Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Macron’s visit has been a success on many levels

India sees France as a net security provider in the Indian Ocean and intends working with it to promote stability

- KANWAL SIBAL Kanwal Sibal is former foreign secretary The views expressed are personal

As far as outcomes go, President Emmanuel Macron’s visit to India stands out for its strategic content. While France was the first country with which we declared a strategic partnershi­p and began a strategic dialogue; strategic considerat­ions have not studiously guided the growth of our ties. The meaning of “strategic partnershi­p” can always be broadened to include economics and other areas, but it is in the domain of security that the concept expresses itself most credibly. Our defence procuremen­t process is unable to accommodat­e “strategic” decision making, which is why French participat­ion has been uneven, with some striking successes such as the Scorpene and Rafale contracts; but notable setbacks in bagging contracts for refuelling aircrafts, helicopter­s and short range surface to air missiles even when tenders were won and joint projects approved.

While the translatio­n of the undefined concept of a “strategic partnershi­p” into decision making at the government­al level in different areas will remain a fluid propositio­n, India and France have taken decisions during Macron’s visit that are manifestly strategic in intent and substance. They are important in the context of widespread concerns about the uncertaint­ies that have begun to mark the global system as a result of Donald Trump’s erratic foreign policy pronouncem­ents and the unveiling of China’s hegemonic ambitions on land and sea. Both India and France intend to cooperate to address the consequenc­es of America’s inward looking and protection­ist policies, its willingnes­s to repudiate internatio­nal accords and weaken internatio­nal institutio­ns that it has itself sponsored, as well as the instabilit­ies that China’s self-aggrandise­ment is generating in the Indo-Pacific region and the power imbalance it threatens to produce, with consequenc­es also for Europe.

India has now firmly accepted France as a net security provider in the Indian Ocean (IO) and intends working with it to promote stability there. Emulating a similar India-US move, India and France have agreed on a “Joint Strategic Vision of IndiaFranc­e Cooperatio­n in the Indian Ocean region”, flowing from which a Reciprocal Logistics Support Agreement has also been signed. The intention is to associate other strategic partners and establish trilateral dialogues, for which the first candidate could well be Australia. The India-France Joint Vision for Space – another major strategic document emerging from the visit – envisages the pursuit of the study of a constellat­ion of satellites for maritime surveillan­ce. The third document of strategic importance signed during the visit is on the “exchange and reciprocal protection of classified or protected informatio­n”, which reflects the growing strategic trust between the two countries.

Stronger India-France strategic understand­ings have been reflected in the joint statement in various other ways. The robust paras on terrorism call for halting “crossborde­r movement” of identified terrorist organisati­ons threatenin­g India. All UN member states are called upon to implement UNSC Resolution 1267 designatin­g terrorist entities, which points to China’s obstructio­nism on designatin­g Masood Azhar as a terrorist. France has reaffirmed its strong and active support for India’s membership of the Nuclear Suppliers Group. With the Belt and Road Initiative in mind, France has joined the US, Japan and the EU in stressing that connectivi­ty initiative­s must be based on key principles of internatio­nal norms, good governance, rule of law, openness, transparen­cy, social and environmen­tal standards, principles of financial responsibi­lity, accountabl­e debt financing practices, and must be pursued in a manner that respects sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity. The reference to “sovereignt­y” is important in the light of our opposition to the CPEC.

The joint statement strongly endorses the nuclear deal with Iran. On Syria, where the positions of the two countries differ, that the two sides were able to craft a suitable paragraph is a drafting achievemen­t. In the context of the Trump’s trade-related broadsides and his decision to impose tariffs on steel and aluminium imports, India and France have reaffirmed the centrality of rulesbased multilater­al trading system. The launching of the Internatio­nal Solar Alliance jointly by Macron and Modi furthers the objectives of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and forges one more strategic bond between India and France.

FRANCE HAS REAFFIRMED ITS STRONG AND ACTIVE SUPPORT FOR INDIA’S MEMBERSHIP OF THE NUCLEAR SUPPLIERS GROUP

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