Podcast with Andrea Benvenuti, author of “Nehru’s Bandung: Non-Alignment and Regional Order in Indian Cold War Strategy”

Andrea Benvenuti Andrea Benvenuti

In 1955, the leaders of 29 Asian and African countries flock to the small city of Bandung, Indonesia, for the first-ever Afro-Asian conference. India and its prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru played a key role in organizing the conference, and Bandung is now seen as a part of Nehru’s push to create a non-Western foreign policy that aligned with neither the US nor the Soviet Union.

 

 

Nehru’s Bandung: Non-Alignment and Regional Order in Indian Cold War Strategy, Andrea Benvenuti (Hurst, June 2024; Oxford University Press, August 2024)
Nehru’s Bandung: Non-Alignment and Regional Order in Indian Cold War Strategy, Andrea Benvenuti (Hurst, June 2024; Oxford University Press, August 2024)

But as Andrea Benvenuti’s Nehru’s Bandung: Non-Alignment and Regional Order in Indian Cold War Strategy points out, Nehru wasn’t actually keen on the idea at all. Nor was Nehru keen on a second summit, feeling that the summit merely highlighted divisions rather than forge consensus. And wrapped up in this whole discussion is Nehru’s attempt to bring China into the fold, perhaps best exemplified by Zhou Enlai, the only leader to emerge as a bigger star from Bandung than Nehru.

Andrea Benvenuti is Associate Professor in Politics and International Relations at the University of New South Wales, teaching 20th-century international history at the undergraduate and postgraduate levels.


Nicholas Gordon has an MPhil from Oxford in International Relations and a BA from Harvard. He is a writer, editor and occasional radio host based in Hong Kong.