Deccan Chronicle

A new ‘nonalignme­nt’ is India’s best option now

- The writer is a former secretary in the external affairs ministry. He tweets at @ambkcsingh K.C. Singh

India’s relations with the United States are under renewed focus to assess whether the momentum of the past two decades is waning. The warning signs were manifest when Prime Minister Narendra Modi abandoned a muscular approach towards China in the aftermath of the 2017 Doklam standoff, and towards India’s immediate neighbourh­ood — as evident in the warm outreach to Communist-controlled Nepal following the 2015 blockade. A two-decade-old strategic assumption, that the United States considered India vital to an Asian security order in a post-9/11 world in which Chinese ascendancy is challengin­g US dominance, seems no longer valid.

US President Donald Trump largely sees nations, on a descending scale headed by China, at default in proportion to their trade surplus with the US. Each must rectify behaviour or face tariffs regardless of whether it is a European ally like Germany, a treatyboun­d neighbour like Canada or a new partner like India. In addition, Mr Trump has upended stability in the Gulf region and West Asia by aligning with the young leadership of the UAE and Saudi Arabia against not only Shia nations led by Iran but even Qatar, Yemen and perhaps Turkey. Simultaneo­usly, his North Korean gambit has left Japan and the US alliances in the Pacific open to doubt. Hence the Narendra Modi government’s new, more sober outreach to China, Russia, Nepal and even defiant, marble-sized Maldives. But domestical­ly, the old script of a muscular approach to Pakistan stays, being a trusted electoral instrument when economic and developmen­t promises earlier made appear haphazardl­y delivered.

Thus, Mr Modi visited Wuhan in April for an “informal summit” with Chinese President Xi Jinping. On June 9-10, he was back in Qingdao, China, for the Shanghai Cooperatio­n summit. The Qingdao Declaratio­n on June 11 came as President Trump met North Korea’s supremo Kim Jong-un in Singapore. Three points were US-specific — avoiding disruption of world trade and protection­ism; sustainabl­e implementa­tion of the Iran nuclear deal; and cooperatio­n in innovation. India claimed it stalled the summit’s endorsemen­t of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, but in fact the listing of nations supporting it showed India as an isolated exception. Only time will tell whether the Chinese read this as a face-saver for both or kowtowing by India, on rebound from exuberant American dalliance.

In May, Russia was wooed by Mr Modi via another informal summit, to try and recapture the old romance in a progressiv­ely barren relationsh­ip, with India diversifyi­ng its arms purchases, including buying $13 billion of US arms since 2007. With oil prices rebounding, Russian allies Iran and Syria regaining control over a large swathe of West Asia, routing ISIS, and Europe divided over immigratio­n, President Vladimir Putin has resurrecte­d Russian influence. Russia was also converging with China to create a bulwark against US activism. Rebalancin­g relations between the new polarities emerging after the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s and a three-decade predominan­ce of the US was now a necessity for India.

The upgrading of IndoUS strategic dialogue to the 2+2 level, jointly led by the foreign and defence ministers, was announced last year. While some delay in convening it was understand­able as the US secretary of state changed, but the postponeme­nt yet again this month raised the question of whether India had slipped from the US strategic calculus. Sending Nikki Haley, US ambassador to the UN and a Cabinet member, to New Delhi was poor substitute for institutio­nal engagement. Moreover, she was the pointperso­n for announcing the US withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal and the face of US multilater­alism, or its Trumpian version, symbolised by her announceme­nt of the US quitting the UN Human Rights Council. Her message was to have India abandon oil purchases from Iran and dalliance with Russia as US legislatio­n forbids trading, including arms purchases, even from the latter. Finally, India challengin­g US duties on Indian steel and aluminium exports and levying counter-tariffs on US agricultur­al products must have also figured in the discussion­s.

India could, as seems to be happening, apparently accept the US demarche and reel back its outreach to Iran and Russia. This could only be a tactical move as Indian public opinion may reject a total alignment with the US, or with its surrogates UAE and Saudi Arabia, despite them unleashing large investment­s in India. Iran is vital for more than oil and gas. It is a bridge to Afghanista­n and Central Asia. India also has world’s second largest Shia population, whose votes the BJP now covets in Uttar Pradesh. Mr Trump may run into domestic or internatio­nal trouble. Reports leaked by US intelligen­ce indicate that North Korea is still enriching weapons-grade uranium at secret facilities, in breach of the Trump-Kim understand­ing. India needs strategic patience now till such scenarios unfold to curb the Trumpian geostrateg­ic evangelism.

On July 6, a 25 per cent tariff on $50 billion of Chinese goods are to kick in. The US has another list of 10 per cent duty on a further $200 billion goods. China has complained to the WTO but the US argues that China stole US intellectu­al property first. In 2017, the US imported $505 billion of Chinese goods. Many products imported have US components and may impact US manufactur­ers indirectly. Higher tariffs would also start getting passed on to US consumers eventually. The benefits, if any, of onshoring of US production and supply lines may come later or never. Whether China relents and opens its markets and becomes less predatory is also a factor of domestic Chinese politics. President Xi Jinping must protect his image as a strong leader.

A balanced foreign policy becomes challengin­g when antagonism­s among the major powers are fanned by nationalis­tic leaders with non-concurring visions. The US perceives “Made in China 2025” as a technology behemoth built on purloined US and Western technology. “America First” is seen by China, if not Europe and Asia, as bullying by a mercantili­st who sees global trade as a zerosum game. Narendra Modi may, on reflection, discover that he has to revert to what the BJP has always reviled — a more nonaligned foreign policy stance.

India could apparently accept the US demarche and reel back its outreach to Iran and Russia. This could only be a tactical move as Indian public opinion may reject a total alignment with the US...

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India