My Account  |  RSS  
Sunday, March 21, 2010    

Search  


United States wants lightweight role for India

Font size:

Kolkata, India — U.S. President Barack Obama greeted the people of India on the occasion of the country's 63rd Independence Day on Aug. 15 by saying that a vibrant and promising India has a natural friend in the United States. But the U.S.-India friendship rhetoric lacks weight and doesn’t suggest that the United States supports a larger role for India in South Asian affairs.

In his encouraging message to Indians, Obama lauded the country’s democracy and the contributions Indian Americans have made in the United States. But he failed to offer any support to boost India’s diminishing role in South Asian politics.

To many, Obama’s talk of India’s growing economic power and of shared values between Indians and Americans seemed patronizing – merely a formal diplomatic wink in India’s direction.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s visit to India last month was another example of U.S. diplomacy hyping India’s image but failing to endorse any concrete plan to partner with it in resolving South Asia’s complex geopolitical issues. Viewing U.S. relations with India vis-a-vis Pakistan, she made it clear that India has to behave like a superpower to be regarded as one.

By staying at the Taj Mahal Hotel in Mumbai, which was the scene of a devastating terror attack last November, Clinton may have sent a strong message to terrorists. Still, she gave Pakistan leeway when she later said that the judicial process to bring perpetrators to justice takes time. The terrorists who organized the Mumbai attacks are reportedly Pakistani nationals belonging to the militant organization Lashkar-e-Taiba, operating from Pakistani soil. None has yet been brought to justice.

Perhaps Clinton should explain how India must behave, as an emerging Asian power, toward judicial delays and denials by Pakistan’s Interior Ministry that the terrorists are Pakistani state actors.

Regarding arms sales to India, the U.S. government mandates that an end-user agreement must be signed when high-tech U.S. weaponry is exported, to ensure that it does not land in the hands of rogue states. But it has sold millions of dollars worth of arms to Pakistan – the state that freed one of the most successful nuclear proliferators in history, Abdul Qadeer Khan, from house arrest in February this year.

The nuclear scientist, revered as a national hero in Pakistan for transforming the country into a nuclear power, had been under house arrest since 2004 for publicly confessing to running an illicit nuclear network. Khan allegedly sold technology to North Korea, Libya and Iran – arch foes of the United States.

If the stance of Pakistan, which differs from the United States in its definition of terror groups, does not stop the U.S. from selling arms and offering aid to Pakistan, why is it worried about India, a country that has never sold arms to rogue states that export terror? Perhaps Clinton should recall the statement of her husband, former U.S. President Bill Clinton, that democracies do not go to war with each other.

U.S. foreign policy in South Asia hasn’t really done any somersaults over the decades, as it has always revolved favorably around Pakistan. But India, with its burgeoning middle class with high disposable incomes, has now become a huge market for global businesses, which the United States can no longer conveniently ignore.

So, while many young intelligent and talented Indians still aspire to work and live in the United States and be a part of the American dream – thanks to the leverage of U.S. soft power – most do not understand that the U.S. diplomatic alliance with India is more to Washington’s advantage than India’s.

Presently the United States is experiencing its worst economic recession in decades. Billions could be earned by companies selling nuclear reactors, technology and expertise to India, since the way has been paved by the Indo-U.S. nuclear deal inked by former U.S. President George Bush. Even the sale of arms and military hardware to India could pump fresh blood into the economy. And yet the pace of such transactions seems to be decelerating, slowed by fresh political wrangling, while billions of dollars in aid to Pakistan seem to be on a fast track.

Pakistan is a key ally of the United States in its war on terror, and yet it takes a hide-and-seek approach in reigning in terrorists operating from its soil. Why does the U.S. government overlook this? Why aren’t there stronger efforts and approaches to involve India in South Asia’s security issues? It seems that India has only a small role, in both civil and military terms, in affecting U.S. policy on Afghanistan-Pakistan.

Finally, China and the United States are locked in a big business game where the United States is China’s biggest export market and China the biggest factory for U.S. goods and services. Deeper into the game is China’s US$1 trillion locked in U.S. Treasury bonds, which gives it wide elbow room to dictate terms.

So, Obama’s top priority is China. Concurrently, he is offering Pakistan an India without weight in South Asia in return for Pakistan’s cooperation in the war against terror. And for India, he has a pleasant Independence Day message.

--

(Susenjit Guha is a freelance writer living in Kolkata, India. He can be contacted at sguha60@yahoo.com. ©Copyright Susenjit Guha.)



[ Flag ]
DEVINDRA @ August 19, 2009 09:17PM HKT
The recent ASEAN /India FTA is a case in point.It brings in 1.6+ billion people together over a large part of ASIA.The US administration has been stumped by India's reaction over climate change& the DOHA negotiations / trade talks wherein they tried very hard to force India to accept an unequal status &which would have caused unmitigated disaster to India's farmers.The tragedy forced on India's indigo farmers during the raj is seared into our consciousness.NEVER AGAIN.The US administration needs to bone up on their history books dealing with asia.Our goal is 2020 to achieve a new India by then.

[ Flag ]
DEVINDRA @ August 19, 2009 09:04PM HKT
India has signed the civil nuclear power agreement after protracted negotiations with USA.Orders for nuclear power plants are being placed with Russia& France who do not have denial legislations like the HYDE ACT.The command economy of China is experiencing an upheaval of epic proportions lately.They are trying to switch to India's consumption led model.India's game plan is being revealed by its economic czar PM& the hiccup of a poor monsoon has delayed the next big step.Internal fine tuning of a new tax code for industry and the people have been revealed.This measure will be implemented after the people will be taken into confidence as it should be in a democracy.Deep liberalisation through market institutions are on the anvil,it will bring in a 50 - 50 economy in the next fiscal.Militarily the govt. is aiming for the best with purchases tied to a tight offsets policy / TOT / INDIGENOUS License production.Global companies are being offered contracts on competetive basis only with field trials in India.The US is not used to being a global arms supplier on these basis.They need to introspect as it is a multipolar world today.New multilateral agreements are being concluded leaving them as spectators.

[ Flag ]
DEVINDRA @ August 19, 2009 08:37PM HKT
The economy in america is in deep recession as correctly stated by the author.They have printed a trillion dollar stimulus as clearly identified by paul krugman.The new govt. of usa is dominated by 'denial ayotollahs' who imagine they are a hyper power economically&militarily.The actual fact is Obama's govt. want to cut and run from Af-Pak region.However they are aware that this will give these two countries back to the jihadis.The next attack on usa will emerge soon thereafter fueled by the narcotics trade.India has its own thinking&refuses to step into the quagmire created by the west in the Af-pak region.The yanks are not used to independent thinking by 'partners'.

[ Flag ]
NJ @ August 19, 2009 05:17AM HKT
So, finally one of the Indians got it! Like I always maintained, India is one of the Chamaars of the village who is being uplifted, paid under the table to fight rest of the Chamaars of the village by the Thakur. How can a country with One billion poors call itself to be any power at all, much worst, world power, are these guys smoking something or taking Bhang. At worst India is a misguided Chamaar, Period. Lets feed our hungry first, OK.








Photo/saxarocks
Equality is important in human life
Ravindra Kumar

Meerut, India



The Age of Orphans
by Laleh Khadivi

Reviewed by Peter Gordon



Copyright © 2007-2010 United Press International, Inc.