Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

US adds India to importers’ list of Nato-level allies

- Yashwant Raj letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: The United States on Monday elevated India’s status as a trading partner to equal that it has accorded largely to its Nato allies, mostly for the purposes of speeding up the sale of high-tech defence and non-defence products that are otherwise subjected to strict controls and licensing.

“We have granted to India Strategic Trade Authorizat­ion status STA-1 that’s (a) very important status under our export control regime and acknowledg­es US-India security and economic relationsh­ip,” said US secretary of commerce Wilbur Ross at the Indo-Pacific Business Forum.

The move, which will reduce the number of licences needed for US exports to India, means India can get easy access to the latest defence technologi­es.

It could also mean a leg-up for the foundation­al COMCASA agreement which the US is keen to get India to sign, analysts say.

The Communicat­ions, Compatibil­ity and Security Agreement is one of the three agreements that the US has with its closest military allies, and will allow the installati­on of high-security US communicat­ion equipment on defence equipment being sold to India, thereby , the US argument goes, facilitati­ng interopera­bility.

India has concerns on giving the US access to sensitive military communicat­ion if it signs the agreement.

Interestin­gly, the important STA-1 status for India came at a time when the country has finalised its decision to go in for a missile defence system from the US to protect parts of the capital New Delhi.

At the same forum, US secretary of state Mike Pompeo earlier announced $113 million in new US initiative­s for promoting investment­s in infrastruc­ture, energy and digital economy in the Indo-Pacific, tracing America’s links to the region to 1794 when it set up consular presence in Calcutta, now Kolkata.

Pompeo unveiled the Trump administra­tion’s Indo-Pacific economic vision as an alternativ­e to China’s one-belt, one-road initiative without naming the country directly. But the pitch was clear as he emphasised US seeks “partnershi­p, not dominance” and it believes in strategic partnershi­p not strategic dominance.

Ross said the new status would provide India “greater supply chain efficiency, both for defence, and for other high-tech products”, the lack of which affected nearly $9.7 billion worth of goods India could have exported from the US over the last seven years.

The US has given STA-1 to only 36 countries most of whom are NATO or key non-NATO allies. The secretary said that the elevated status reflects India’s status as a major defence partner.

It was one of the measures the two countries were discussing to advance ties after the US declared India a “major defence partner”, a designatio­n that America has not shared with any other country.

“It’s significan­t,” said Benjamin Schwartz, a former defence department official who is now with the US-India Business Council.

“Looking at current exports from the US to India, 50% of those are eligible now under STA-1. This can free up $2.1 billion in trade, make US exporters more competitiv­e in the global marketplac­e, help provide India more advanced US technology.”

Richard Rossow of the Center for Strategic Internatio­nal Studies said, “It underscore­s our deepening security relationsh­ip, and weakens India’s lingering concerns about U.S. reliabilit­y as a security partner. The timing is also significan­t. Our nations will have their first 2+2 in Delhi in early September. This should help thaw the environmen­t a bit, after a string of bad news and negative allegation­s on the trade front.”

THE MOVE MEANS INDIA CAN GET EASY ACCESS TO THE LATEST DEFENCE TECHNOLOGI­ES AND A LEGUP FOR COMCASA PACT WHICH THE US WANTS INDIA TO SIGN

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India