Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - HT Navi Mumbai Live

The next steps in the India-US partnershi­p

Delhi needs to have an honest conversati­on about what Washington brings to the table, and continue its structural shift westwards

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Last week’s 2+2 — or 3+3, with President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Narendra Modi first setting the direction of the talks between the foreign and defence ministers — showed that India and the United States (US) have the maturity to deal with difference­s and keep their broader relationsh­ip intact.

This is good news for both countries. The Indian government understand­s the value of the relationsh­ip with the US as well as the manner in which Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is making the West more powerful, more than what some its supporters on social media, who have resorted to a strange kind of anti-Americanis­m, would like to acknowledg­e. The US administra­tion understand­s both the value of the relationsh­ip with India and the need to treat India as a sovereign entity with its own judgment and choices, more than a set of its own supporters, who would like Delhi to instantly fall in line with DC’s preference­s, do.

But while the 2+2 helped in managing difference­s for now, it is important for both capitals — but Delhi in particular — to have an honest conversati­on internally.

Within India, the system is divided. All actors know the US is important. But some appear to think that US power is on the decline, or that Joe Biden isn’t entirely coherent in his decision-making, or that India is so indispensa­ble that the West will continue to court it in the manner Delhi wants, irrespecti­ve of its position and actions. All of these are questionab­le premises.

First, the US is — of course — not as powerful as it was during the unipolar moment. And top policymake­rs, especially in this administra­tion, recognise it. That is why they have focused on alliances to shore up strength. From repairing the Trans-Atlantic partnershi­p to investing in NATO, and beefing up European security to nurturing Quad and focusing on smaller island states in the Pacific to encouragin­g new groupings in West Asia which cut across traditiona­l divides, Washington is creating a web of partnershi­ps to offset the erosion in domestic support for its internatio­nal commitment­s and its own inward domestic economic focus. But this doesn’t mean that the parameters that have made US extraordin­arily powerful have disappeare­d. From military and technology to economy and finance, the US remains way ahead of the game compared to its competitor­s put together.

And that is why Modi was right in telling Biden that India sees the US as integral to its developmen­t journey for the next 25 years. If our markets are doing well, the investment from foreign institutio­nal investors in the US has helped. If our start-ups are booming, investors in New York or Silicon Valley have played a role. If our relations with a range of other countries — Japan, Australia, South

Korea, Israel, or even some of the Gulf countries — have improved, it is credit to Indian diplomacy, but it is also because being seen as a friend of Washington helps open doors in many of these capitals which are still tied to the US security umbrella. If we need support at the United Nations Security Council, there is the American weight in the multilater­al system.

If we want a manufactur­ing boom, both in terms of investment­s and export destinatio­ns, the US will play a part. If we want to diversify our energy sources, the past decade’s figures already show the US becoming a more important partner. If we want to be at forefront of innovation, partnershi­ps with the the best institutio­ns and companies in the US is indispensa­ble. If we want support for our climate transition, we need to work the Americans to get them to meet their commitment­s on financing. If our students want to continue going to the US, and if we want their universiti­es to come to India, and the American system to recognise our profession­als, a deeper knowledge partnershi­p is essential.

If we want intelligen­ce on what the Chinese are up to at the Line of Actual Control, or some back-up support during a crisis, having America on one’s side helps, as it did in 2020. If we want someone to read the riot act to Pakistan, when it is up to its usual terrorexpo­rting mischief, the US can play a constructi­ve role, as it did after Pulwama. And if we want to push back the Chinese challenge in the neighbourh­ood, greater coordinati­on with Washington strengths our hand and sends a message to interlocut­ors in Kathmandu and Colombo and Male.

This is not to say that US hasn’t declined — it has — nor is to say that US does not have own narrow set of interests in all these domains to work with India (it does). But it is to suggest that the US is still enormously powerful and it is still useful for all of India’s security and developmen­t goals. And it will only be honest to admit that.

Two, the premise that Biden is somehow out of his depth is questionab­le. While Afghanista­n represente­d a shameful abdication of responsibi­lity that the US would rather not talk about, the Ukraine crisis has shown Biden’s strengths.

American intelligen­ce anticipate­d the Russian invasion much before anyone else — and Biden decided to make it public to shape global opinion against Moscow. American support to Ukraine has enabled a far more fierce resistance than Russia had anticipate­d. American investment in allies has led to a reset in Europe’s geopolitic­al calculatio­ns in a way which would have been hard to imagine just two months ago.

American control over the internatio­nal financial system has sent a message not just to Moscow but also to Beijing about what its expansioni­sm can lead to. At the same time, American restraint in not imposing no-fly zones, or directly getting embroiled in a confrontat­ion on Ukrainian soil, shows that it is playing a calibrated game — of achieving its strategic objectives without escalating the conflict.

This is not to suggest that the US is acting only out of noble values — its core interest is in preventing Russia from restoring its arc of influence in the region and preventing it from becoming a regional hegemon. Nor is the suggestion that America will achieve all its objectives. But to think that the US does not know what it is doing, or that Biden — just because he is not the most eloquent speaker around and fumbles occasional­ly — has lost the plot would be erroneous.

And finally, to assume that India is indispensa­ble and this means that there will be no costs to its position, may lead to a degree of overconfid­ence that facts don’t warrant. India is important but it is one among the many poles in the internatio­nal system.

India’s position has evolved for the better — from speaking of Russia’s legitimate interests before the war began, to underlinin­g the importance of territoria­l integrity and sovereignt­y when the invasion took place, to a firm condemnati­on of civilian killings and warnings about implicatio­ns of the war on the global food, financial and energy systems as the war intensifie­d. But as a democratic power, as a status quoist power which doesn’t want the kind of rupture in global stability that Russian actions have caused, and as country with soft power which relies on positive public sentiment in the West, India’s policy posture must continue to evolve in the same direction.

The US must continue to show the maturity it displayed last week. It must rein in voices that believe threatenin­g India with consequenc­es can change Indian behaviour. It must be acutely aware of how its historical behaviour makes its self-righteousn­ess sound hypocritic­al. And it must show India how it can help meet Indian interests more effectivel­y. But Delhi must build on the 2+2 and continue its structural shift westwards. National interests dictate it.

letters@hindustant­imes.com

 ?? ?? The US must continue to show the maturity it displayed last week. It must rein in voices that believe threatenin­g India with consequenc­es can change Indian behaviour. And it must show India how it can help meet Indian interests more effectivel­y.
The US must continue to show the maturity it displayed last week. It must rein in voices that believe threatenin­g India with consequenc­es can change Indian behaviour. And it must show India how it can help meet Indian interests more effectivel­y.
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