For the last several years, India’s ruling elite and its cheerleaders in the strategic community sold one grand idea to the world: that India was no longer merely a South Asian state, but the central pillar of a new Indo-Pacific order. Washington, especially during Trump’s first term, appeared willing to indulge this imagination. The renaming of the old US Pacific Command as Indo-Pacific Command in 2018 was treated in New Delhi as more than bureaucratic symbolism. It was read as a certificate of elevation, a recognition that India had arrived as America’s principal regional counterweight to China and as a future net security provider from the Indian Ocean to the Western Pacific.
But diplomacy, like war, eventually tests slogans against outcomes.
The restoration of the Pacific Command designation is therefore not just a change of name. It is a message. No serious analyst should exaggerate it into a complete rupture in U.S.-India relations. India will remain important for Washington in maritime coordination, technology, trade, intelligence and China-related calculations. But it is equally wrong to dismiss the move as meaningless. Strategic language is chosen carefully in Washington. If “Indo-Pacific” represented an American bet on India’s expanding role, the return to “Pacific” suggests that the bet is being reviewed against performance.
If “Indo-Pacific” represented an American bet on India’s expanding role, the return to “Pacific” suggests that the bet is being reviewed against performance.
Operation Sindoor and Pakistan’s response have contributed to that review. India entered that crisis with the confidence of a power that believed it could treat Pakistan however it liked, dominate the narrative and then return to business as usual. The outcome was very different. Pakistan did not collapse under pressure. Its military response restored deterrence. Its diplomatic outreach prevented isolation. Its nuclear status reminded the world that South Asia cannot be managed by unilateral Indian assumptions. Most importantly, the crisis again required international attention, pressure and crisis management.
This is the contradiction at the heart of India’s strategic elevation. A state that repeatedly creates escalation risks with a nuclear-armed neighbour cannot simultaneously claim to be an uncontested regional stabiliser. A country that cannot impose a political settlement on Pakistan cannot be granted an open-ended mandate to manage South Asia. A power that expects Washington to back it against China, but also wants Washington to absorb the risks of its confrontation with Pakistan, cannot remain free of scrutiny forever.
This is where Trump 2.0 differs from Trump 1.0. The first Trump administration elevated India as part of a theory. The second appears more interested in results. In theory, India was to balance China, stabilise the Indian Ocean and project confidence across the region. In practice, it remains locked in unresolved disputes with Pakistan, faces a live border challenge with China, depends heavily on Russian military supplies, and has not shown the ability to deliver regional order on American terms. Washington may still use India, but it is no longer as willing to be used by India.
Pakistan’s relevance, by contrast, does not rest on branding. It rests on geography, deterrence, military capability, intelligence reach, access to Afghanistan, proximity to Central Asia and the Gulf, and a long, costly experience in counterterrorism. Pakistan may have economic weaknesses and political turbulence, but no regional map can be drawn around it. Every major question in this region – Afghanistan, terrorism, connectivity, China, the Gulf, nuclear stability and crisis management – runs through Pakistan in one way or another.
The lesson for India is simple. Strategic elevation cannot be sustained by public relations, diaspora applause or think-tank vocabulary. It must be earned through restraint, delivery and stability.
The Pacific Command reset does not end India’s importance. But it does puncture the illusion of Indian indispensability. After Sindoor, Washington has seen that Pakistan cannot be coerced into irrelevance.
The writer is a freelance columnist