Concepts

Act East Policy

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectInternational Relations

Definition

India's strategic and economic policy of deepening engagement with the countries of South-East Asia and the wider Asia-Pacific, upgraded from the earlier Look East Policy.

Key points

  • The Look East Policy was launched in the early 1990s under Prime Minister P. V. Narasimha Rao to reconnect India with East and South-East Asia after the end of the Cold War.
  • It was rebranded as the "Act East Policy" in 2014, signalling a shift from economic engagement to a more proactive strategic, security, and connectivity role.
  • Its priorities include connectivity projects such as the India-Myanmar-Thailand Trilateral Highway and the Kaladan Multi-Modal Transit Transport Project, and stronger ties with ASEAN.
  • It has a strong North-East India dimension, treating the region as India's gateway to South-East Asia, which links it to border management and insurgency concerns in the North-East.
  • It dovetails with India's Indo-Pacific outlook, including the Quad and the SAGAR doctrine.

Why it matters for CAPF

Act East ties India's foreign policy to North-Eastern security and connectivity, a theme that overlaps internal security and international relations, making it a high-value CAPF topic.

Common confusion

"Look East" (1990s, economic) was upgraded to "Act East" (2014, strategic and security-focused). Act East emphasises South-East Asia and the Indo-Pacific; do not confuse it with "Neighbourhood First", which focuses on India's immediate South Asian neighbours.

One-line recall

Look East (1990s) upgraded to Act East (2014): proactive strategic and connectivity engagement with South-East Asia, gateway through the North-East.

concept neighbourhood first, concept sagar doctrine, concept bimstec, concept quad

Parent note

international organisations and india

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