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India’s global clout in doubt after failing to sway SCO, Quad on Pakistan

SCO did not mention the militant attack in Pahalgam at its recent meeting, while the Quad’s statement on the incident excluded Pakistan

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India’s Defence Minister Rajnath Singh (second from left) and his counterparts attend a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation in Qingdao on June 26. Photo: AFP
India’s failure to rally international backing for its claims that Pakistan was behind a recent deadly militant attack in Kashmir has exposed the limits of its diplomatic influence.
The setback has raised questions about India’s ability to mobilise multilateral platforms in its favour, despite being a prominent member of the China-led Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) and the US-backed Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad), according to analysts.

At the SCO meeting in Qingdao on June 25, India refused to endorse a joint declaration that omitted any mention of the April 22 militant attack in Pahalgam, where gunmen killed 26 people – mostly tourists – in one of the deadliest assaults in Kashmir in recent years.

India has blamed Pakistan-based militants for the attack, which led to a brief conflict between the two South Asian neighbours before a US-brokered ceasefire took effect on May 10.

The final text of the SCO declaration did refer to militant violence in Pakistan’s Balochistan – another point of contention as Islamabad has long accused New Delhi of backing armed groups in the province.

India’s external affairs ministry said India refused to back the declaration because “one country objected” to Delhi’s request to include concerns about terrorism.

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