Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Bonding over a common enemy

Stand on terror and China keep the India-US friendship going

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India First meets America First and agree Pakistan is third-rate. The most tangible consequenc­e of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s maiden summit with US president Donald Trump has been the blacklisti­ng of the Hizbul Mujahideen leader, Syed Salahuddin, and an agreement that both countries should go after terrorist

ourtake safe havens. But the main Indian accomplish­ment from the visit was to reassure itself that the India-US strategic partnershi­p will survive an unpredicta­ble White House resident. For the most part, that has been accomplish­ed. The government­s found common ground on terrorism. But they also agreed that they faced a common Chinese challenge on the maritime front.

What New Delhi could only paper over were the sources of friction in the economic sphere. Mr Trump, reflecting his curious mercantili­st view on economics, expressed displeasur­e over India’s small trade surplus with the US. He was on firmer ground when it came to criticisin­g India’s high barriers to manufactur­ed goods. However, the two government­s agreed to handle these and other trade and investment problems through dialogue rather than confrontat­ion. Nonetheles­s, while the US will maintain continuity on the strategic side, India should expect little leeway on trade and immigratio­n issues. This should not come as a surprise: Mr Trump has been consistent when it comes to fulfilling the baser economic and cultural concerns of his white working class support base. Mr Modi may see a faint echo of his own government’s actions here in this. No one expects him to reverse his moves to restrict the activities of US-based charities in India. His base requires that of him.

India’s foreign policy establishm­ent can take some reassuranc­e from the fact that the bilateral relationsh­ip seems set to weather what was seen as its sternest test. The administra­tions of George W. Bush and Barack Obama were largely on the same page when it came to India. Mr Trump, both in terms of his personalit­y and the manner of his election, was a wild card. But he has chosen an establishm­ent foreign policy team and even at a personal level seems to see Mr Modi as a kindred political figure. India should not expect that everything will be smooth sailing after this. The US continues to be patchy in its response to China. It remains to be seen how much stomach it has for a renewed military commitment to Afghanista­n. India will go its own way on climate change. These, however, are in the realm of normal difference­s and not evidence of Trumpist whimsy.

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