Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

INDIA, US SIGN DEFENCE BILL

FINE PRINT The legislatio­n also approves $619-billion budget for US military in 2017

- Yashwant Raj ■ letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: President Barack Obama on Friday signed a legislatio­n that approves $619 billion budget for US military in 2017 and codifies India as a “Major Defence Partner”, a distinctly unique definition the US doesn’t use for any other country.

The India section of the voluminous Act, the details of which have been widely reported as it travelled around the legislatur­e getting procedural approvals, essentiall­y institutio­nalises and commits future government to that definition, unless recalled.

The Obama administra­tion declared India a “major defence partner” — borrowing it from a legislatio­n moved by Congressma­n George Holding, a co-chair of the House India caucus — during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s June visit.

The legislatio­n has been called both “symbolic, expressing a sense of where congress stands on ties with India”, as an expert has said, to not doing enough, and failing to upgrade ties to a higher level, say, to match the one US has with Israel.

India has welcomed it, with sources saying, it “locks in” all future administra­tion to the definition, and have said the closer ties that some people have advocated could have been counterpro­ductive, and not in India’s interest.

Benjamin Schwartz, who headed the India desk at the Pentagon till a year ago, wrote in a recent piece about the legislatio­n that the intent was to bolster India as “predominan­t security provider in the Indian Ocean Region” to offset China’s military superiorit­y.

Shwartz, who is now with the US-India Business Council, argued that “the growing gap between Chinese military power and that of its neighbours increases the risk of instabilit­y in Asia. This gap is provocativ­e and dangerousl­y so in a region that contains the world’s most important trade corridors”.

The India section, which is titled Enhancing Defence and Security Cooperatio­n with India, and directs the administra­tion to appoint an official to directly oversee the relationsh­ip, identify impediment­s and resolve them.

Specially, those issues that are impeding “United States-India defence trade, security cooperatio­n, and co-production and codevelopm­ent opportunit­ies”.

The first report under this law will come in around June from the incoming administra­tion of President-elect Donald Trump, who has said, at an election rally in November, India and the US will be “best friends” on his watch.

 ?? PTI FILE ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi with US President Barack Obama in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington.
PTI FILE Prime Minister Narendra Modi with US President Barack Obama in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington.

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