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From Golden Chapter to Strategic Liability: India Bangladesh Strategic Partnership 2025

2 min readSource

Analysis of the India Bangladesh Strategic Partnership 2025. Explore how the fall of Sheikh Hasina and rising anti-India sentiment are reshaping South Asian geopolitics.

The handshake remains, but the grip has tightened into a fist. For much of the last decade, Bangladesh was hailed as the crown jewel of India's 'Neighborhood First' policy. However, as we approach 2025, this 'Golden Chapter' looks increasingly like a strategic headache. Since the sudden arrival of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in India on August 5, 2024, the bilateral ties have entered a volatile transition.

The Cost of Over-Investing in India Bangladesh Strategic Partnership 2025

India's engagement since 2009 was deep but perhaps too narrow. Bilateral trade surged from $6.2 billion to $14.24 billion by 2023, making Dhaka India's largest trading partner in South Asia. New Delhi extended $8 billion in credit lines for massive infrastructure projects. Yet, India's strategy equated regional stability with regime continuity. By prioritizing Hasina's leadership over broader societal engagement, India now faces a legitimacy crisis among the Bangladeshi public.

Demographic Shifts and Geopolitical Friction

A generational shift is redefining the relationship. Nearly 45% of the population is under 25, and for them, the 1971 liberation nostalgia has faded. They view India less as a liberator and more as a dominant neighbor. Economic woes have added fuel to the fire; GDP growth fell from 7.88% in 2019 to an estimated 3.8% for 2025. According to the World Bank, over 3 million people slid below the poverty line this year alone.

Meanwhile, China remains a major player with $40 billion in Belt and Road Initiative investments. Unlike India's emotional ties, Beijing's influence is transactional, allowing it to navigate political shifts more flexibly. The United States has also filled the normative gap left by India's silence on human rights, applying pressure through visa restrictions and public criticism.

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