Washington Sends Strong Signal: No Repeat of the “China Mistake” with India

The “China Mistake” Doctrine: Why Washington Is Moving to Contain India’s Rise and What It Means for the Global Order

In the gilded halls of international diplomacy, words are often chosen for their ability to obscure rather than reveal. However, at the recent Raisina Dialogue in New Delhi, the veneer of diplomatic niceties was stripped away, replaced by a bluntness that has left the world’s most populous democracy reeling. Christopher Landau, the US Deputy Secretary of State, delivered a message that was as clear as it was provocative: The United States will not repeat the “mistake” it made with China by allowing India to leverage American markets and technology to become a peer competitor.

This statement marks a fundamental shift in the Indo-US relationship, moving it away from the romanticized “natural partnership” narrative toward a cold, transactional, and managed engagement. For the last two decades, the prevailing wisdom in Washington was that a strong, prosperous India was in America’s best interest—a democratic counterweight to an assertive China. But as India’s economic and technological footprint grows, the primary concern in the halls of the State Department has shifted from “balancing China” to “maintaining American dominance.”

The China Precedent

To understand the weight of Landau’s warning, one must look back at the early 2000s. Washington championed China’s entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO), betting that economic liberalization would lead to political reform. Instead, Beijing used globalization to hollow out American manufacturing, acquire sensitive technology, and build a military and economic machine that now challenges the United States on every front.

“India won’t get the same treatment,” Landau remarked, signaling that the “sweeping access” to US capital and technology that fueled China’s rise is now a relic of the past. The US is essentially admitting that it feels “beaten” in many commercial sectors by its previous engagements and is now adopting a protectionist stance to ensure no other nation—even an ally—follows the same trajectory.

The War on Talent: Students and Visas

Perhaps the most stinging part of this new doctrine is its focus on people-to-people ties. For decades, the flow of Indian talent to the United States has been a win-win. Indian students constitute the largest group of international scholars in the US, contributing billions to the economy and serving as the backbone of Silicon Valley’s innovation engine.

However, Landau’s rhetoric suggests that this talent pipeline is now being viewed through a lens of suspicion. He questioned whether the US needs these students, arguing that they might eventually compete for the same jobs as Americans. This sentiment aligns with a broader, more restrictive immigration policy led by the current US administration. The H-1B visa program, the primary route for Indian professionals, remains in a “deep freeze,” leaving thousands of high-skilled workers in a state of professional and personal limbo.

By framing Indian students and workers not as “contributors to innovation” but as “competitors for jobs,” Washington is attacking the very cultural and intellectual bridge that has kept the two nations close. If the US begins to view Indian brainpower as a threat rather than an asset, the fundamental nature of the partnership changes from collaborative to zero-sum.

Friction Beneath the Surface

While trade volumes have grown and defense ties have deepened in recent years, this week’s revelations prove that the foundation of the relationship is resting on unresolved friction. India has managed to navigate some of the more punitive aspects of US policy, such as shaking off the 50% import tariffs that threatened its export market, but the underlying tension remains.

The US wants India to be a security partner in the Indo-Pacific—a “Shield of the Americas,” as some might phrase it—but it is increasingly unwilling to provide the economic and technological reciprocity that India expects. New Delhi, for its part, has always valued its “strategic autonomy.” It seeks a partnership of equals, not a relationship where its growth is “managed” by a supervisor in Washington.

A New Geopolitical Reality

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The warning delivered by Landau is a sobering reminder that in the realm of great power politics, there are no permanent friends, only permanent interests. The United States is currently in an era of introspection and protectionism, driven by the fear of losing its status as the world’s sole superpower.

For India, this is a moment of truth. The “China Mistake” doctrine suggests that the path to becoming a global power will not be paved by American assistance, but rather obstructed by it. If Washington views a successful India as a “mistake to be avoided,” New Delhi must rethink its reliance on US markets and technology.

As the global order continues to shift, the Indo-US partnership finds itself at a crossroads. It remains a partnership with immense promise, but it is now one defined by a “managed” ceiling. The gunshot-like delivery of Landau’s message has signaled to the world that the rules of engagement have changed. History is being rewritten, and as power dynamics fluctuate, India must prepare to navigate a future where its greatest ally is also its most vigilant gatekeeper.