By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 25th April 17
On April 18, almost three months after the
United States President Donald Trump was sworn in, his National Security
Advisor, Lieutenant General HR McMaster, travelled to New Delhi --- the first
high level US official to visit India to pick up the strings of defence and
security ties that had blossomed under Trump’s predecessor, Barack Obama.
Senior New Delhi officials, accustomed to the
warmth of Ashton Carter, defence secretary in the Obama administration, found
McMaster’s visit rather less comforting. It yielded mainly routine statements
on “shared perspectives” with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and pro-forma US
assurances that India remains central to Washington’s notion of Asian security.
No date was agreed for Modi to visit Washington – recognition the prime
minister covets, but must now wait for.
New Delhi has expected change, after being
at the target end of Trump’s anti-immigration, anti-outsourcing campaign
platform. Change was also predicted in the China factor, which had triggered
Obama’s “rebalance to Asia” and, therefore, India’s new importance in Asia’s
security architecture.
On the day Trump was sworn in, he fulfilled
a campaign promise to withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an
anti-China trade grouping, thus potentially easing trade tensions with China.
The new president has deferred campaign promises to declare Beijing a currency
manipulator, ostensibly after Chinese promises to rein in North Korea. Trump’s
invitation to China’s President Xi Jinping for an ice-breaking summit in
Florida in early April inflamed New Delhi’s concerns that he is mercurial on
China, up one day and down the next.
On the crucial US-India-Pakistan dynamic,
Trump had already irked New Delhi last November by offering to mediate on
Kashmir. This was aggravated earlier this month by his influential UN envoy,
Nikki Haley, who declared that Trump himself might oversee an India-Pakistan
peace process. New Delhi’s response was predictably icy.
There remains immense goodwill for India
amongst US Congresspersons, both in the Senate and the House of
Representatives. But an administration embroiled in acrimonious political
battles has lagged in appointing officials to the senior positions where policy
is enacted and prioritised. No matter how well intentioned the US Congress, it
can do little for now with just a skeleton administration to work with.
Of the 600-700 new Trump appointments that
the Senate must okay, barely 22 have been confirmed so far. The two key departments
dealing with security policy --- defense (the Pentagon) and state --- are
functioning without confirmed Deputy Secretaries, who are their de facto chief
operating officers. Nor do these departments have South Asia points-persons ---
there is no confirmed Assistant Secretary of Defense for South and Southeast
Asia; or Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia. There is no
Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs, another key
official.
That leaves New Delhi in the unfamiliar and
uncomfortable position of not having a champion in Washington. For years,
Defense Secretary Ashton Carter drove the India relationship, fuelled by the Obama
White House’s unwavering conviction that a strong India was in America’s
national interest, regardless of whether it marched alongside America; or
bought US weaponry.
Carter brought attention to India at the
Principals’ level – the rarefied decision-making layer that is Washington’s equivalent
of India’s Cabinet Committee on Political Affairs. In the Trump administration
– or what of it can be discerned so far – New Delhi can take solace only in the
appointment of Lisa Curtis, who has been named Senior Director for South Asia
in the National Security Council.
A Washington insider says that with the new
administration so understaffed, there is little adult supervision of India
policy. Yet, without a strategic India policy from the executive, or enough personnel
to sustain new strategic initiatives on India, the question already taking
centre stage is: Why exactly is New Delhi a policy priority? What is India
delivering to us?
“The Trump team wants deals that tangibly
benefit both countries, including American workers. Senior officials are
instinctively pro-India, but they will invest time in the relationship only if
they see positive results rather than just rhetoric”, says Ben Schwartz, of the
US-India Business Council.
This outlook aligns with Trump’s insistence,
voiced during campaigning, that America’s military allies and partners who
“free-ride” on US military capabilities must start paying their way. While
India is not a US treaty ally like Japan, South Korea or NATO countries, the
Trump administration’s default mind set is transactional, rather than
strategic. That causes US officials to raise proposals like: “Don’t you think
India should buy the F-16 fighter to demonstrate support to the new president?”
This transactional approach has a serious
downside, says a US defence industry executive. “If India chooses Sweden’s
Gripen NG light fighter over the F-16, the chatter in Washington will return to
how “oversold” the India relationship is.
“Under Trump, it’s easy to imagine the
president’s desire for quid pro quos clashing badly with New Delhi’s insistence
on decision-making autonomy,” says Shashank Joshi, a fellow with the Royal
United Service Institution in London.
While New Delhi has always seen the US
defence relationship as a source of high technology for building indigenous
defence weaponry, Pentagon officials say Defense Secretary Mattis wants to
shift the relationship’s focus from technology transfer to operational
cooperation between the two militaries. If China is what binds New Delhi and
Washington strategically, believes Mattis, there needs to be visible action and
capability creation towards that.
New Delhi, however, has longstanding
reservations about participating in anything that resembles a military
alliance. In March 2016, the US Pacific Command (USPACOM) chief, Admiral Harry
Harris, speaking before a New Delhi audience, envisioned the day when “American
and Indian Navy vessels steaming together will become a common and welcome
sight throughout Indo-Asia-Pacific waters.” But Manohar Parrikar, then India’s
defence minister, quickly poured cold water on that prospect, publicly ruling
out any question of joint patrolling. Then, in July, Parrikar reinforced that
message in parliament, stating: “No talks have been held with United States on
conduct of any joint naval patrols. Further, Indian Navy has
never carried out joint patrols with another country.”
True, Sino-Indian relations have sharply
declined since then. Beijing’s opposition to India’s membership of the Nuclear
Suppliers Group; its support to Pakistan in blocking a UN resolution
designating Jaish-e-Mohammed chief, Azhar Mehmood, a terrorist; the growing
supply of Chinese weaponry to Pakistan; China’s role in connecting its western
Xinjiang province with Pakistan’s Arabian Sea port of Gwadar under the “Belt
and Road” initiative; and, this month, Beijing’s aggressive castigation of New
Delhi for permitting the Dalai Lama to visit the disputed Tawang area in
Arunachal Pradesh, might have sharpened resolve in New Delhi to be more assertive
with China.
Yet, it remains an open question whether this
disharmony will encourage India into deeper joint training and operations with
the US and its allies. For now, New Delhi seems disinclined to provoke Beijing
by acceding to Australia’s request to be an observer in the forthcoming
Indo-US-Japan trilateral Malabar naval exercise.
Operational cooperation is also impeded by
New Delhi’s longstanding reluctance to sign two defence agreements that would
legally enable Washington to supply safeguarded military equipment. The first
of these, the Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCASA),
would allow the US to transfer secured communications links to India that would
improve the ability for joint operations. For example, in January, Pacific
Command chief, Admiral Harris, told this correspondent that the US and Indian
navies were cooperatively tracking Chinese submarines in the Indian Ocean,
using the Boeing P-8 maritime aircraft. However, India’s non-signature of
COMCASA meant its P-8I (I for India) was supplied without the communications
equipment needed to “talk” to the US Navy’s P-8A (A for America). This was a
self-inflicted blow to operational effectiveness, noted Harris.
Even so, New Delhi has resisted signing
COMCASA, as also the second agreement – termed the Basic Exchange and
Cooperation Agreement for Geospatial Information and Services Cooperation (BECA),
which facilitates secure digital mapping –because of intrusive security
measures that come with safeguarded equipment, including inspections on Indian
bases.
New Delhi has gradually ceded ground to the
US on these agreements. First, it signed India-specific “end user verification”
agreements, which allowed it to get cutting-edge protective equipment for the
prime minister’s executive jet. Last year, a Logistics Exchange Memorandum of
Agreement was signed, which allows the two militaries to access each other’s
logistic facilities. Neither of these faced the domestic political blowback
that New Delhi was so worried about. Admiral Harris believes COMCASA might be
signed first, as “it deals with interoperability and stuff that we really
need”. This would amount to an Indian statement that would provide serious impetus
to US-India defence ties in the early days of Trump.
===========
Improving US-India ties
US-India ties galvanized by Defence
Framework Agreement of 2005, renewed for ten years in 2015
Defence Trade & Technology Initiative (DTTI) deals with defence trade issues
The “India Rapid Reaction Cell” in the Pentagon clears roadblocks relating to India
Of three “enabling agreements”, “Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement” (LEMOA) signed last year
US policymakers expect “Communications Compatibility And Security Agreement” (COMCASA) to be signed next
An amendment to the National Defence Authorization Act of 2017 (NDAA 2017) legally binds every US administration to treat India as a “Major Defence Partner”
After Obama administration’s strategic approach to India, Trump likely to demand more quid pro quos.
Trump regime currently short-staffed, officials not yet named for key positions
Defence Trade & Technology Initiative (DTTI) deals with defence trade issues
The “India Rapid Reaction Cell” in the Pentagon clears roadblocks relating to India
Of three “enabling agreements”, “Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement” (LEMOA) signed last year
US policymakers expect “Communications Compatibility And Security Agreement” (COMCASA) to be signed next
An amendment to the National Defence Authorization Act of 2017 (NDAA 2017) legally binds every US administration to treat India as a “Major Defence Partner”
After Obama administration’s strategic approach to India, Trump likely to demand more quid pro quos.
Trump regime currently short-staffed, officials not yet named for key positions
Trump has just taken over. These ties usually do not really dramatically depend on change of guard. It will settle down. Finally all international,relationships are based on give & take keeping in mind national interests .
ReplyDeleteWe as a nation are independent financially and have reasonably independent defence policy unlike a few other countries depending on hand outs. Let us push this path of self sufficiency, things will work out.
Hello Ajai,
ReplyDeleteHow are you? Its been years I commented on your articles, funny enough, I choose this article to critic as it mentions Trump.
For starters, I would like this article broken down to many topics. The article first mentions some facts like Mcmasters visit, and quickly jumps(->) to New Delhi's expected change (does not say what change it wants) -> trump executive orders ->India -Pakistan -kashmir mediation -> Trump's understaffed administration -> single engine F16 vs Gripen competition -> Sino India relations -> US India Operational Cooperation. Have read the article twice, but still did not get a point you are trying to make. I only important quote which was worthy (I still do not understand what this article is trying to point the reader at) to remember was this,
“The Trump team wants deals that tangibly benefit both countries, including American workers. Senior officials are instinctively pro-India, but they will invest time in the relationship only if they see positive results rather than just rhetoric”, says Ben Schwartz, of the US-India Business Council.
Now, If you could have elaborated more, or given your view after your analysis, to what New Delhi Wants (from your sources, New Delhi's expected change) versus Trumps tangible deals, (what is India gaining and what is it losing). Is Single Fighter competition a pawn here, that would be nice. If you are already writing an article along this line, ignore my comments. Do not get angry now :)
Again, Thanks for your efforts,
Cheers,
Bharath
Waiting for COMCASA to be signed .
ReplyDeleteThe recurring mention of indo-US ties, COMCASA etc on this site is getting boring.
ReplyDeleteThe americans believe in one prime policy - to avoid direct confrontation with the enemy. They do this through the policy of balancing one country against the other. Pakistan is used to balance india and india is/will be used to balance china. The problem for the US is that indian policy makers witnessed and understood this first hand during the death on lakhs on bangaldeshi hindus.
Today, India refuses to follow america's instructions. It refuses to balance china. The russians too want china to grow. Both the indians and russians share a common goal. The question is, will china fall to opportunism and turn against india and russia? The US thinks this is so...
Fearing a china-russia co-operation, trump plans to do a nixon. Back in 1971, when india refused to stop and changed geography, nixon was forced to travel to china. This partnership with Us-china was arranged by none other than the pakistanis. The aftermath of 71 prompted the US to develop china. During this period, the americans initiated unprecedented technology transfer to china(assembly lines, military complex etc). Now trump wants to do the same. It is unclear what the US will give to china this time.
Regarding the indo-US relationship and its lobbyists, I don't know what caused them to become so blind. Understand this... there are only two real super powers in the world. If you want to stop the will on one(america), you can only that through the other(russia). The rest(india, china, pakistan etc) are mere pawns in the game.
You think rafales and f16s can stop the americans from doing what they have been doing since the 50s?
FYI -
ReplyDeletehttp://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/pakistan-qamar-javed-bajwa-kashmir-political-struggle-india/1/942199.html
Hope that you have learned the truth about your sources, truth, using, and censoring opinions...