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Bush era warmth over? US seen drifting from India

1nd1a

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NEW DELHI: It was a walk-past that raised eyebrows. At the G-20 summit in Cannes, observers saw what they described as a strange scene -- Prime Minister Manmohan Singh standing to the side while US President Barack Obama strode past him to greet another head of state with nary a glance at him.

Although the two leaders enjoyed a quiet chat later and are slated for a bilateral summit in Bali next week, for many in the room, the "overlook" seemed to symbolize what is now popularly described as a "drift" in the India-US relationship.

Dirges have been sung over the India-US relationship for some time now. US makes no secret of a growing disappointment with India, while India realizes that the warmth in ties subsided with George Bush's exit. The newer phenomenon is that few tears are being shed in the top levels of the Indian establishment over the state of ties with the US.

So what gives? US remains shell-shocked over the MMRCA rejection while India's positions on Libya, Syria and Palestine -- and increasingly Iran -- draw scorn from Washington's administration elite. After Obama's soul-stirring speech in the Indian Parliament last November, at least on the nuclear front, India has not, according to the US, delivered.

India refuses to change its liability law, whose punitive liability provisions keep US firms out, even though they have thawed enough to carry out "early works agreements" with NPCIL. India has been at the receiving end of a harangue on ratification of the Convention on Supplementary Compensation. India has promised to ratify it but is yet to do it. Consequently, India's membership to the four non-proliferation regimes is still a twinkle in the eye.

India's disappointment goes beyond. In the government, there is little sympathy for US action in Libya or Syria, despite the fact that neither Muammar Gaddafi nor Bashar Al Assad are Indian favourites. India is now increasingly coming round to the view that a US withdrawal from Afghanistan might not be so bad for the region. The recent US move to strike deal with the Haqqani Network at ISI's bidding has not gone down well in India.

In the Asia-Pacific theatre, where India and US have the greatest congruence, the US is pushing for a regional security architecture which India is chary of, because it might mean that India would be sucked into a US-China rivalry, and New Delhi does not want to go down that path.

George Bush believed in the big picture where India was concerned even in the worst days of the nuclear deal. Obama is more transactional and this shows in the relationship. With mounting domestic political issues on either side, Obama's "walk past" is probably an accurate sign of the times.

Even as they cope with the perceived downturn in ties, Indians hope that things will look up. For, despite all the difficulties, US remains India's most important partner. The ties are deeper and multi-faceted. Just over the next few weeks, joint working groups on defence, defence production and procurement will be meeting while a civil aviation summit is on the agenda.

There is an intensive travel schedule planned. Francisco Sanchez, US undersecretary for international trade, is in town. US Nuclear Regulatory Commission chairman Gregory B Jaczko will lead a five-person NRC delegation to India, followed by Rajiv Shah, head of USAID, deputy secretary Bill Burns, not to speak of congressional delegations and a long line of Indian ministers going to the US. On the face of it, ties have never been as good

Incidentally, India was unusually quiet at the just concluded G-20 summit. At the last G-20 summit in Seoul, Singh was feted as the global economic savant. It was this time in 2010 when all P-5 leaders were beating a path to New Delhi as Singh seemed to have fresh ideas to rebalance the global economy.

A year later, India has dropped off the map. China was the sole toast of last week's summit as European leaders tried to persuade Hu Jintao to help bail out the Eurozone financial crisis, which now threatens to engulf Italy after Greece.

Even French President Nicolas Sarkozy inexplicably stood Singh up, despite the fact that their bilateral meeting coincided with the opening of the commercial bids of the MMRCA where French aircraft Rafale is in the running.

Indian leaders opted for a lower profile. While all the other participants made sure their positions were available to the global media assembled in Cannes, they stayed away.

Bush era warmth over? US seen drifting from India - The Times of India

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Not sure with what mentality this was written. I don't see any differences between the two countries. We are buying Arms more then ever, Even though US lost $11 billion dollars deal. We are buying a huge list of items. They are still interested in selling F-35, WE ARE NOT INTERESTED.

I don't know why people make such a big issue out of nothing. :no:

:sniper:
 
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This article is rubbish and just an effort by TOI to sensationalize news to sell;

Point 1 : Historically USA was never a supplier country to India with weapons ,but now under Obama India has signed deals worth billions of dollars
Point 2 :USA and India are doing billions of dollars of deals and Indian community among the most respected and influential in USA
Point 3:With the thaw in US-Pak relation and Pak looking more and more towards China , it is India that USA needs to partner over a long term to counter China's dominance in the region especially with Russia being no longer a threat to USA
 
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I think it is time to drop this 'neutral' foreign policy - it has served us well but its time is over IMO - and define what you stand for.

Trying to appease all sides, we end up being close to none.
 
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kind of funny.. 10-15 billion dollars is pretty close to chicken $hit if you look at it in the context of over all arms trade in the world and the economy size of a country like USA.. Why so much huff and puff about this one deal (50% of which anyway needs to get off setted to India) ?
 
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I think people are reading too much into nothing. Obama and MMS share a very warm relationship and irrespective of MMRCA, Obama is a man who is always willing to greet people and be nice to them. So all this glance and cold shoulder is just fiction in the minds of the journalists. If US was so cross with India, it would not be offering F35. If US was cross with India then India would not be head over heals to order C17s.

So just relax "Time pass India" is all I have to say.
 
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Your rejection of what's been reported as cheap propaganda doesn't surprise me, many Indian posters chose to ignore sensitive issues.

Sleeping with America means submission and US' foreign policy is such that their interests comes first. After giving India the nuclear deal, US' expectations were high on harvesting hard cash but they are left almost empty handed with a few export orders. India is looking to Russia for nuclear technology and to Europe for weapons, that's where billions of $ will be spent next few years right under the nose of Americans. The American Elite is aware of this and realizes that Bush-Condy Admin has been taken for a ride by MMS.

I'd say well done India, you got what you wanted and gave them the middle finger.
 
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I think it is time to drop this 'neutral' foreign policy - it has served us well but its time is over IMO - and define what you stand for.

Trying to appease all sides, we end up being close to none.

No, India should continue with current policy if she ever wants to manifest herself as more than a regional power. With growing Chinese influence in Asia, US can not afford to ignore you since only India can contain China so use this comfortable position you are in and exploit America like Israel is doing.
 
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Presidents from the Democratic Party like obama, clintion have always been more popular in India but the fact is that they are anti India (pro pak, china) and Republicans like Bush are more sane and good for India but they are not very popular.

To the point man.

It is so sad that the Indian populace shows its stupidity to the whole world denouncing by Bush, and loving Clinton and Obama without even noticing who did what for this country.

I remember when MMS said that people in India love Bush, and everyone in India was up in arms at that. Oh they were so angry at the man who fought the whole effing world to get India the nuke deals. And then I saw how Indians rejoiced when Obama got elected - simply because he is black.

I guess Obama and Clinton are treating us right for being the utter fools that we are.
 
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No, India should continue with current policy if she ever wants to manifest herself as more than a regional power. With growing Chinese influence in Asia, US can not afford to ignore you since only India can contain China so use this comfortable position you are in and exploit America like Israel is doing.

no dude america is not a good ally to have. look at what they did to Pakistan under the garb of using them against the war on terror.
 
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I always calls Manmohan Singh a weak prime minister because he dances on the tunes of America if america don't like him then i will be his biggest supporter. :tup:

If MMS don't listen to USA's command then we can have good relations with Iran, Mayanmar, Sri Lanka (All of these countries are drifting towards china because India don't respond to them under US pressure) + it will help save our retailers, farmers, SMEs.


Be it America or china no one can deny India its rightful share in the world.
 
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