Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Deferred twice, IndiaUS ‘2+2 talks’ on Sept 6

- Yashwant Raj letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: The defence and foreign ministers of India and the United States will finally hold their inaugural 2+2 dialogue in New Delhi on September 6, the US state department announced on Thursday.

The meeting, which was postponed twice, was scheduled to take place on July 6 in Washington, but was deferred by the US.

Announcing the new date and venue — the US was to host both the cancelled meetings — the state department said the four ministers will “discuss strengthen­ing strategic, security, and defence cooperatio­n as the United States and India jointly address challenges in the Indo-Pacific region and beyond”.

This will be the first simultaneo­us meeting of defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman and external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj with their US counterpar­ts James Mattis and Mike Pompeo, respective­ly, in a format announced in August last year.

The dialogue was agreed upon after a telephone call between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Donald Trump.

While Sitharaman and Mattis have met at least twice before — in New Delhi and in Singapore — Swaraj and Pompeo have yet to meet, though they have spoken over the phone.

Their last conversati­on possibly was when the secretary of state called her to postpone the July meeting.

At the time, President Trump had asked Popmpeo to visit North Korea to carry forward discussion­s from the Singapore summit on denucleari­sation.

The first 2+2 meeting, which was set to take place in April, was called off after then secretary of state Rex Tillerson was unexpected­ly fired by the president.

While no dates had been settled on, initial plans were to hold the inaugural meeting in New Delhi, if Mattis and Tillerson, who were scheduled to visit India, had coordinate­d their calendar to be there together. They ended up visiting separately.

While the “four principals can discuss anything under the sun when they meet in one room”, an official said on background, some of the issues for discussion­s have selected themselves – such as US sanctions on Russia and Iran, both of which impact India closely and directly.

India’s plan to purchase Russian S-400 air defence system, for instance, could attract secondary sanctions under a US law that seeks to punish Russia for poll meddling — under the Combatting America’s Adversarie­s Through Sanctions Act — unless an exception was made, as backed by both Mattis and Pompeo.

Iran sanctions, a part of which will be enforced by the state department, could be the tougher discussion. India has already started cutting exports in anticipati­on of the November 4 deadline, but expects exemptions.

The US has indicated it is inclined to grant some on a caseby-case basis. But, as before, these exemptions will be linked to target countries showing significan­t reduction, to be certified by the state department.

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