The Art of Diplomatic Kite Fighting:
How India Mastered the Ancient Game
A 26-Year Strategic Chess Game Disguised as Humility
It is the kite flying season in India but picture this: It’s Raksha Bandhan in New Delhi, but the rains have grounded all the kites. The rooftops that should be alive with colorful paper diamonds dancing in the wind are empty and wet. But perhaps that’s fitting, because the most spectacular kite fight of our times isn’t happening in the Delhi sky—it’s been playing out on the global stage for over two decades, and most of the world only just realized the game was on.
“It may be dangerous to be America’s enemy, but to be America’s friend is fatal,”
(An observation by Henry Kissinger)
The Master’s Opening Move (1998)
Every kite fighter knows the secret: let your opponent think you’re just enjoying a casual flight while you’re actually positioning for the kill. In 1998, when Atal Bihari Vajpayee came to power, the world saw India’s nuclear tests and thought they understood the move. What they missed were the two quiet revolutions that would reshape everything.
First, Vajpayee began building India’s naval manufacturing from scratch—shipyards, aircraft carriers, even submarines. While everyone focused on the nuclear spectacle, India was quietly ensuring it could never again be held hostage by foreign naval suppliers. No more depending on others for spare parts or facing sanctions that could cripple your fleet.
But the second move was pure genius, invisible to almost everyone: the appointment of shikshamitras—education friends—in schools across India. While the world’s strategic analysts were counting warheads and naval vessels, Vajpayee was investing in something far more powerful: the minds of an entire generation. Those children who learned basic literacy through shikshamitras in 1998 are the adults using smartphones and digital payments today. Without that foundation, Modi’s Digital India would have been impossible.
And then, the masterstroke of appearing humble: Vajpayee cozied up to the USA through further liberalization. The Americans saw the economic opening and thought, “Perfect, India is integrating into our system.” They never realized they were providing the capital and technology India needed to build its independence.
The Stalled Decade (2004-2014)
Every chess game has moments where players lose sight of the bigger picture. The UPA years were India’s lost decade—not economically, but strategically. The Congress-led government essentially put Vajpayee’s long-term vision on pause, becoming too comfortable with the “junior partner” role rather than building independent power. It also killed the small scale industries by opening the doors for Chinese products without any reciprocation.
It’s like having a brilliant kite fighting position and then… doing nothing with it for ten years. The pieces were on the board, but nobody was playing the game.
The Acceleration (2014-2024)
When Modi returned in 2014, he didn’t start from scratch—he picked up Vajpayee’s chess game exactly where it had been left off. But now the conditions were perfect:
The shikshamitras had done their work. India had hundreds of millions of people who could read, write, and operate digital technology. The foundation was there for the great leapfrogging that followed.
Just as India jumped from no phones to smartphones for everyone, bypassing landlines entirely, the defense sector leapfrogged decades of gradual development. No more importing Bofors guns with their corruption scandals and foreign dependencies. Indigenous BrahMos missiles, Akash air defense systems, even India’s own answer to the American Humvee.
And when the Kargil conflict showed how dangerous it was to depend on others’ GPS systems—remember, the US denied GPS access to India while reportedly providing it to Pakistan—India built NavIC, its own navigation system. Never again would Indian forces be blinded during crucial moments.
The Kite Fighting Technique
Here’s where the kite fighting analogy becomes perfect. Every good kite fighter knows the classic technique:
- Let loose the kite – appear casual, let it fly high and far
- Position above your opponent’s thread – gain the crucial advantage
- Swift, sharp pull back – the moment of truth, speed is everything
Modi executed this flawlessly on the global stage. Years of appearing humble, praising Biden, Trump, whoever was in power. Everyone thought: “Modi is so accommodating, how can he refuse anything?” The world saw a deferential leader who would always be compliant.
But while appearing humble, India was gaining altitude—building economic strength, defense capabilities, strategic partnerships. The “Swift pull back” came when India suddenly wasn’t the accommodating partner everyone expected. Instead of being the compliant kite flying below, India started asserting its own interests decisively.
The genius is that opponents often don’t realize what’s happening until their string is cut.
The Domestic Foundation
None of this would have worked without genuine popular support. Modi’s welfare programs—subsidized housing for over ten million families, free food distribution, free healthcare for the poor—created an unshakeable domestic base that external pressure couldn’t penetrate.
This wasn’t just politics; it was strategic necessity. When the CIA tried regime change operations through the farmer protests and Shaheen Bagh demonstrations, using the classic color revolution playbook, Modi’s genuine mass support meant these movements couldn’t gain the critical momentum needed to topple governments.
The 2024 election victory was the final confirmation: the regime change strategy had failed completely.
The Global Chessboard Today
By 2024, the pieces were perfectly positioned. India’s COVID diplomacy—sending vaccines and medical aid to the Global South when the West was hoarding—created the same kind of gratitude and alignment that America built with the Marshall Plan post-WWII. Except India’s version was more powerful because it came from one developing country helping others, not a rich power helping devastated allies.
The results speak for themselves:
- Putin, Xi, and Lula all backing Modi
- Spain and Switzerland canceling F-35 orders after Trump’s tariffs
- France, even under leftist leadership, supporting strategic autonomy
- Australia and UK (Five Eyes countries!) signing FTAs with India
- The Gulf becoming India’s largest trading partner
- Both India and EU as observers in mBridge, the possible alternative to SWIFT
- Even Indonesia’s president proudly declaring his Indian DNA
When Trump Forced the Hand
USA was not happy when India hit Kirana Hills which had housed it’s nuclear assets and frantic behind the scene pat on Pakistan ensured a smooth surrender for Trump to claim Noble Prize. Alas, Modi denied that opportunity in full public glare on the floor of Parliament.
However the real turning point came when Trump himself moved the goalposts. A mini-FTA deal had actually been reached between India and the USA—carefully crafted to keep American agricultural products out. This wasn’t protectionism; it was civilizational necessity.
American genetically modified food products simply lack the taste that Indian consumers expect. More critically, milk is part of morning prayer rituals for nearly a billion Indians. Milk from cows fed with non-vegetarian feed is religiously unacceptable. Even if Modi wanted to accept such imports, his government would be finished—some red lines cannot be crossed, no matter the economic pressure.
But Trump refused this carefully negotiated compromise. He moved the goalposts and insisted that agricultural products must be made duty-free imports into India. In essence, he demanded that Modi commit political suicide for a trade deal.
That was the moment the kite strings were truly positioned for cutting. Trump announced 25% tariff. Modi remained unmoved. No call. No rapprochements. Tariff raised to 50%. Still no reply.
A 30 trillion economy imposed tariff so high to bar import over an balance of payment of 41 billion on a 4 trillion economy. No flutter from the former colony of UK. Stoic silence was the only reply. Trump escalated further and announced there would not be any negotiations with India. Still no reply.
The Moment of Recognition
Yesterday, India’s defense ministry issued a statement without any triggering news report: they haven’t canceled any trade deals with the USA. The very act of denying something unprompted sent the clearest message possible: “We have that capability, we’ve been thinking about it, and it remains an active option.”
Airlines of India have already placed orders for over 500 Boeing Aircraft. These include Air India and Akasa Airlines. The value of these would be over 100 billions. India cancelled just one order for P8 reconnaissance aircraft from Boeing, signalling that more could follow. In fact the India could just impose reciprocal tariff of 50% on the import and deal would go to Airbus.
It’s like a kite fighter positioning their manja, (glass-coated thread) right above an opponent’s thread and casually mentioning, “Oh, by the way, I’m not planning to cut anything today.” When nobody even asked.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu is tweeting about wanting to visit India to help resolve US tensions. Even traditionally US-aligned countries are recognizing they need to hedge for the post-American-hegemony world.
And here’s a detail most people don’t know: India has a very old treaty with Israel that includes commitments aggression against Israel, that no other country has received from India—the only such arrangement in Indian diplomatic history. Subramanian Swamy revealed this years ago, and significantly, no one ever denied it. In diplomacy, that silence speaks volumes. That secret treaty puts India and Israel in special relationship. Both have never hesitated to make supplies in times of war faced by other.
The Tactical vs Strategic
The fundamental difference is now clear. Trump is a tactical player—he sees an opponent’s kite and immediately tries to cut it with aggressive moves, tariffs, threats. Quick wins, immediate confrontations.
Modi and his coalition are strategic players—they think in decades, not news cycles. They set up positions quietly, build alliances methodically, and wait for the perfect moment to execute.
When P. Chidambaram former Finance Minister of India, set a target of reaching a $4 trillion economy by 2043, he was thinking conventionally—linear growth, traditional development patterns. Modi’s team achieved it 19 years early because they understood the strategic pieces were already in place, waiting to be activated.
The Endgame
Today, we’re witnessing the climax of a 26-year strategic masterpiece. The “humble kite” that spent decades appearing accommodating while building strength is now positioned above everyone else’s strings.
Countries that thought they could control India through defense dependencies, economic pressure, or political interference are discovering their traditional tools don’t work anymore. When your opponent has indigenous defense manufacturing, alternative payment systems, genuine popular support, and strategic partnerships across multiple blocs, the old playbook becomes useless.
The chess game that began in 1998 has reached its decisive moment. And just like in kite fighting, by the time you realize you’re being outmaneuvered, your string is already being cut.
The monsoon rains may have grounded the kites over Delhi today, but the most important kite fight in modern geopolitics is soaring high above us all—and India is holding the winning string.
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The art of kite fighting, whether with paper and manja or nations and treaties, remains the same: patience, positioning, and knowing exactly when to make your move.