Business Standard

2+2 steps forward, one step back

An important Indo-US agreement signed, but thorny issues remain

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The 2+2 dialogue between the Union ministers for defence and external affairs and their counterpar­ts from the United States was held last week after delays, which led many to worry about the low priority that IndoUS ties were apparently assigned by the administra­tion of President Donald Trump. In the event the talks were revealing of the strategic vision that unites the two countries — as well as of issues, new and old, that might cause division. The highlight of the talks was certainly the agreement to sign an agreement on security co-ordination, which is a variant of one of the “foundation­al agreements” that the US has with its close strategic partners.

Called the Communicat­ions Compatibil­ity and Security Arrangemen­t, or COMCASA, the agreement allows mutual access to encrypted security platforms — which, for example, ensures that the Indian Navy will be able to unlock the full range of capabiliti­es for area awareness embedded in the P-81 surveillan­ce and reconnaiss­ance aircraft that it has bought from the US. These currently operate only with commercial­ly available equipment, no substitute for the controlled suite of communicat­ions equipment that will now be available. Warships in the two navies will now also be able to communicat­e with each other more securely and effectivel­y. The signing of this agreement has been a long-pending requiremen­t to take Indo-US defence co-operation to a new level, and it is to be welcomed that the government has left behind old ways of thinking that feared the implicatio­ns of opening up encrypted communicat­ion to one of India’s strategic partners.

However, there are also divisive issues that were deliberate­d upon at the 2+2 dialogue. In spite of the fact that strategic and military ties have of late been much warmer and less rocky than economic relations, some problems have also cropped up. Two of these are to do with the implementa­tion of US-led sanctions regimes — against Russia and against Iran. The latter has been a problem before. India, which relies on oil imports, is not pleased at having to cut Iranian oil out of its import mix. A few months ago, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj reiterated that India recognised only sanctions led by the United Nations, which does not include the Iran sanctions, which are being caused by Mr Trump’s decision to withdraw unilateral­ly from the 2015 nuclear deal with Teheran. It is possible, however, that the US will be satisfied with a major cut in India’s imports from Iran.

The question of defence purchases from Russia is more thorny, as it cuts close to sensitive red lines in New Delhi about strategic autonomy and its long-standing defence partnershi­p with Moscow. The military wants to buy five Russian S400 surface-to-air missile systems for about $6 billion — which would, if the letter of recent US law is followed, require sanctions to be imposed upon the Indian military in turn. Given the bipartisan support in Washington for sanctions on the Russian military and intelligen­ce, the path forward is uncertain. Yet it is clear that an India-specific carveout will have to be managed or the promising Indo-US strategic relationsh­ip will be severely affected. This will have to be managed by Indian diplomacy, through its relationsh­ip not just with the US administra­tion but also with Capitol Hill, where the Russian sanctions originated.

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