Orlando Sentinel

Trump meets India PM as U.S. sanctions Pakistani militant

- By Matthew Pennington and Catherine Lucey Associated Press

— President Donald Trump welcomed India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the White House on Monday for their first meeting, as the U.S. branded a top militant from Indian neighbor Pakistan as a “global terrorist.”

The leaders of the world’s two largest democracie­s are looking to expand ties on defense and fighting terrorism, but strains are likely on trade. Their personal chemistry could prove as important as policy in setting the tone for relations.

During brief Oval Office remarks, Trump heaped praise on Modi as a “great prime minister” who had brought economic growth to India. Modi recalled Trump’s visits to India long before he was president and said he was looking forward to collaborat­ing with him now that he is president.

“The relationsh­ip beWASHINGT­ON tween the United States and India is very, very strong and very, very powerful,” Trump said.

“We agree on most things. And I would say, by the end of the day we’ll agree on everything. I have a feeling,” he jokingly said.

Hours before Modi’s arrival, the State Department imposed sanctions on Syed Salahuddin, the Pakistanba­sed leader of Hizbul Mujahideen, the main rebel group that fights against Indian control in the divided Himalayan region of Kashmir. India’s foreign ministry hailed the move.

Trump has so far focused on outreach to China, India’s other strategic rival, as he looks to Beijing to rein in nuclear-armed North Korea. But Washington and New Delhi share concerns about China’s rise as a military power that has underpinne­d increasing­ly close relations in the past decade.

The Trump administra­tion says it wants to provide India the kind of defense technology it does to the closest U.S. allies. In a concrete indication of that, the U.S. State Department approved the $365 million sale of a C-17 military transport aircraft. The administra­tion is also set to offer a $2 billion sale of U.S.-made unarmed drones to help in surveillan­ce of the Indian Ocean.

Trump thanked Modi for India’s purchase of U.S. military equipment. Since 2008, India has signed more than $15 billion in U.S. defense contracts.

Modi’s two-day Washington visit began Sunday.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA PRESS ?? President Donald Trump welcomes India leader Narendra Modi on Monday.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA PRESS President Donald Trump welcomes India leader Narendra Modi on Monday.

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