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Vijay Keshav Gokhale

Indian diplomat From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vijay Keshav Gokhale
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Vijay Keshav Gokhale IFS, (born 24 January 1959),[7] is a retired Indian diplomat and the 32nd Foreign Secretary of India. Gokhale previously served as the Ambassador of India to China.[8]

Quick facts 32nd Foreign Secretary of India, Prime Minister ...
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Early life and education

Gokhale hails from Pune, Maharashtra.[9] He studied at St. Columba's School, Delhi. He then attended St. Stephen's College, Delhi, and completed his M.A. degree in history from the University of Delhi. He joined the Indian Foreign Service in 1981.[10]

Gokhale is fluent in Marathi, Hindi, English, Sanskrit,[11] and Mandarin Chinese.[12] He is married to Vandana Gokhale, and they have a son, Jayant Gokhale.[13]

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Career

Gokhale is an Indian Foreign Service officer of the 1981 batch.[12] He served in Indian diplomatic missions in Hong Kong, Hanoi, Beijing and New York.[7] He served as the Deputy Secretary (Finance), Director (China and East Asia) and Joint Secretary (East Asia) at the Ministry of External Affairs, India.[14]

Gokhale was the High Commissioner of India to Malaysia from January 2010 to October 2013[14] and the Indian Ambassador to Germany from October 2013 to January 2016.[15] He was the Indian Ambassador to China from 20 January 2016 to 21 October 2017.[3] He is currently a Non-Resident Senior Fellow at the New Delhi-based think tank, Carnegie India. Gokhale is one of India's most reputed and well-versed sinologists.[citation needed]

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Expertise

Vijay Gokhale is considered as an expert on Chinese affairs.[16] He has the rare distinction of being the only Indian Foreign Service officer to have served in both mainland China and Taiwan.[17] He was the Director General of the India-Taipei Association, Taiwan.[18] Gokhale during his tenure as the Ambassador of India to China, played a key role in resolving the 2017 Doklam crisis between both the nations.[12][19] Statements and actions since the beginning of his tenure indicate that he will push a moderate or dovish position on relations with China.[20] In June 2020 Gokhale stated that China is not seeking a New World Order.[21]

Publications

In 2021 he published a research paper titled "The Road from Galwan"[22] examining different factors influencing the Galwan Valley clash between India and China in Eastern Ladakh, along the Line of Actual Control, and the way forward for the two Himalayan neighbors. Gokhale announced his very first book titled "Tiananmen Square - The Making of a Protest" which is an eye-witness account of the 1989 brutal military crackdown in China and its aftermath from an Indian perspective.

  • Tiananmen Square: The Making of a Protest. Harper Collins, May 2021. ISBN 9789354225369
  • The Long Game: How the Chinese Negotiate with India. Penguin Random House. July 2021. ISBN 9789354921216
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See also

References

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