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China Global Security Initiative GSI 2025: Beijing’s Strategic Play in South Asia

2 min readSource

Explore the impact of the China Global Security Initiative GSI 2025 in South Asia, analyzing India's pushback and the growing influence of Beijing.

It's not a formal alliance, but it's rewriting the regional playbook. Throughout 2025, South Asian nations grappled with China'sGlobal Security Initiative (GSI), a framework that challenges Western-led norms in one of the world's most contested regions.

The China Global Security Initiative GSI 2025 Framework

Launched by President Xi Jinping in April 2022, the GSI positions China as a stabilizing force. Unlike NATO, it doesn't offer mutual defense treaties. Instead, it exports "indivisible security"—a concept prioritizing state authority and sovereignty over external intervention.

According to Reuters, this approach is particularly attractive to governments focused on regime security. In South Asia, it serves as a policy umbrella for arms sales, surveillance tech, and internal security training, effectively bypassing traditional human rights conditions often attached to Western aid.

India’s Resistance and Regional Hedging

New Delhi isn't buying it. India views the GSI as a tool to expand Chinese influence and undermine its own regional primacy. In response, India has doubled down on its engagement with the Quad and its "Look West" policy.

  • Pakistan remains the model partner for the GSI, integrating it into their deep-seated defense ties.
  • Nepal and Sri Lanka are cautious, wary of being caught in the crossfire of great-power rivalry.

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