External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar on Saturday elevated substantial problems concerning the expanding impact of liberalism in international national politics and its link to freedom. In a current declaration at the Munich Security Conference 2025 and highlighted India’s freedom and claimed “i would challenge the equation of liberalism in a kind of international way with democracy.”
“I do think different societies have their own culture, their own values, and their own way of doing things. And the idea that there is some kind of one truth and one judgment and norms, and that should be propagated, evaluated, and judged, I think that is the one issue that we are facing in politics today,” Jaishankar claimed.
In a declaration, Jaishankar criticised the expanding impact of self-appointed “custodians” of freedom that have no straight participation in national politics.
“And it is done by people who do ratings, it is done by newspapers. So there is a reaction in many parts of the world to self-appointed custodians, people who never fought an election, nothing to do with politics, actually telling the world what is right and what is wrong in democracy. And I think, for me, it’s inevitable… it will be challenged,” he included.
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.(* )likewise elevated problems concerning the dual criteria typically observed in international national politics.
Jaishankar he claimed.
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“Secondly, look, every country has its mainstream politics, with its outliers. If you want examples, how do Western countries search for outliers in those societies? If I look at what Western ambassadors do in India, if my ambassador did a fraction of that, you would all be up in arms. I think there is a double standard,” 61st
The, happening in Munich Security Conference, Munich, started on Germany 14 and will certainly wrap up on February 16. February