By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 23rd Jan 15
US government
officials on Thursday confirmed that President Barack Obama’s visit to India
for Republic Day was the first time he would be travelling to attend another
country’s national day.
Also exceptional
would be the US president’s exposure abroad to an outdoor security risk. While
Obama had appeared in public for hours during his two inaugural parades, the
officials said, “There’s not been a similar event that he’s attended overseas
in which he’s done so, so it’s unique in that case”.
Deputy National
Security Advisor for Strategic Communications Ben Rhodes briefed the US media
in Washington on Obama’s visit to India.
Press reports
have indicated that Washington has warned Islamabad of the consequences of a
terrorist strike on President Obama in India.
Rhodes also
confirmed that Obama’s State of the Union address, an important annual
political rite in America, had been brought forward to Wednesday evening to enable
the president to be free for his India trip.
Unusually, India’s
“support” to US interests in Iran and Afghanistan was highlighted, even though
Washington and New Delhi have not always seen eye-to-eye on these issues.
Stating
that India has been “an important element of our international effort with
respect to Iran”, Rhodes said Obama and Modi would “discuss the status of the
Iran nuclear negotiations.”
“India’s
reduction in its purchases of Iranian oil have been essential to the pressure
that we’ve placed on Iran that has them at the table in this negotiation.
India has a relationship -- a longstanding relationship with Iran, and so we
need to make sure that we’re closely coordinated with India as we continue to
enforce those sanctions and pursue a comprehensive resolution”, Rhodes said.
On Afghanistan, he
noted, “India is a major contributor to development assistance in support of
the Afghan government. We need to maintain that cooperation going forward
now that the U.S. has drawn down our military presence.”
While reluctant
to point out specific objectives of the visit --- “deliverables” in official
jargon --- Washington made it clear that forging a common position on climate
change would be on the “front burner”.
“(C)ooperation
on clean energy and climate change is critically important, both because the
United States and India are working together to develop additional clean energy
sources and because we’re both working independently in our own countries to
reduce the public health impacts of our energy sectors, but also because of the
international climate negotiations that are leading into Paris this year,” Rhodes
said.
During Obama’s
visit to China in November, the American and Chinese presidents had agreed on
emission targets for both countries. China’s carbon dioxide emissions will peak
by 2030, with Beijing trying to achieve this earlier. Meanwhile the US would
strive to reduce emissions by 26-28 per cent from its 2005 levels.
With Washington
aiming at emission targets more ambitious than those laid out in the Kyoto
Protocol, it clearly believes New Delhi can announce ambitious emission targets
that would take forward the battle against global warming.
“This trip is a
very important opportunity for us to look at what can we do, what areas can we
cooperate in, to give additional momentum to the climate negotiations”, said
Rhodes.
Suggesting strongly
that agreement on civil nuclear cooperation remained elusive, Rhodes explained,
“(W)e’re pushing for progress in terms of the implementation of our civil
nuclear cooperation, which is in the benefit of both countries. So that
work is ongoing.”
Highlighting the
growing ties in counterterrorism cooperation and intelligence sharing, the US
official termed it a “focal point” of the relationship. Referring to the new
focus on India-centric groups like the Lashkar-e-Toiba, Rhodes stated, “(W)ith
India, our counterterrorism cooperation tends to be focused on those groups
that are operating in South Asia.”
Ultimately,
Obama’s visit seems likely to be characterised by symbolism rather than
agreements signed. “(O)ur goal I think is to leave
this relationship in a fundamentally different place than it was when President
Obama took office and when Prime Minister Modi took office,” said Rhodes.
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