, triggering deadly health outcomes. Recent global assessments reveal the true scale of this crisis.

According to the 2025 Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change, outdoor PM2.5 pollution was responsible for over 1.7 million deaths in India in 2022, up nearly 38% from 2010. Fossil fuels contributed to 44% of these deaths, with petrol use in transport alone linked to hundreds of thousands of fatalities. The premature mortality associated with outdoor air pollution in 2022 translated into an estimated $339.4 billion in economic losses—about 9.5% of India’s GDP.

These figures confirm that pollution is not an abstract problem; it is a massive public health killer. The sources are diverse: industrial emissions, vehicle exhaust, power plants burning coal, construction dust, organic waste burning, and seasonal agricultural residue burning (e.g., paddy stubble in northern states). Even household fuels such as wood, dung, and crop residue contribute significantly to the air pollutant load in rural areas.

A separate consortium study led by Indian and international researchers found that long-term exposure to PM2.5 above WHO guidelines is associated with roughly 1.5 million deaths annually in India. Core mechanisms include acute increase in the severity of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), cardiovascular diseases, strokes, and lung cancer. Studies also consistently show that each 10 micrograms per cubic meter (µg/m³) increase in PM2.5 is linked to an approximately 8.6% higher risk of mortality, even at levels below India’s national standards.

Geographically, the crisis is most severe in northern India and the Indo-Gangetic Plain. Delhi and surrounding cities routinely record PM2.5 levels far above WHO recommended limits, with some measurements many times higher than safe thresholds. This results in severe ‘smog’ events, particularly in winter when temperature inversions trap pollutants near the ground. While precise death counts for local cities vary, estimates suggest over 17,000 pollution-linked deaths annually in Delhi alone, and similar masked patterns of elevated respiratory and cardiovascular morbidity in other metropolitan regions.

Environmentalists also highlight that pollution shortens life expectancy—analyses suggest up to 6+ years lost for residents of cities like Lucknow compared to populations in areas meeting WHO targets. 

Beyond mortality, pollution causes chronic illnesses that reduce quality of life and productivity. It is linked to low birth weight, developmental problems in children, diabetes, hypertension, and other non-communicable diseases increasingly observed across urban and rural India alike. 

In sum, pollution operates as a silent but relentless killer—not only through overt fatalities but through pervasive, daily assaults on human health.

Economic Ramifications: Pollution as a Drag on India’s Growth Engine

If pollution’s human toll is immense, its economic cost is equally staggering. Rather than being a transient shock like a tariff increase, pollution imposes a quasi-permanent tax on the Indian economy—eroding output, reducing earnings, and diverting resources away from productive investment.

Lost Productivity and Labor Output

Pollution reduces both the quantity and quality of labor output. Illness from polluted air leads to absenteeism (workers missing days of work) and presenteeism (workers being present but performing poorly due to illness). Studies show that elevated pollution levels are linked with lower economic output—especially in sectors reliant on physical labor (e.g., construction, manufacturing, agriculture).

Estimates suggest that air pollution costs India approximately $95 billion annually—or about 3% of GDP—through lost productivity, reduced efficiency, and higher healthcare burdens. Another global economic analysis reinforces that if India had achieved WHO-compliant safe air quality in 2019, GDP could have been roughly $95 billion higher through reduced morbidity, absenteeism, and mortality.

Beyond aggregate figures, pollution also saps cognitive performance and may impact learning outcomes in children, suggesting an erosion of human capital that compounds over generations.

Healthcare Costs and Public Resources

Pollution-related illnesses impose huge burdens on public and household healthcare spending. Although exact national valuations vary, older estimates indicate that pollution accounted for $36.8 billion in economic losses in 2019—equivalent to roughly 1.36% of GDP—primarily through lost output and healthcare costs.

These costs strain both public health infrastructure and individual household budgets, particularly in low-income communities where pollutant exposure is often highest and medical access is limited. Farmers, informal sector workers, and migrant labourers—who cannot afford reliable healthcare—bear disproportionate illness and cost burdens.

Sectoral Disruptions

Pollution inflicts wide-ranging economic damage across India’s core sectors. In agriculture, air pollutants such as ground-level ozone and acid deposition weaken crop health, cutting yields and farm incomes; studies in the Indo-Gangetic plains suggest losses of 10–20 percent in affected regions. Tourism and services also suffer, as domestic and foreign visitors increasingly avoid smog-choked cities like Delhi and Agra, reducing footfall for hotels, retail, and heritage-dependent local economies. Pollution further undermines foreign investment, since multinational firms now weigh environmental quality when choosing locations for capital and talent. Meanwhile, India’s heavy dependence on coal—providing nearly half of total energy and over three-quarters of electricity as of 2022—locks in pollution and complicates long-term decarbonisation.

Comparative Perspective: Pollution Versus Tariffs

Gopinath’s argument comparing pollution to trade tariffs holds analytical weight. Tariffs operate as discrete, often sector-specific external shocks. Countries can negotiate, diversify markets, or adjust product lines to mitigate tariff effects. Their impacts on GDP are usually limited in duration and scale.

In contrast, pollution’s economic effects are systemic and persistent. They transcend sectors, affecting human health, worker productivity, healthcare costs, agricultural yields, tourism, and investment climates continuously. Recent assessments suggest pollution’s burden on GDP (potentially 5–9.5% annually when broad cost categories are included) far outpaces typical tariff losses, which usually range within fractions of a percent of GDP. 

Moreover, tariffs generally do not kill workers or reduce life expectancy. Pollution does—steeply eroding the demographic dividend India hopes to exploit as a young workforce.

Structural and Intergenerational Impacts

Pollution creates deep structural and intergenerational damage that far outlasts short-term economic shocks. Premature deaths and chronic illnesses steadily erode human capital, shrinking workforce participation and weakening institutional memory. Education suffers as schools shut during severe pollution episodes, while children exposed to toxic air face long-term health problems and cognitive decline, undermining future productivity. The burden falls disproportionately on marginalised groups—urban slum residents, rural households dependent on biomass fuels, and low-income workers—thereby widening inequality. Pollution also interacts with climate change, intensifying heat stress and compounding health and economic risks. These harms accumulate across generations, leaving exposed children with lifelong health penalties, lower earnings, and deeper developmental gaps.

Policy Imperatives and Solutions

Given the scale of the crisis, India’s pursuit of sustainable development requires urgent, coherent environmental policy firmly integrated with economic planning. A rapid transition to clean energy—by expanding renewables and reducing coal dependence—can sharply cut pollution while generating jobs. Stronger emissions standards, cleaner fuels, and tighter vehicle norms are essential to curb industrial and transport pollution. Urban mobility reforms, including efficient public transport, electric vehicles, and strict dust control, can ease city air toxicity. In agriculture, alternatives to crop residue burning must be incentivised to address seasonal pollution spikes. Expanding air-quality monitoring across urban and rural areas and linking real-time data to enforcement would improve accountability. Crucially, pollution control must be embedded in public health planning, treating dirty air as a health emergency. Though these measures involve costs, their long-term economic gains—higher productivity, lower healthcare spending, stronger tourism, and better quality of life—far outweigh the short-term burden.

Conclusion

Pollution in India is not a peripheral environmental complaint; it is a central development challenge. It claims millions of lives each year, with over 1.7 million deaths in 2022 attributed to PM2.5 alone and fossil fuels driving a large share of this burden. Economically, pollution siphons off a significant share of GDP each year—through lost productivity, healthcare costs, and constrained economic opportunities.

Compared to trade tariffs, which are episodic and negotiable, pollution’s drag on growth is deep, systemic, and continuous. In a country aspiring to lead global growth and reap the benefits of its demographic dividend, ignoring pollution threatens not just human lives but economic futures.

Addressing pollution must therefore be central to India’s policy agenda—through clean energy, stronger regulation, urban planning, rural reforms, and public health strategies. Doing so is not merely an environmental imperative; it is essential for unlocking sustainable, inclusive, and resilient growth.



India pollution crisis, air pollution in India, PM2.5 India, India air quality, pollution deaths in India, economic cost of pollution, India GDP and pollution, public health crisis India, environmental economics India, Gita Gopinath Davos 2026, World Economic Forum India, India economic growth challenges, fossil fuel pollution India, coal pollution India, clean air India, renewable energy India, climate change and health India, air pollution mortality India, productivity loss due to pollution, healthcare burden India, urban air pollution India, Delhi air pollution, Indo Gangetic Plain pollution, sustainable development India, environmental policy India, pollution vs tariffs, India trade tariffs impact, human capital erosion India, demographic dividend India, climate and economy India, air pollution policy India, WHO air quality guidelines India, clean energy transition India, economic impact of air pollution


Saturday, January 24, 2026

The Permanence of War: Why the World’s Conflicts Refuse to End—and What 2026 Is Likely to Inherit

 YouTube

If wars truly ended when their original causes disappeared, the modern world would be largely peaceful. Colonial borders would have settled. National identities would have matured. Historical grievances would have faded into textbooks. Diplomacy would have replaced violence as the default language of international disagreement.

Instead, in 2026, the global conflict map look less like a series of discrete crises and more like a palimpsest whereupon old wars are not being erased but overwritten with new justifications. The world did not witness a dramatic surge in entirely new wars in 2025; rather, it endured the continuation, mutation, and entrenchment of existing ones. What has changed is not the presence of conflict but its structure, durability, and political utility.

Modern wars no longer seek decisive victory. They seek leverage, signalling power, domestic legitimacy, and strategic denial. Above all, they seek permanence.

The Myth of Resolution in a World That Profits from Stalemate

Most contemporary conflicts persist not because solutions are unavailable, but because resolution threatens entrenched interests. Frozen conflicts—Northern Ireland, Cyprus, Kosovo, Donbas—are often celebrated as diplomatic successes. In reality, they are conflicts placed in long-term storage. Violence subsides, but identity disputes, territorial ambiguity, and political resentment remain carefully preserved.

The Good Friday Agreement ended mass bloodshed in Northern Ireland, yet sectarian identities remain politically mobilised. Cyprus has been divided since 1974 not because reunification is impossible, but because ambiguity serves geopolitical convenience. Kosovo-Serbia relations remain deliberately unresolved, allowing nationalist leaders on both sides to periodically revive grievances for domestic gain.

A frozen conflict is not peace. It is violence postponed, often indefinitely.

Israel–Palestine: A Conflict Too Useful to End

Few conflicts illustrate structural permanence better than the Israeli–Palestinian struggle. Rooted in the mid-20th century creation of Israel and competing claims to land, sovereignty, and national identity, it has long outlived the conditions of its origin.

Israel retains overwhelming military superiority, yet no credible political roadmap for Palestinian self-determination exists. Gaza remains ungovernable, the West Bank increasingly fragmented, and Palestinian leadership divided and discredited. Meanwhile, Israeli politics have grown more securitised, less conciliatory, and increasingly shaped by coalition pressures rather than strategic foresight.

For Hamas, perpetual resistance legitimises authority. For Israeli hardliners, perpetual threat justifies militarisation and settlement expansion. External actors posture but rarely intervene decisively. The result is a conflict that renews itself through periodic explosions of violence, each one framed as exceptional while reinforcing the same deadlock.

In 2026, the question is not whether the conflict ends, but whether it regionalises further through proxy escalation involving Iran, Hezbollah, and Gulf interests.

Iran and Israel: The Shadow War That Prefers Darkness

The Iran–Israel confrontation remains one of the most consequential undeclared conflicts of the modern era. It is fought through assassinations, cyberattacks, sabotage, airstrikes, and proxy militias rather than formal declarations of war. Iran arms Hamas and Hezbollah not merely to challenge Israel, but to extend deterrence without direct exposure. Israel retaliates covertly to avoid triggering regional war.

This form of conflict thrives precisely because it avoids resolution. Open war would be catastrophic. Peace would require mutual recognition and compromise neither side can politically afford. Thus, escalation is carefully calibrated to remain below the threshold of full-scale war—until miscalculation intervenes.

In 2026, the danger lies less in deliberate escalation than in accidental convergence, where simultaneous crises overwhelm restraint.

Kashmir: Stability Without Peace

The Kashmir conflict between India, Pakistan, and China is often described as dormant. This is misleading. It is actively managed, militarily controlled, and politically unresolved. India maintains firm territorial control over its administered regions. Pakistan retains its grievance as a cornerstone of national identity. China views Kashmir through a strategic lens tied to border security and infrastructure corridors.

Large-scale war is unlikely, not because tensions are resolved, but because nuclear deterrence imposes restraint. Yet deterrence also entrenches stagnation. Political dialogue is absent, trust is nonexistent, and local alienation remains unaddressed.

In 2026, Kashmir remains stable in appearance, volatile in substance—a conflict neither side can win, but neither is willing to abandon.

Ukraine: When War Becomes the Architecture of Order

The Russia–Ukraine war, rooted in the 2014 annexation of Crimea and the separatist conflicts in Donetsk and Luhansk, has evolved into something larger than territorial dispute. It is now a structural conflict over the nature of European security and the post–Cold War order.

Donetsk and Luhansk are no longer merely contested regions; they are symbols of a fractured continent. Ceasefires have failed because they attempt to manage symptoms rather than causes. Russia seeks strategic depth and influence. Ukraine seeks sovereignty and survival. Europe seeks stability without escalation. The United States seeks deterrence without direct confrontation.

Even if active combat diminishes in 2026, militarisation will not. Ukraine will remain armed, Russia entrenched, Europe anxious. Peace, in the classical sense, has already slipped beyond reach.

Syria, Afghanistan, and the Illusion of Post-War Landscapes

Syria and Afghanistan illustrate a disturbing modern pattern: wars that “end” without resolution. Syria’s civil war, which began in 2011, devastated the country, displaced millions, and fractured its social fabric. Its sovereignty is fragmented, reconstruction stalled, and reconciliation nonexistent.

Afghanistan followed a similar trajectory. After twenty years of war, the withdrawal of U.S.-led forces in 2021 did not produce peace but abandonment. The Taliban govern, but violence persists, economic collapse deepens, and extremism finds fertile ground. The conflict no longer dominates headlines because it no longer involves Western troops.

These wars demonstrate a brutal truth: modern conflicts do not end; they merely lose international attention.

Africa’s Resource Wars: Chaos with a Business Model

The conflicts in eastern Congo and Somalia defy simplistic explanations. They are not failures of statehood so much as examples of functional disorder. In Congo, armed groups, foreign interests, and corporate supply chains intersect around minerals essential to the global economy. Instability enables extraction without accountability.

Somalia’s prolonged conflict, compounded by insurgency, persists because governance remains fragmented and external interventions prioritise security over institution-building. Violence is sustained not by ideology alone, but by the political economy of disorder.

In 2026, these conflicts will continue precisely because they are profitable to too many actors to resolve.

Latin America’s Quiet Wars

In Colombia, decades of civil conflict involving the state, guerrilla groups like FARC and ELN, and paramilitaries have killed over 200,000 people. Peace agreements reduced violence but did not dismantle the underlying structures of inequality and criminal economies.

Mexico’s drug cartel violence and Central America’s gang wars represent a different category of conflict—undeclared wars where non-state actors rival state authority. These conflicts persist because they operate within global demand networks, weak institutions, and selective enforcement.

They are not aberrations. They are alternative systems of power.

Europe’s Supposedly Settled Fault Lines

Northern Ireland, Cyprus, Kosovo, and the Basque region are often cited as conflicts of the past. In reality, they are conflicts managed by fatigue rather than reconciliation. Political arrangements suppress violence but do not erase grievance. Identity remains mobilisable. Memory remains combustible.

In an era of rising nationalism and economic anxiety, these fault lines can reawaken with unsettling ease.

The Forces That Will Shape Conflict in 2026

What distinguishes 2026 from earlier years is not the number of conflicts, but the conditions that accelerate them. Technological diffusion has lowered the cost of violence. Drones, cyber warfare, surveillance tools, and disinformation allow states and non-state actors to inflict damage without overt confrontation. War has become deniable, modular, and continuous.

Climate stress will intensify resource competition, particularly in fragile states. Economic inequality will fuel internal unrest. Great powers will increasingly prefer proxy engagement to direct confrontation. The result is a world where conflict is normalised, regulated, and rarely resolved.

Potential New Flashpoints on the Horizon

As existing conflicts persist, several regions show signs of escalation that could redefine the global security landscape. The Red Sea and Horn of Africa risk becoming militarised trade corridors as shipping disruptions, militia activity, and naval deployments converge. Nigeria’s internal fragmentation, driven by ethnic tension, jihadist violence, and economic stress, threaten to spill beyond borders.

In South America, Venezuela–Guyana tensions over oil-rich territory could escalate as domestic pressures mount in Caracas. In Asia, China–Philippines confrontations in the South China Sea carry the risk of miscalculation, while India–China border tensions remain structurally unresolved despite temporary disengagements. Even seemingly minor disputes like the Thailand–Cambodia border issue could resurface amid nationalist mobilisation.

Finally, the least visible but most pervasive battlefield of 2026 may be cyberspace—a domain where conflict unfolds without maps, casualties are indirect, and accountability is elusive.

Will 2026 Be Any Different?

In form, yes. In substance, no.

Wars in 2026 will be more fragmented, more technological, and less formally declared. They will involve fewer soldiers and more machines, fewer decisive battles and more endless skirmishes. They may kill fewer people per episode, but they will persist longer, embed deeper, and resist closure more effectively.

The defining tragedy of contemporary conflict is not its savagery but its banality. War no longer shocks the world; it merely scrolls past it.

Peace remains possible, but it demands political courage that few leaders possess and institutional reforms that powerful actors resist. Until then, 2026 will not mark a turning point. It will mark another chapter in humanity’s long habit of managing violence rather than ending it.


#GlobalConflicts,#Geopolitics,#WorldAffairs,#InternationalRelations,#GlobalSecurity,#ModernWarfare,#ProxyWars,#ConflictAnalysis,#PoliticalRisk,#StrategicStudies,#WarAndPeace,#FrozenConflicts,#GreatPowerPolitics,#MiddleEastConflict,#UkraineWar,#IndoPacific,#SouthChinaSea,#KashmirIssue,#IsraelPalestine,#IranIsrael,#AfricaConflicts,#LatinAmerica,#EuropeanSecurity,#CyberWarfare,#FutureOfWar,#2026Outlook,#GlobalInstability,#MultipolarWorld,#SecurityStudies


Featured Post

RENDEZVOUS IN CYBERIA.PAPERBACK

The paperback authored, edited and designed by Randeep Wadehra, now available on Amazon ALSO AVAILABLE IN INDIA for Rs. 235/...