Gulf News

Pompeo trip seeks US-Asia synergy

US secretary of state faces a very tough task in reassuring America’s regional allies that the Trump team is wholly committed to its Indo-Pacific plan

- By Andrew Hammond ■ Andrew Hammond is an associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.

Mike Pompeo finished up on Friday his trip to India after signing on Thursday the Communicat­ions Compatibil­ity and Security Agreement (Comcasa) military cooperatio­n deal. The success brought a positive end to a tricky trip to Islamabad and New Delhi where the United States secretary of state sought traction for his revamped Indo-Pacific strategy in the face of China’s growing strength.

In India, Pompeo and US Defence Secretary James Mattis met their counterpar­ts — External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj and Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman — for so-called “two-plus-two” talks to strengthen the bilateral partnershi­p. Sitharaman hailed the Comcasa deal as elevating ties “to unpreceden­ted heights”, while the US side depicted it as a breakthrou­gh too.

The deepening of the US-India relationsh­ip is centred, according to Washington, around promoting a regional agenda of ensuring “freedom of the seas and skies, promoting market economics, supporting good governance, and insulating sovereign nations from coercion”. To this end, US policymake­rs had declared New Delhi a major US defence partner in 2016, and the new Comcasa will now underpin greater counter-terrorism and defence cooperatio­n.

While the New Delhi leg of the US tour was relatively smooth sailing, the Islamabad stop-off was much more difficult. Pompeo said after the meeting with new Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan that he hopes for a “re-set of relations”. While Imran has deployed much anti-US rhetoric over the years, the US secretary of state rightly sought early engagement with him, especially with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi — who has called Pakistan the “iron brother” of his own nation — passing through Islamabad at the weekend after Pompeo.

For strategic political reasons, the new Pakistani prime minister is being courted by both Washington and Beijing with the latter having already made commitment­s of around $60 billion (Dh220.68 billion) to Islamabad under its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Pakistani troops also recently took part in exercises with some 3,000 others from the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on (SCO), including the Chinese military.

‘Taking decisive action’

While Islamabad had for decades been a key US ally, the relationsh­ip has frayed significan­tly. This was highlighte­d last month when a transcript of a phone conversati­on between Pompeo and Imran, released by the US State Department, that referred to the new government “taking decisive action against all terrorists operating in Pakistan”, was disputed as factually inaccurate by Imran’s team.

It was this vexed terrorism issue that was the key item on the agenda on Wednesday between Imran, Pompeo and Mattis. And this conversati­on was made no easier by the US military decision last week to cancel $300 million in aid to Islamabad over what Washington calls its failure to take action against militant groups operating on its soil.

Mattis asserted that tough talks were needed on Wednesday and that he and Pompeo made “very clear what we have to do, all of our nations, in meeting our common foe — the terrorists”.

Pompeo’s South Asia tour, on the back of his visit last month to Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia, was designed to see clear movement forward on US agendas in both India and Pakistan to help bring greater energy and credibilit­y to the US Indo-Pacific strategy, which has come under criticism for its perceived (under) ambition vis-a-vis China. That is why the US secretary of state last month articulate­d his revamped plans for a “new era in US economic commitment to peace and prosperity in the region”.

Pompeo announced some $113 million in regional investment­s focused on technology, energy and infrastruc­ture. In the secretary of state’s words, this is “just a down payment” on future US commitment­s to the region.

Welcome as more details of the administra­tion’s emerging plan are for many US allies — especially coming after US President Donald Trump’s decision not to attend November’s Apec and Asean summits — critics claim that it will have less overall impact than the Barack Obama administra­tion’s Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP) strategy. And the added pressure on the White House is China’s monumental ambition in comparison as illustrate­d by the $1 trillion BRI.

In this context, Pompeo faces a very tough ask in reassuring sometimes sceptical US regional allies that the Trump team is wholly committed — politicall­y, economical­ly and security-wise — to its Indo-Pacific plan. Even with Thursday’s success with Comcasa in India, questions will remain about the ambition of the US strategy, especially given the scale of China’s own plans.

 ?? Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News ??
Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News

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