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As India continues its rapid economic, technological, and geopolitical rise, questions are emerging about the implications of its expanding intelligence capabilities for Western allies and the broader international security environment. This article examines India’s principal intelligence and security institutions, including the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW), the National Investigation Agency (NIA), and the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), situating them within India’s evolving role as a global power. It analyzes India’s strategic partnerships with the United States, Russia, and multilateral groupings such as BRICS, alongside its involvement in regional and global conflicts including Kashmir, Ukraine, Israel–Palestine, and Bangladesh. The paper further assesses India’s growing cyber and intelligence capabilities, recent diplomatic controversies, and historical case studies of intelligence operations abroad. While India is widely viewed as a strategic partner by Western nations, its pursuit of strategic autonomy, multi-alignment diplomacy, and expanding intelligence reach raise important questions about trust, transparency, and long-term alignment. The article argues that Western allies should neither reflexively distrust nor uncritically embrace India’s intelligence posture, but instead adopt a nuanced approach that recognizes India as a capable, independent actor whose intelligence growth carries both strategic opportunities and potential risks.