Three
points remain to be negotiated, COMCASA will not be signed
during 2+2 meeting on July 6th
By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 23rd June 18
A key
defence agreement with the United States (US) that India once staunchly opposed,
is now tantalizingly within reach.
After three
days of intensive negotiations in New Delhi, from Monday to Wednesday, only
three points of disagreement remain in finalizing the Communications
Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCASA), which will allow the US to
transfer highly secure communications equipment to India.
Top defence
ministry sources say negotiations were conducted with unusual purpose, with
both sides hoping the agreement could be announced at the inaugural “two-plus-two”
US-India dialogue on July 6, when Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj and Defence
Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will jointly meet their American counterparts, Mike
Pompeo and Jim Mattis.
However,
agreement on those three points remains elusive and at least one more round of
negotiations would be required. A key part of the dispute relates to
“sovereignty issues”, including visits by US inspectors to Indian bases where
the COMCASA-safeguarded equipment is deployed.
Business
Standard learns that the proposals India provided to break the deadlock are
being taken back by the US legal negotiating team to Washington, for legal
vetting.
Similar
issues led to a decade of Indian resistance to signing the Communication and
Information Security Memorandum of Agreement (CISMOA) – as the agreement
was earlier named.
Since India
objected to signing a blanket agreement like CISMOA, which several other
countries had signed, its name was changed to COMCASA to convey an
India-specific nature.
For similar
reasons, India also resisted two other agreements that the US regards as
“foundational” for a viable defence partnership. Eventually, in August 2016, the
US and India signed the Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA),
which allows both countries’ militaries to replenish from the other’s bases and
facilities, subject to permission. India has no similar agreement with any
other country, not even Russia.
Negotiations
on the third agreement, termed Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement for
Geo-spatial Cooperation (BECA), will follow COMCASA, say defence ministry
sources.
Without
COMCASA, the US has been legally obliged to supply India weaponry equipped with
commercially available communications systems in place of the more capable
equipment safeguarded by COMCASA.
When the
Indian Navy bought the P-8I maritime aircraft, Boeing supplied it without CISMOA-safeguarded
voice and data channels --- called Data Link-11 and Link-16 --- through which
the P-8I alerts friendly naval forces about enemy submarines. The absence of
these links prevents the generation of a Common Tactical Picture with partner
navies that operate over CISMOA-protected links.
The
non-availability of Link-16 also prevents Indian fighter aircraft from
generating a “common air picture” with friendly air forces. Non-signature of
CISMOA also denies India precision Global Positioning System (GPS) gear, and
state-of-the-art guidance for the Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missile
(AMRAAM) that the air force is procuring for its fighter aircraft.
Finally, unless
COMCASA is signed soon, the 15 Chinook CH-47F helicopters that Boeing is
building for India in Philadelphia will have less sophisticated navigation and
radio equipment than US Army Chinooks.
Good thing. Only we should avoid buying fighters from US or elsewhere.
ReplyDeleteI hope IAF has by now realised Tejas is the only affordable fighter available to buy in large numbers.
Let us invest lot more in infantry and artillery (rocket and tube), do it by buying locally made arms.
Irrational expectation that COMCASA is within reach. The biggest impediment to getting the agreement signed is structuring provisions that ensure sanction proof supply of defence equipment to India. Mere presidential assurance may not suffice. Notwithstanding the progress made on COMCASA, I continue to believe that exchanging communication codes with US or allowing access to US inspectors to India's military installations is not worth any level of sophisticated technology the US may offer or assure. India's military buys help the US earn, now increasingly valuable, export revenues. Why not hold the line for few more years and India may be able to get frontline US equipment without Foundational Agreements thanks to US' increased imperative to export!
ReplyDeleteReally?
ReplyDeleteOn one hand, the indian policy makers are accounting for american sanctions and on the other hand, they are signing strategic agreements with them?
Surely, only one of these can be true. Not to mention, India has no use of either CISMOA or LEMOA. The indian defence minister is just a figure head. Hint: Ajit doval was in russia last month.
The S400 purchase is a game changer in the balancing war and the americans do not know how to handle this change.
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ReplyDelete