Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Congressma­n backs deeper India-US defence ties

- Prashant Jha letters@hindustant­imes.com

A US congressma­n has said India and the United States agree on ’far’ more things than the two disagree on, adding that containing the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and its aggression remains the top challenge in the Indo-Pacific and the two sides must have conversati­ons about strengthen­ing mutual defences.

In an interview, US congressma­n Raja Krishnamoo­rthy — an elected representa­tive from Illinois and a member of the house permanent select committee on intelligen­ce — also talked about helping reduce Indian dependence on Russian arms while ensuring it has access to the best technology.

Claiming that India-US ties remain strong in the wake of Russia’s invasion, the congressma­n said that different countries have different opinions with regard to different subjects.

“The fundamenta­ls remain extremely strong and that’s why the US and India continue to cooperate on a range of issues, from security matters as part of the Quad initiative to economic matters, trade matters, and of course, people to people and cultural ties,” he said.

“There are more than four million Indian-Americans and they form a very sturdy and long-lasting bridge to India. And I think that also helps to always keep the relationsh­ip close.”

Krishnamoo­rthy rejected the premise that the difference­s in the position on Ukraine may lead to an erosion of strategic trust, and instead highlighte­d the longterm trajectory and the strategic subtext of the relationsh­ip. “I think that everyone understand­s that what we share in common far, far outweighs anything that we may disagree about,” he said.

According to him, CCP’s aggression in the Indo-Pacific presents an important challenge “and I think that if we take the eye off that ball, we lose an opportunit­y to really stabilise the region and create a rulesbased internatio­nal order, which is what I think all democratic countries desire.”

He also accused China of “misinforma­tion, propaganda, falsehoods and fabricatio­n”, and underscore­d the need for democracie­s to work together.

“I think democracie­s based on the fundamenta­l principle of equality under the law, liberty and freedom for people, protection of minorities, all the shared values of the United States and India have in common, will ultimately prevail. That is what we see in history,” he said.

He agreed with American administra­tion’s recent push for deeper India-US defence cooperatio­n to offset Delhi’s dependence on Moscow and said that he would be willing to champion ties that took into account Indian concerns.

“We should increasing­ly talk about what is the manufactur­ing and technology supply chain on the defence side, how do we make sure that our mutual defences are strong, and how do we make sure that India has the capability that it requires to defend itself without being so dependent on Russian imports and, at the same time, have access to the most modern technology.”

When asked about the health of Indian democracy, the Delhiborn Krishnamoo­rthy, whose family moved to the US soon after he was born in 1973, said that just like American democracy, it was being challenged.

“I believe minority rights are very important in any democracy. I think that they are under pressure in India. I think they are under pressure here in the US,” he said, adding that 30% of his constituen­cy in Illinois was foreign-born — and they had “gone through hell in the last six years, especially during the (Donald) Trump presidency, as immigrants”.

The most important challenge in the Indo-Pacific region is containing the Chinese Communist Party and Chinese communist aggression.

RAJA KRISHNAMOO­RTHY, US Congressma­n

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India