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US-India defence ties are on target

India will expect continuity in its defence relationship under Donald Trump and hopefully that is what the administration will also accept

Published on: Jan 30, 2017 10:18 AM IST
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The most tangible element of the growing strategic convergence between India and the United States over the past two decades has been in the realm of defence. The George W. Bush administration began the process by lifting dual-use technology sanctions against India. While the sanctions were imposed over nuclear concerns, they had the additional effect of keeping India from acquiring almost any high-end US defence technology as well. President Barack Obama saw slow progress, largely because of the American allergies that afflicted the second Manmohan Singh government. But an ambitious Defence Technology and Trade Initiative was started and has since laid out over a half-dozen specific defence production projects that the two countries – and more importantly their individual defence firms – can work on together. The idea was to not only produce, in time, tangible Indo-US joint weapons systems but to also cut paths for such projects through the bureaucratic thickets of the respective defence ministries. The DTTI has had limited success, but continues to expand its remit.

The future of the Indo-US defence relationship now rests on the Donald Trump administration moving forward in two areas. (Reuters Photo)
The future of the Indo-US defence relationship now rests on the Donald Trump administration moving forward in two areas. (Reuters Photo)

The new Donald Trump administration has yet to say anything concrete about the Indo-US defence relationship. There are reasons to be positive. The new president has spoken of India in only positive terms, something that has not characterised his language on most parts of the world. The outgoing Obama administration sought to institutionalise what had been accomplished with India in terms of defence cooperation with an amendment to the National Defence Authorisation Act 2017. The amendment fortunately received strong bipartisan support and is unlikely to be a source of contention with the Trump administration. This was largely confirmed by the testimony of the new Pentagon Chief, General Jim Mattis, who spoke of the DTTI has having helped the Indo-US defence relationship “grow to the benefit of both countries.”

 
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