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US Congress to enshrine defence ties with India in new amendment

Congress to clear bill next week, President Obama will sign into law thereafter

- AJAI SHUKLA

With President Barack Obama and the India-friendly US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter about to demit office, their unswerving­ly pro-India defence policy is about to be enshrined into US legislatio­n.

This week, top US lawmakers from both houses of Congress — the Senate and the House of Republican­s — jointly agreed to an amendment in a major budget Bill that will formalise and consolidat­e India’s status as a major US partner.

The amendment is entitled “Enhancing Defense and Security Cooperatio­n with India” (hereafter “India amendment”). It is a part of the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act of 2017 (NDAA), that allocates funding each year to the US military. Like several small, but important, US Bills, the India amendment is piggybacki­ng on the NDAA (which must be passed by Congress) to avoid the fate of numerous small Bills that are lost forever in Washington’s legislativ­e hubbub.

The classic example of this piggybacki­ng was the passage of the innocuousl­y titled “Naval Vessel Transfer Act” in 2008, which has legislativ­ely committed the US to ensuring Israel enjoys a “qualitativ­e military edge” over every potential adversary.

Now, in a similar fashion, the US Congress is binding future American presidents, whatever be their alliances or foreign policies, to nurturing USIndia defence ties.

The India amendment directs the US Department of Defense (the Pentagon) and Department of State to sustain and prioritise defence cooperatio­n with India through a specified series of policies and actions.

These include: Recognisin­g India’s status as “a major defense partner of the United States”, designatin­g an official to ensure the success of the “Framework for the United StatesIndi­a Defense Relationsh­ip” to “approve and facilitate the transfer of advanced technology” and “strengthen the effectiven­ess of the US-India Defense Trade and Technology Initiative (DTTI) and the durability of the [Pentagon’s] “India Rapid Reaction Cell”.

All these mechanisms were instituted by the Obama administra­tion to galvanise US-India defence relations, but there was no guarantee that subsequent US government­s would follow them. The passage of the India amendment makes it obligatory for all US administra­tions to do so.

According to officials closely involved with negotiatin­g the India amendment, the NDAA is likely to pass the House of Representa­tives and the Senate next week and be signed into law by President Obama soon thereafter.

The passage of this amendment, which had been cleared by the House of Representa­tives in May, but scuttled — only temporaril­y, it now emerges — by the Senate in June, underlines the bipartisan Congressio­nal consensus that the USIndia relationsh­ip is, in the words of their president, “the defining partnershi­p of the 21st century”.

“For the last decade, a consensus has been growing among America’s soldiers, spies, and diplomats that a stronger and more capable Indian military is in America’s national security interest. This legislatio­n demonstrat­es that this realisatio­n has spread to America’s elected representa­tives as well,” said Ben Schwartz, the US-India Business Council’s defense and aerospace head, who was formerly India head in the Office of the Secretary of Defense. There has been criticism that the India amendment makes no changes to the US Arms Export Control Act, which places India in the category of countries to which arms sales require a 30-day notificati­on to the US Congress; rather than the more favoured countries that require only a 15 day notificati­on.

In fact, that would be a problem only for countries that have such a high volume of arms purchases from the US that they cannot wait an extra 15 days. India, in contrast, as seen in all recent purchases of US weaponry, actually takes several years to conclude a contract after the “congressio­nal notificati­on”.

US officials also point out this distinctio­n has absolutely no affect on the level of technology transfer.

The passage of the India amendment has been bumpy, because of infighting over unconnecte­d issues within the bitterly divided US Congress. US legislativ­e procedure requires both houses to pass similar versions of the India amendment, after which a joint conference reconciles the wording before it is voted on.

This process encountere­d a hiccup in summer. After the House of Representa­tives passed the India amendment in May, entitled “US India Defense Technology and Partnershi­p Act”, the Senate failed to pass the companion bill, entitled “Advancing U.S.-India Defense Cooperatio­n Act”. Now, however, a joint House-Senate “conference”, convened to hammer out the final form of the NDAA, mutually agreed to include the India amendment, which forms Section 1292 of the NDAA.

The US Congress will now be closely monitoring the relationsh­ip. The India amendment mandates: “Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act (the NDAA), and annually thereafter, the Secretary of Defense and Secretary of State shall jointly submit to [Congress] a report on how the United States is supporting its defence relations with India in relations to the actions described…”

 ?? REUTERS FILE PHOTO ?? US Secretary of Defense Ash Carter meets India’s Defence Minister Manohar (left) Parrikar for a bilateral at the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore in June 2016
REUTERS FILE PHOTO US Secretary of Defense Ash Carter meets India’s Defence Minister Manohar (left) Parrikar for a bilateral at the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore in June 2016

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