By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 7th June 16
On
Saturday, in the lead-up to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s on-going visit to
the United States, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar spoke out in measured
terms against China’s aggressive unilateralism in the South China Sea.
Addressing the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore, Parrikar abandoned the timidity
with which Indian officials speak about China, and called for “the parties to
these disputes [in the South China Sea] to renounce the threat or use of force
against other states.”
American
observers often misread the studied distance New Delhi maintains from US
actions and comments on the South China Sea, to conclude that India does not
have the stomach to stand up for regional rights. Mr Parrikar himself has rebutted
over-enthusiastic comments from senior American officials --- including the US
Pacific Command (USPACOM) chief, Admiral Harry Harris Jr, and the US envoy to
India, Rich Verma --- about joint patrolling by the US and Indian navies. Yet,
even at this moment, an Indian flotilla with three frontline warships is
sailing the South China and East China Seas, visiting ports in Vietnam, the
Philippines, South Korea, Japan, Russia and Malaysia.
Meanwhile,
in Singapore, Mr Parrikar pointed to India’s own interests in retaining freedom
of navigation in the waters of the western Pacific, through which more than
half of India’s maritime trade passes. He said: “While we do not take a
position on territorial disputes, which should be resolved peacefully without
the threat or use of force, we firmly uphold freedom of navigation and over-flight
in accordance with international law, in particular the UN Convention on the
Law of the Sea.”
Voicing the
concern of regional countries at Beijing’s belligerent rhetoric and inflated
maritime claims, represented by its unilaterally drawn “Nine-Dash Line” that
claims much of the South China Sea as China’s historical waters, Mr Parrikar
stated: “While no single region has a monopoly on nationalist rhetoric, we need
to pay special attention to its linkages with territorial disputes and
alternate readings of history in this part of the globe.” Even without joint
patrolling, this brings New Delhi’s stated position in this region pretty much
congruent with Washington’s.
Mr Parrikar
also backed the ASEAN-created, multilateral security architecture to maintain
regional harmony, although these mechanisms are distrusted by China, which
prefers to bully smaller countries in bilateral arrangements, rather than being
outnumbered in a multilateral framework. Yet, Parrikar supported
multilateralism, stating: “We have a foundation of regional and sub-regional
arrangements to build upon. Bilateral dialogue and confidence building can
usefully supplement these regional and sub-regional mechanisms. ASEAN has built
several mechanisms, which can play a central part in the regional security
framework.”
Yet, Mr
Parrikar also served the US a reminder that, despite Washington’s and New
Delhi’s common interests in south-west Asia; India’s core concerns include violent
conflict in West Asia, and Afghanistan’s stability that is being relentlessly
undermined by Pakistan. While the Indian defence minister did not say so, New
Delhi deeply resents American diplomatic and military support to Pakistan, which
allows Islamabad to leverage its support for the Taliban to keep India out of a
substantive role in shaping a post-conflict regime in Afghanistan.
This
dichotomy --- US-India convergence in south-east Asia, and divergence in south
and west Asia --- will form the geopolitical backdrop to Mr Modi’s engagement
with President Barack Obama on Tuesday and Wednesday in Washington. Even so,
the US administration may be already re-evaluating its unquestioning support to
Islamabad. Last month’s killing of Taliban chief Mullah Muhammad Mansour, in a
drone strike in Baluchistan suggested that Pakistan might find it harder to
string along Washington indefinitely. The blocking of funding by the US
Congress for the sale to Pakistan of eight F-16 fighters, and the passage of the
“US India Defense Technology and Partnership Act” in the House of
Representatives underline that American lawmakers have lost patience with
Islamabad and better understand the potential of partnering with India. This
realisation will be inevitably reinforced with a predictably rousing Modi
speech to a joint sitting of the US Congress. That Americans of Indian origin
constitute a potent political lobby became clear in New York in 2014, during Mr
Modi’s jamboree at Madison Square Garden.
While the
defence partnership is loaded with the weight of expectations, there is not
much on the table in terms of deliverables. India
may be formally associated with
the US Central Command (USCENTCOM), in addition to the Hawaii-based USPACOM,
which currently coordinates military exercises and plans with New Delhi. While
two “foundational agreements” have been broadly negotiated, the Logistics
Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) is likely to be signed quickly, while
the signing of the more operationally vital Communications and Information
Security Memorandum of Agreement (CISMOA) may depend upon the political
reaction to LEMOA.
As always,
there will be feel-good statements about US-India joint exercises, especially
the Indian Air Force’s participation in last month’s Red Flag exercise in
Alaska, and the naval Exercise Malabar, now a trilateral exercise that also
includes Japan. Much will be made of India’s purchase of the CH-47F heavy lift
helicopter, and the AH-64E Apache attack helicopter. There could be news about
India’s $700 million purchase of 145 M777 ultralight howitzers. All eyes will
be peeled for indications that the Indian Navy has chosen to partner with
America in the design and construction of its second indigenous aircraft
carrier, a 65,000-tonne vessel that will be called INS Vishal. If the navy
finally plumps for a catapult launch capability (as it is increasingly inclined
to do), that may open the doors for not just a host of US aircraft carrier
systems, such as the electromagnetic aircraft launch system (EMALS), but also
air combat control systems, and a bouquet of naval combat helicopters, fighters
(the F/A-18 Super Hornet remains a strong contender) and electronic warfare
aircraft.
Still
underperforming is the Defence Technology and Trade Initiative (DTTI), established
in 2012 to remove hurdles to US-India defence trade. Four “pathfinder projects”
announced during President Obama’s visit to Delhi in 2015 have made little
headway. Since this is his pet project, US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter can
be expected to propose measures to galvanize this initiative.
New Delhi
watchers will measure the success of Mr Modi’s visit less in terms of defence
agreements than in the context of whether he can induce President Obama to unstintingly
campaign for India’s candidature of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG). Mr Modi has
laboured to persuade holdout countries to support India’s entry into the NSG;
his current visits to Switzerland and Mexico aim at this very objective, and
has apparently succeeded with Berne. But unstinted US support will be crucial.
In 2008, a nominally “lame duck” President George Bush pushed through crucial
legislation relating to the US-India nuclear deal. Mr Obama, who still has
seven months in office, could win serious equity in New Delhi by shepherding
India into the NSG.
Modi is working on the right lines. However, if only the track record of his government was better on human rights and his relations with wife more civilized, the Americans would find it easier to support India. In a way, Modi as a person brings new energy as also new hurdles.
ReplyDelete@ Ashok Asthana, would you please help explain what changed, when you say "his government was better on human rights". I understand this is a separate discussion, but could help know the perception and so present facts if need be.
ReplyDelete@Anon 00:21
ReplyDeleteFirst time in India's history not once but twice people have been forcibly deboarded from planes for holding an opinion contrary to what preached by this Govt. First it was a Greenpeace activist and second was a tribal rights activist. This is one such incident and direct attack on decades old democratic ethos of India.