Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

New Delhi’s mission in US

Each strand of Indian foreign policy will be on display during PM Narendra Modi’s visit

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Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi’s visit to the United States (US) marks the intersecti­on of multiple strands of Indian foreign policy. The visit has a bilateral component, with the first in-person conversati­on between PM Modi and President Joe Biden. It has a plurilater­al component, with the first in-person summit of the Quad leaders. And it has a multilater­al component, as PM Modi moves to New York to address the United Nations (UN) General Assembly. In all forms of engagement, India confronts both an opportunit­y and a challenge.

On the bilateral front, the strategic embrace with the US is now on firm footing. This is fundamenta­lly driven by the shared concerns on China’s behaviour, which poses a threat to American hegemony globally and Indian security directly. This has translated into deeper defence, security and intelligen­ce cooperatio­n. This does not mean there aren’t difference­s. India is particular­ly concerned at the situation in Afghanista­n, triggered by the US withdrawal, and Washington’s continued blind spot on Islamabad. India also, while deepening strategic ties, wishes to exercise autonomy in its choices, be it in the form of acquisitio­n of S-400s from Russia or deeper engagement with Iran or having a working relationsh­ip with the military regime in Myanmar. It is committed to a free and open Indo-Pacific vision, but would have liked Washington to be more collaborat­ive with other like-minded partners such as Paris on AUKUS. The US is frustrated with what it sees as India’s protection­ist attitude on trade, there is a political constituen­cy which is pressuring the Biden administra­tion to actively speak up on the quality of Indian democracy, and climate remains both an area of agreement and difference­s. None of these issues are insurmount­able, but building on the convergenc­e while managing the divergence is important.

Along with the bilateral component, as external affairs minister S Jaishankar’s meetings with his counterpar­ts from a range of countries show, India is conscious that the emerging world order will have several regional nodes of influence. There is a broader bipolar backdrop — where the US and China are colliding — but this coexists with a more complex architectu­re where different countries will matter on different issues. PM Modi will seek to strengthen ties with the US, send a message on regional security to China, and assert India’s independen­t worldview at the UN.

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