Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Indiaus two plus two talks on July 6

External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj and defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman will meet counterpar­ts in US

- Jayanth Jacob jayanth.jacob@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: After several scheduling issues, India and the US are slated to hold the first two-plustwo dialogue—between their foreign and defence ministers-in Washington on July 6, officials familiar with the plans said.

External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj and defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman will travel to Washington to meet their counterpar­ts, US secretary of State Mike Pompeo and defence secretary Jim Mattis, to discuss a host of bilateral issues as well as regional developmen­ts.

The dialogue announced after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s meeting with President Trump at the White House in August 2017 was tentativel­y scheduled for April 18-19 this year.

In March both foreign sectary Vijay Gokhale and Defence Secretary Sanjay Mitra were in Washington to prepare ground for the dialogue against the background of the exit of then US secretary of state Rex Tillerson. “But the preparatio­ns for the two plus two dialogue were on and it was only because of the scheduling issues that the dialogue got postponed to July”, said one of the officials cited in the first instance. The two sides also look- ed for suitable dates in June but couldn’t come up with a mutually convenient date for hosting the dialogue, this person added, asking not to be identified.

“India’s global strategic partnershi­p with the United States has overcome the hesitation­s of history and continues to deepen across the extraordin­ary breadth of our relationsh­ip. It has assumed new significan­ce in the changing world”, Prime Minister Naredra Modi had said at the Shangri La dialogue in Singapore recently.

The first dialogue takes place after Prime Minister Modi’s successful informal summits with President Xi Jinping of China and Vladimir Putin of Russia.

India is likely to discuss with the US, its concerns over the impact of US sanctions on deals with both Russia and Iran, an official said. The sanctions on Tehran are of concern to India as Iran remains India’s third largest source of oil. India has also made substantia­l investment­s in the Chabahar port in Iran which connects India to Central Asia via Afghanista­n, bypassing Pakistan. The sanctions on Russia are set to hit India’s defence purchases and New Delhi has alre- ady request for an exemption.

A second official , said on condition of anonymity that cooperatio­n in the area of counter-terrorism would be a key focus area in the meetings.

“In the Af-pak (Afghanista­npakistan) region, we are on the same page. The US also agrees that Pakistan has to take more action against cross –border terrorism and rein in terrorist groups that operate from its soil and destablise the entire region,” added this person.

Another key issue for India is the proposed changes in the US visa regime that could affect tens of thousands of Indians.

Meanwhile, the US has been pushing India to sign two foundation­al agreements for what it terms as “additional and longlastin­g defence co-operation between the two countries.”

Tina Kaidanow, principal deputy assistant secretary of state for political-military affairs was in New Delhi recently and urged Indian officials for early signing of the pacts. The agreements are Communicat­ions Compatibil­ity and Security Agreement (COMCASA), and Basic Exchange and Cooperatio­n Agreement (BECA). India and the US had signed first foundation­al agreement: Logistical Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) in 2016.

Strategic affairs expert C Uday Bhaskar said that the dialogue is taking place at a time when two sides are having a flux in their respective geopolitic­al outlook.

“I think they should be resilient enough to understand this. Also for india, the dialogue happens at a time when us planning to impose sanctions on two of it’s key interlocut­ers, namely Russia and Iran,” he said.

 ?? PTI FILE ?? The dialogue announced after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s meeting with President Trump at the White House in August 2017 was tentativel­y scheduled for April 1819 this year.
PTI FILE The dialogue announced after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s meeting with President Trump at the White House in August 2017 was tentativel­y scheduled for April 1819 this year.

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