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The Architecture of Peace: Transitioning from ‘Words of War’ to ‘Dharmic Diplomacy’: A Comparative Analysis of Ancient Indian Ethics and Modern Geopolitical Rhetoric
Published Online: May-June 2026
Pages: 09-15
Cite this article
↗ https://www.doi.org/10.59256/ijrtmr.20260603002Abstract
The 21st century geopolitical landscape is currently defined by a “Rhetorical Crisis,” where the individual temperaments of ‘superpower’ leaders have transitioned from strategic diplomacy to “Rhetorical Brutalism.” This study posits that physical warfare is the kinetic manifestation of a prior systemic failure in leadership communication. By analyzing tensions prevailing in the Central Asia, in the months of March and April 2026, regarding the Strait of Hormuz and the escalatory language directed at sovereign States, the paper identifies a dangerous shift toward personal vilification over principled disagreement. The research introduces a Stewardship Model of diplomacy, synthesized from the ancient Indian ethical framework of “Vāk-Tapas” (Austerity of Speech) found in the Bhagavad Gita and the “Adharma-Doer Separation” principle from the Ramayana. This model is contrasted with the “unpalatable” and “cheap” rhetoric of modern autocratic styles that treat the global majority, consisting of 200+ independent nations, as pawns rather than sovereign partners. By integrating Western classical logic with Eastern “Dharmic” restraint, the study identifies a significant gap in current International Relations (IR) literature regarding the neuro-psychological impact of leadership temperament. The paper concludes by proposing a formal “International Leadership & Communicative Ethics (ILCE)” syllabus for the United Nations, asserting that global security is fundamentally dependent on a "Linguistic Reset" that restores the Vachan (Word) as the anchor of international trust.
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