Hindustan Times (East UP)

Charting the future of India-US ties

The relationsh­ip is more robust than ever before. But deepening ties will bring its set of challenges

- Dhruva Jaishankar is director of the US Initiative at the Observer Research Foundation The views expressed are personal

The India-United States (US) relationsh­ip has, despite the efforts of naysayers, developed on a positive trajectory over the past two decades. Today, the US is among India’s most important security partners (alongside Russia and France), and arguably the most comprehens­ive, with collaborat­ion extending to intelligen­ce, homeland security, defence technology, and maritime, space, and cyber cooperatio­n. Although Europe and Japan remain important countries for Indian trade and incoming investment, the US is also perhaps India’s most comprehens­ive economic partner, if research and developmen­t (R&D), education, technology, employment, energy, and health care are taken into considerat­ion. For the US, the India partnershi­p has progressed at a time when almost every other major relationsh­ip — with both adversarie­s and allies — has experience­d immense tumult. Despite some continuing areas of difference, India is the rare country over which Republican­s and Democrats compete to project themselves as the better party to partner.

Neverthele­ss, whatever the outcome of next month’s US elections, relations between India and the US are set to enter a new, more constructi­ve, but paradoxica­lly more difficult phase.

For example, the basic building blocks of an India-US defence partnershi­p have now been put in place. Whether on logistics or secure communicat­ions, the basic agreements required for military cooperatio­n have been — or are about to be — signed. A political level 2+2 dialogue has been institutio­nalised to oversee the host of working level bilateral and multilater­al consultati­ons, covering everything from space and cyber cooperatio­n to defence technology and maritime security. Defence sales have become routine, with the Indian armed forces employing a growing number of American platforms. Technology barriers, which had once been the major obstacle to closer ties, have largely been overcome. All three military services conduct regular bilateral exercises, and a tri-service exercise has been initiated.

The next steps towards a more robust defence partnershi­p, however, present far more difficult challenges. Further defence co-production and R&D will require significan­t changes to India’s defence industrial ecosystem, including predictabi­lity concerning Indian procuremen­t and considerat­ions of export markets, as India integrates into internatio­nal supply chains. Greater interopera­bility will entail a distributi­on of labour and planning for specific scenarios, which, in turn, will require a degree of trust from both countries.

Similar challenges are discernibl­e in the cyber domain and on emerging technology more generally. Again, the broad tenets of India-US cooperatio­n are now more or less in place, with a degree of informatio­n-sharing between emergency response teams that would have been unheard of a decade ago. A shared understand­ing of the promise of various emerging technologi­es, and concern about China’s potential global role, have led to India-US cooperatio­n in new multilater­al entities. Cyber security talks between the two militaries have become more regular, involving the Pentagon and US Indo-Pacific Command, as India continues the process of establishi­ng a tri-service cyber command.

But for further collaborat­ion, India will require clarity on personal data protection, including possibly through legislatio­n, while improving its own capacities. For its part, the US will have its work cut out in standardis­ing data sharing formats and mechanisms with partners, and not just with India.

The challenges may be even greater in implementi­ng India-US cooperatio­n on developmen­t assistance and infrastruc­ture in third countries. Both have articulate­d similar concerns about China’s Belt and Road Initiative,

and both India and the US bring certain strengths to the table when it comes to developmen­t assistance. India’s State-backed foreign assistance, loans, and investment are no longer negligible, especially in South Asia and Africa.

Meanwhile, the US — which was already a major foreign grant assistance provider through the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID) — has increased its capacity for overseas lending through the BUILD Act and is formulatin­g standards via the Blue Dot Network.

But despite top-down agreement, India-US joint coordinati­on — let alone collaborat­ion — may prove more complicate­d. The two countries’ priority areas in the Indo-Pacific are often different. Areas where India can play to its strengths, as in capacitybu­ilding and electoral assistance, may run up against US concerns about regional democratic backslidin­g. And managing two bureaucrac­ies and accountabi­lity structures will only compound the headaches in both capitals.

To a lesser degree, a similar story can be told about the bilateral economic relationsh­ip, although important frictions persist. Despite talk of a “trade war” and tariffs under President Donald Trump, goods trade

between India and the US grew from about $60 billion in 2013 to over $90 billion in 2019. Prior to the pandemic, the number of Indian students in the US increased, as did two-way investment.

But further economic relations will likely be based less on goods trade, and more on other aspects of economic cooperatio­n. These might include higher education, health care, innovation, and green energy collaborat­ion, areas where the impact may be less quantifiab­le but no less important. But these forms of collaborat­ion will, in turn, require major steps to ensure regulatory and policy predictabi­lity.

In some sense, India and the US have moved beyond the basic conceptual arguments about the value of their relationsh­ip to each other. Barring some exceptions, a fundamenta­l understand­ing has permeated the bureaucrac­ies and policy communitie­s in both countries about the value of the partnershi­p. Yet, the next stage in India-US relations, while rewarding, may not be without its regular frustratio­ns.

 ?? HT ?? Across spheres — defence, new tech, economy and developmen­t — India and the US have a conceptual overlap. But the next stage will not be easy
HT Across spheres — defence, new tech, economy and developmen­t — India and the US have a conceptual overlap. But the next stage will not be easy
 ?? Dhruva Jaishankar ??
Dhruva Jaishankar

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India