By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 24th Jun 13
A less than full
house and an almost empty balcony stared back at John Kerry
as the US Secretary of State began his visit to Delhi with a speech at the
Habitat Centre on Sunday evening. Even considering the heat, the holiday, and
that the Indian cricket team was due to play England in the Champion's League
cricket final, it must have been a disappointing turnout.
Kerry, who is on
a ten-day tour to Qatar, India, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Jordan, Israel and Brunei
is in India till Tuesday morning. He is here for the fourth US-India Strategic
Dialogue, his first, where he will chair the inter-agency delegation
meeting.
While Kerry did
not avoid strategic issues, the bulk of the speech related to climate change
and economic partnership between "the oldest and the largest
democracies." With the strategic dialogue due tomorrow, he pressed all the
right buttons, including reiterating Washington's support for India's
membership to the Nuclear Supplier's Group; an expanded UN Security Council
and the other global non-proliferation regimes.
He reiterated
that India was "a key part of the US rebalance to Asia," nodding
approvingly at India's growing appetite for US defence equipment by noting that
India would soon be the largest operator of C-17 transport aircraft, besides
the US Air Force.
He noted that this would allow the Indian military to deploy more rapidly in
support of strategic aims.
With India
having expressed its reservations about the US-Taliban dialogue, and the
marginalisation of the Karzai government, Kerry apparently sought to undo some
of the damage by backing India for a key role in post-2014 Afghanistan. He
declared that India "must play a crucial role in the 2014 elections as the
world's largest democracy."
The bulk of
Kerry's speech related to climate change and the need for the US and India to
work together to tap into "the biggest market on earth", as he
referred to the $6-trillion new energy market, including clean energy.
He offered
assurances that the US is "sensitive to India's unique
circumstances," i.e. the apprehension in New Delhi that caps on greenhouse
emissions would hinder India's industrial development.
The Strategic
Dialogue, inaugurated in 2009, is a forum for discussing the range of US-India
bilateral and regional issues.
The discussion
on Monday will include bilateral and regional economic engagement, regional
security and defence, science and technology, climate change, and global issues
such as women's empowerment, non-proliferation and space cooperation.
Besides official
engagements, the US Secretary of State will be going on a walkabout in the
capital's Lodhi Gardens on Monday.
the charm offensives... by truthful actions... translate... housefuls... won't work... India... once bitten... twice shy... already... truthful actions... actions.. actions... only work...
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