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US says strategic ties with India 'will carry over into next century

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Russia Says Sarin Gas in Aug. 21 Syria Attack was 'Homemade' | Russia | RIA Novosti
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********.com - Shocking Video: Syrian Rebels Testing Chem Weapons On Rabbits As Warning To Civilians

Don't underestimate the capability



Once that kind of expertise to produce chemical weapons at home is spread ,it will be a lot worse as many industrial chemicals are available off shelf ,the fighting on both sides will be worse.

Err...you are very confused. They can do whatever in Syria(alleged) because they actually control territory there and because all the borders are porous. Coming to India with a chemical weapon already prepared would be suicidal (the Pakistanis would have to really trust them)& making it here, not an option. Your points are competely unfounded. This is the stuff of pipe dreams. These chaps can't even beat the Syrian army, they are going to come try the Indian Army...?:lol:
 
Err...you are very confused. They can do whatever in Syria(alleged) because they actually control territory there and because all the borders are porous. Coming to India with a chemical weapon already prepared would be suicidal (the Pakistanis would have to really trust them)& making it here, not an option. Your points are competely unfounded. This is the stuff of pipe dreams. These chaps can't even beat the Syrian army, they are going to come try the Indian Army...?:lol:

Thats the difference. The syrian army has huge local support which Indian army don't . Plus reports seem to suggest that they are able to make chemical weapons with industrial chemicals .Which means they could assemble something like that in Kashmir also.

Coming to India with a chemical weapon already prepared would be suicidal (the Pakistanis would have to really trust them)& making it here, not an option.

Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/indian...y-over-into-next-century-7.html#ixzz2fzJMuSp3

Depends who brings them ,Pakistan or NATO/CIA. Pakistan was nothing but a creation of the British to contain India after all.


Your points are competely unfounded. This is the stuff of pipe dreams.
Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/indian...y-over-into-next-century-7.html#ixzz2fzJVpuHZ

Once the situation in kashmir starts changing you will eat your words. And it will happen .That I know. Be not surprised because Congress will win 2014 elections by hook or crook . I am not going to say more.I have been listening to the sermons of the muezzins in the mosque who have connections with politicans and foreigners with 'shady' background and know what they know what they are talking about. You Don't. Better be vigilant rather than arrogant.
 
Thats the difference. The syrian army has huge local support which Indian army don't .



Depends who brings them ,Pakistan or NATO/CIA. Pakistan was nothing but a creation of the British to contain India after all.




Once the situation in kashmir starts changing you will eat your words. And it will happen .That I know. Be not surprised because Congress will win 2014 elections by hook or crook . I am not going to say more.I have been listening to the sermons of the muezzins in the mosque who have connections with politicans and foreigners with 'shady' background and know what they know what they are talking about. You Don't. Better be vigilant rather than arrogant.

Wrong. If that was the case then terrorists would not have been arrested in JnK recently. :disagree:
"I am not going to say more.I have been listening to the sermons of the muezzins in the mosque who have connections with politicans and foreigners with 'shady' background" - That's their 'duty'
 
Wrong. If that was the case then terrorists would not have been arrested in JnK recently. :disagree:
"I am not going to say more.I have been listening to the sermons of the muezzins in the mosque who have connections with politicans and foreigners with 'shady' background" - That's their 'duty'

Kashmiris favour independence over India, Pakistan

Srinagar, May 26, 2010:

More than 75 percent of people in Kashmir Valley, the centre of a bloody conflict against India, want an Independent Jammu and Kashmir, an opinion poll conducted by a UK based research house suggested.

The Chattam House released the report Wednesday.

The first ever poll on the issue to be conducted across both sides of Jammu and Kashmir divided by a line of control between India and Pakistan concluded that more than 43 percent of the state’s population wanted independence of the whole region, while support for the two options provided under the UN resolution i.e. joining India or Pakistan stood at 21 percent and 15 percent respectively.

The results, however, have been found highly polarised along religious lines in the Muslim dominated state.

The researcher Robert W Bradnock, senior visiting research fellow at King’s College London conducted the research for Chatham House with technical support from Ipsos MORI, in conjunction with FACTS Worldwide India and Aftab Associates in Pakistan.

A total of 3,774 respondents aged over 16 and selected on the basis of quota sampling were interviewed (face to face). Three districts of Indian administered Kashmir Doda, Pulwama and Kupwara were excluded along with Neelum Valley in Pakistan administered Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan.

Bradnock who has also explored attitude to alternate solutions said that the results of the poll suggest that there was no single proposition for the future of Kashmir which could be put to the population of the former princely state and get majority support.

“One conclusion is clear: a plebiscite along the lines envisaged in the UN resolutions of 1948-49 is extremely unlikely to offer a solution today,” Brandock concludes.

Response

Independence: In aggregate 44 percent in AJK and 43 percent in J&K said they would vote for independence. However, while this is the most popular option overall, not only does it fail to carry an overallmajority, on the Indian side of the LoC it is heavily polarised. In the Kashmir Valley Division, commonly regarded as the core region of Kashmiri identity and of demands for its political recognition, support for independence runs at between 74 percent and 95 percent. In contrast, across JammuDivision it is under one percent. In Leh it is thirty percent and Kargil twenty percent.

Joining India: Twenty-one percent overall said they would vote to join India. However, only one percent on the Pakistani side of the Line of Control said they would vote for this, compared with 28 percent on the Indian side. In the Vale of Kashmir support for joining India was much lower, down to just two percent in Baramula. Only in Jammu and Ladakh Divisions was there majority support for joining India, rising to as high as eighty percent in Kargil.

Joining Pakistan: Fifteen percent overall said they would vote to join Pakistan. Fifty percent of the population on the Pakistani side of the LoC said they would choose to join Pakistan, comparedwith two percent in J&K, on the Indian side of the LoC. Badgam, in the Kashmir Valley Division, had the highest percentage vote for joining Pakistan at seven percent.
Kashmiris favour independence over India, Pakistan: Poll
Comprehensive New Poll Shows Most Kashmiris Favor Independence
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Troubles are a lot more than you think Sarthak. Instead of shooting the messenger,try to understand. I am giving advance warning of what is to come. Hopefully you guys understand.
 
Thats the difference. The syrian army has huge local support which Indian army don't . Plus reports seem to suggest that they are able to make chemical weapons with industrial chemicals .Which means they could assemble something like that in Kashmir also.

This is becoming a bit repetitive. A whole bunch of Syrian veterans will come to Kashmir, buy industrial chemicals and aturn them into chemical weapons. Maybe we really deserve it if all we can do while that is happening is sit around swatting flies.....Use on whom actually? Chemical weapons will not discriminate between an Indian soldier & a local Kashmiri civilian, the Indian soldier might actually have some protection even. They are called WMD for a reason.

Depends who brings them ,Pakistan or NATO/CIA. Pakistan was nothing but a creation of the British to contain India after all.


Err...Pakistan has plenty of people inside their own country who might decide to use the "weapons" locally.....They would also have to wonder abouit Indian reaction to their help...that is a part of India's nuclear red line.....so, no. They won't.


Once the situation in kashmir starts changing you will eat your words. And it will happen .That I know. Be not surprised because Congress will win 2014 elections by hook or crook . I am not going to say more.I have been listening to the sermons of the muezzins in the mosque who have connections with politicans and foreigners with 'shady' background and know what they know what they are talking about. You Don't. Better be vigilant rather than arrogant.

Vigilant? Yes. Arrogant? No. You are wasting time here. Your wild scenarios are the stuff of movies, the ME,Europe,Pakistan itself is a far more tempting target than India will ever be. Best to agree to disagree here. No meeting point is likely.
 
Kashmiris favour independence over India, Pakistan

Srinagar, May 26, 2010:

More than 75 percent of people in Kashmir Valley, the centre of a bloody conflict against India, want an Independent Jammu and Kashmir, an opinion poll conducted by a UK based research house suggested.

The Chattam House released the report Wednesday.

The first ever poll on the issue to be conducted across both sides of Jammu and Kashmir divided by a line of control between India and Pakistan concluded that more than 43 percent of the state’s population wanted independence of the whole region, while support for the two options provided under the UN resolution i.e. joining India or Pakistan stood at 21 percent and 15 percent respectively.

The results, however, have been found highly polarised along religious lines in the Muslim dominated state.

The researcher Robert W Bradnock, senior visiting research fellow at King’s College London conducted the research for Chatham House with technical support from Ipsos MORI, in conjunction with FACTS Worldwide India and Aftab Associates in Pakistan.

A total of 3,774 respondents aged over 16 and selected on the basis of quota sampling were interviewed (face to face). Three districts of Indian administered Kashmir Doda, Pulwama and Kupwara were excluded along with Neelum Valley in Pakistan administered Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan.

Bradnock who has also explored attitude to alternate solutions said that the results of the poll suggest that there was no single proposition for the future of Kashmir which could be put to the population of the former princely state and get majority support.

“One conclusion is clear: a plebiscite along the lines envisaged in the UN resolutions of 1948-49 is extremely unlikely to offer a solution today,” Brandock concludes.

Response

Independence: In aggregate 44 percent in AJK and 43 percent in J&K said they would vote for independence. However, while this is the most popular option overall, not only does it fail to carry an overallmajority, on the Indian side of the LoC it is heavily polarised. In the Kashmir Valley Division, commonly regarded as the core region of Kashmiri identity and of demands for its political recognition, support for independence runs at between 74 percent and 95 percent. In contrast, across JammuDivision it is under one percent. In Leh it is thirty percent and Kargil twenty percent.

Joining India: Twenty-one percent overall said they would vote to join India. However, only one percent on the Pakistani side of the Line of Control said they would vote for this, compared with 28 percent on the Indian side. In the Vale of Kashmir support for joining India was much lower, down to just two percent in Baramula. Only in Jammu and Ladakh Divisions was there majority support for joining India, rising to as high as eighty percent in Kargil.

Joining Pakistan: Fifteen percent overall said they would vote to join Pakistan. Fifty percent of the population on the Pakistani side of the LoC said they would choose to join Pakistan, comparedwith two percent in J&K, on the Indian side of the LoC. Badgam, in the Kashmir Valley Division, had the highest percentage vote for joining Pakistan at seven percent.
Kashmiris favour independence over India, Pakistan: Poll
Comprehensive New Poll Shows Most Kashmiris Favor Independence
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Troubles are a lot more than you think Sarthak. Instead of shooting the messenger,try to understand. I am giving advance warning of what is to come. Hopefully you guys understand.

Jihadis and Salafists want. Our own elections showed they have lesser support. In any case Kashmir can be independent only and only from the dead lifeless and frozen fingers of a dismembered, defeated and destroyed India.
 
This is becoming a bit repetitive. A whole bunch of Syrian veterans will come to Kashmir, buy industrial chemicals and aturn them into chemical weapons. Maybe we really deserve it if all we can do while that is happening is sit around swatting flies.....




Err...Pakistan has plenty of people inside their own country who might decide to use the "weapons" locally.....They would also have to wonder abouit Indian reaction to their help...that is a part of India's nuclear red line.....so, no. They won't.




Vigilant? Yes. Arrogant? No. You are wasting time here. Your wild scenarios are the stuff of movies, the ME,Europe,Pakistan itself is a far more tempting target than India will ever be. Best to agree to disagree here. No meeting point is likely.

Europe,USA and nations in ME are their sponsors.

Err...Pakistan has plenty of people inside their own country who might decide to use the "weapons" locally.....They would also have to wonder abouit Indian reaction to their help...that is a part of India's nuclear red line.....so, no. They won't.


Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/indian...y-over-into-next-century-7.html#ixzz2fzOy7VrH

Pakistan is already a finished state. I do not see any future for it .So yes they could use such things against each other.

Vigilant? Yes. Arrogant? No. You are wasting time here. Your wild scenarios are the stuff of movies

Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/indian...y-over-into-next-century-7.html#ixzz2fzPCy4gq

I will say this ,the syrian campaign will be over in 2014. If assad loses,the next place they will be brought in will be brought in is kashmir,central asia in 2015-16. Around the same time in which CIA has drawn on scenarios for balkanization of India and PAkistan. The terrorists do not operate for Pakistan govt ,but are mercenary arms of GCC and NATO. Check the link which stated CIA plans to split india in 2015 by RAW officer.CIA also has stated that Pakistan will be failed state by 2015.

Pak will be failed state by 2015: CIA - Times Of India
The Destabilization of Pakistan | Global Research
Think about it. Killing two birds with one stone.Pakistan And India both targetted for balkanization in 2015.
'CIA plans to split India by 2015'

Think about it. I would like more indians to be aware and prepared.

Jihadis and Salafists want. Our own elections showed they have lesser support. In any case Kashmir can be independent only and only from the dead lifeless and frozen fingers of a dismembered, defeated and destroyed India.

Thats what precisely CIA has in its works for India and Pakistan in 2015. After Syria ,India and Pakistan are the next targets.

http://www.mid-day.com/news/2009/jan/220109-Malegaon-blast-case-452-witnesses-Central-Intelligence-Agency-Lt-Col-Shrikant-Purohit.htm
http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-destabilization-of-pakistan/7705
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2005-02-13/us/27854865_1_nic-cia-talibanisation
 
Modi is supported by many pro-Chinese Indians here who would gladly carve away Indian territory to China.

After reading your sound knowledge about Indian history, this comment does not surprise me at all :lol::lol:
 
A century is a long time in geopolitics, too long for anybody to predict anything. Nobody who is currently talking or thinking about geopolitics will be alive then. The old order shall have changed, yielding place to a new one. Let's talk about this decade and a few more, for now.

Indeed ! World history would testify that relations between countries can change overnight ....and with that yardstick Century is really long period . Well since we like to hear big words ...we are periodically peppered with such heart-warming rhetoric !

Yet the conviction with which US pushed through India's case through NSG ( even as China was busy to sabotage same through covert means ) needs to be kept in mind. Well US will do everything to protect interests . Rise of India serves US interests well as it helps China to keep in check.

So we obviously needs to see through the rhetoric if there is any substance in Indo-US relations ?

I think good ties are interest of both country and I believe they should remain so for foreseeable future .


I have always stressed the fact that US has only one friend ....and its US itself !!!

We need to remember that even as we get cosy with 'Friendly' US ....
 
You better believe they'll welcome him with open arms should he become PM! You think they'd risk pi$$ing off one of their most important friends over such things?

Not that Modi has actually been found of doing anything wrong but the US has shown itself to be happy doing business and cosying up to the monsters of this world. As long as it suits their own national interest they'll do it.[/QUOTE]


Oh ! I have no doubt about that ....
US has entertained many dictators and criminals in the past .

The Best part of being Superpower is you can be hypocrite and also get away with it ....


So I have no doubt that if Narendra Modi becomes PM ....US will embrace him with open arms

Only thing amuses me is what will happen to high ideals of Human rights , religious tolerance !!!

Well US will swallow bitter pill rather meekly ...

Right now they have maintained status quo ....because they have no clue what verdict Indians are going to throw ?

Have you ever heard it criticize Saudi Arabia for lack of religious freedom ?

Modi is supported by many pro-Chinese Indians here who would gladly carve away Indian territory to China.

You must be hallucinating .....!!!
 
The India-US love story is soaring - Rediff.com News




The medium and longer term prospects remain very positive for the India-US relationship, feels Kanwal Sibal.

The most important foreign policy development in the last decade has been the remarkable improvement in India’s relations with the United States.

From mutual suspicion, lack of empathy and a policy of keeping the relationship at a low level to avoid giving the US too much leverage over India, we have moved to a relationship of mutual confidence, genuine engagement and belief that the two sides can develop convergent strategic interests.

The rhetoric accompanying this rapprochement is a little overblown on the US side, with President Obama describing the India-US relationship as a defining one for the 21st century.

What this might mean other than a strengthened relationship and greater convergence in the coming years is unclear.

The vision of India becoming such a major pole in global affairs that the India-US tandem will determine the configuration of international relations, the principles governing them, the management of global commons and the consolidation of political and human values acceptable universally seems a little grandiloquent.

India, on the other hand, uses more subdued vocabulary to describe the improving ties, emphasizing their transformed nature, which is a more realistic description of where they stand today.

The Indian government, conscious that it is already being perceived as being too pro-US and aligning itself unduly with US interests, presumably feels the need to keep its rhetoric low-key so as not to invite criticism domestically and raise doubts externally about the independence of its foreign policy decision making.

Nevertheless, the fact remains that for India, its relationship with the US has become the most important one.


The range of engagement with the US, reflected in several dialogues in diverse areas that the two countries are holding -- whether it is in the field of energy, education, agriculture, health, development, science and technology, environment, trade, defense, counter-terrorism, non-proliferation, high technology and the like -- far exceeds that with any other country.

The objective is to build Indian capacities in a number of sectors with US technology and know-how, a process that would help India to develop and grow even as the US gets greater access to the expanding Indian economy.

India and the US have had to overcome a difficult legacy. It can be argued that, over decades, the US has done much damage to India’s strategic interests by hamstringing its efforts to develop nuclear and missile technologies, imposing sanctions on India in these areas, denying India high and dual use technologies, overlooking Pakistan’s acquisition of nuclear and missile technologies from China, politically subverting Indian sovereignty over Jammu and Kashmir by interventions on Pakistan’s behalf, arming Pakistan against India, and unleashing Islamic extremism in the region by its decision to use ****** groups to fight the Soviet Union in Afghanistan.

Progress has been made, even though unevenly, in overcoming this unfortunate legacy.

The change in mutual perceptions began with the Vajpayee government, with the then Indian leadership speaking of India and the US as ‘natural allies’ and taking the initiative to engage the US on divisive strategic issues, especially nuclear and high technology ones.

The slow progress being made was put into really high gear by President Bush, leading to the 2005 India-US civilian nuclear deal and the Nuclear Suppliers Group exception for India, for which the US undoubtedly did the ‘heavy-lifting.’

This deal, however controversial it became in India because of some crucial concessions extracted from India and the misleading hype about its energy potential created by its supporters, the fact is that non-proliferation issues blighting India’s bilateral relationship with the US and pitted India against the majority of the international community for decades have been removed from the agenda, which constitutes a solid political and diplomatic gain.


Flowing from this, India has been able to sign civilian cooperation agreements with several other countries, including Canada, with progress in negotiations with Australia and hopeful prospects of an agreement with Japan. India has been able to secure raw uranium for its reactors, overcoming an immediate problem that the Indian nuclear sector faced.

As a result of the US-India nuclear deal, sanctions on almost all Indian entities have been lifted and high technology export controls for India have been eased to a degree.

The US has committed itself to promoting India’s membership of the four technology denial regimes, namely, the NSG, the Missile Technology Control Regime, the Wassenaar Agreement and the Australia Group, which when it happens will integrate India into the global non-proliferation regimes as a non-NPT member.

India’s task will be to prod the US to implement this commitment at the earliest and not use it as a bargaining point to extract more concessions from India in non-proliferation related areas.

The US position on India’s permanent membership of the United Nations Security Council has evolved positively and has contributed to the sentiment in India that the US is now ready to open the strategic space that India claims for itself.

Actual membership will be a prolonged process and will not depend on US alone, thought the US position on expansion will remain crucial.

The US attaches importance to the bilateral dialogue on global commons -- air, space, sea and cyber. It is emphasizing the partnership with India in defining the rules. The intention is to ensure that as India rises and seeks a change in the international rules so far defined by the West, it does so closely with the US so that any disruptive initiatives get forestalled.

In addition, the US seeks burden-sharing in upholding the international system from which it feels others benefit without assuming responsibility. The dialogue on the global commons is intended to steer India towards burden-sharing.

In the maritime domain, freedom of navigation and securing the sea lanes of communication are areas where the US would have particular interest in partnering India, given India’s dominating position in the Indian Ocean and the steady expansion of its navy.

In the new area of cyberspace, cyber security has become a matter of urgent international attention and India’s emergence as a major IT power, along with the vast expansion of its telecommunications network, makes India a partner of choice to establish new rules of the game.

The dramatic change in India’s defence ties with the US in the last decade signifies a notable reduction of the trust deficit between the two countries, given the history of US sanctions and its practice of imposing arms embargoes in situations of tension and conflict.

In the last five years or so, the US has bagged orders worth about $9 billion, whether for C-130 and C-17 heavy lift aircraft, advanced maritime reconnaissance aircraft, attack helicopters and VIP helicopters etc.

The US lost out in the competition for the 126 combat aircraft contract, a setback that it did not easily absorb, as it expects a greater share of Indian defense procurements as a testimony of India’s seriousness in treating it as a long term strategic partner.

India has baulked at signing the inter-operability agreement, the logistics agreement and the agreement to have access to high defense technology.

India remains reticent about tying up too much with the US in the defense domain lest it is perceived as having moved too much into the US defense orbit and compromising the independence of its policies. The US is, wisely, no longer insisting on signing them, leaving India to decide as opportune.

What balances this reticence are the numerous joint military exercises with the US involving the three arms. The naval exercises in the Indian Ocean area have been particularly elaborate, involving even aircraft carriers, submarines etc on both sides, which sends an important strategic message because these waters are crucial for the trade and energy flows for China and other East Asian countries.

The US, India and Japan also held the first trilateral naval exercise off the coast of Japan in 2012, though India is inexplicably reticent about such trilateral exercises in the Indian Ocean.

The US move to establish a strategic partnership with India, symbolized by the nuclear deal, has the rise of China an underlying motivation, though this is not acknowledged officially. Chinese commentators interpret this relationship as a move against China, though they find India’s attachment to independent decision making as a reassuring element.

The US has described India as a lynchpin of its pivot or rebalancing towards Asia. While caution is exercised in not making it appear that this initiative is directed at China, the reality is that the rise of China and its growing muscle-flexing, as is evident in its conduct in the South China Sea, requires the US to signal its intention to maintain and reinforce its presence in Asia to give confidence to its allies who may otherwise seek accommodation with China at the expense of the US.



In this the US clearly sees India as a vital partner given India’s several attributes that makes it a credible power to rival China in the years ahead. India, however, is wary of this re-balancing strategy as it doubts the capacity and inclination of the US to contain China beyond a certain point because of the huge economic and financial interdependence between the two countries.

India would like to avoid becoming collateral damage in an unclear US strategy towards China.

On the issues of terrorism and religious extremism, while bilateral cooperation in the area of counter-terrorism has progressed, US policies have an element of ambivalence that undermines Indian interests.

The principal US focus is on Al Qaeda and its affiliates, but not on the Taliban whom the US seems ready to accommodate so long as it commits itself to cutting off its links with Al Qaeda and not permit terrorism from areas under its control directed at the West.

For this reason India and the US have difficulty in remaining on the same page on the Afghanistan issue, as well as on some aspects of US policies towards Pakistan, whether it is the reluctance to apply the kind of pressure that Pakistan merits in view of its profound terrorist affiliations to force it to break these links, or contain the ambitions of the Pakistani military in Afghanistan. US arms aid to Pakistan remains an issue, even though India downplays it so as not to vitiate the atmosphere of the dialogue with Pakistan.

On Afghanistan, in the course of the decade, the US has moved from a seriously distorted analysis of the situation that looked for a solution through a resolution of the Kashmir issue to a more realistic position which took into account Pakistan’s double-faced Afghan policy.

Initially, the US opposed any significant Indian presence in Afghanistan because of Pakistani sensitivities but moved towards welcoming Indian economic assistance effort there and even seeking to do cooperative projects with India.

The US has discouraged India from defence cooperation with Afghanistan other than providing training to Afghan security forces within limits, though the Afghan government is pressing India to even supply combat equipment.


India has been able to establish its presence on the ground in Afghanistan because of the security cover provided by the US. With the impending US withdrawal, India will face new challenges from the Taliban forces.

The US decision to open a dialogue with the Taliban disregards India’s strong objection to any political accommodation with it without insisting on the red lines laid down by the international community on the subject. The US decision to leave Afghanistan in 2014 in conditions permitting an orderly withdrawal with the help of the Pakistani military creates a potential security problem for India.

The US awareness of Pakistan’s double-dealing on terrorism, highlighted by the shelter given to Osama bin Laden on its soil and refusal to act against the Haqqani Network, has not resulted in any clear US policy of dealing with the country on the basis of its duplicitous conduct.

The US continues its failed policy of offering carrots to Pakistan, which include even military aid, in the hope of buying its cooperation. The result is that Pakistan is able to manipulate the US to serve its purpose in crucial areas despite under currents of tensions between the two countries.

At one stage it appeared that the US had de-hyphenated India and Pakistan, especially in nuclear matters, but the element of hyphenation has not altogether disappeared, as the US does defer to Pakistani sensitivities towards India to some extent. On the whole, though, it can be said that India-US relations have in the last decade acquired a different trajectory than US-Pakistan relations.

The Iranian issue has created wrinkles in the bilateral relationship as US sanctions have interfered with India’s energy security, forcing India to reduce its oil intake from Iran quite drastically and impeding any Indian investment in attractive long-term projects in the oil and gas sector in Iran.

The US linking of the nuclear deal with India’s policy towards Iran and India’s vote against Iran in the IAEA to satisfy US expectations have been factors in creating the perception that the US relationship carries costs in terms of independence of decision-making.

The talk of strategic autonomy, which is a code word for not aligning India with US/Western positions on international issues, unsurprisingly, finds disfavor in US circles, though for the first time an American leader, to wit US Vice President Biden, during his recent visit to India declared that he saw no contradiction between strategic autonomy precious to India and India’s strategic partnership with the US.

The last decade has also seen a significant expansion of India-US economic ties, with trade in goods standing at $62 billion and the total exchanges, including investment, amounting to over $100 billion, making the US the largest economic partner of India.

The India-US bilateral economic agenda is, as noted earlier, is exceptionally wide-ranging. Progress has been slow in most areas, partly because the Indian reforms process has slowed down, the ceilings on FDI in sectors of the economy of interest to the US have not been raised and enabling legislation in areas like education has not been passed as yet. These are areas, however, where reforms will undoubtedly occur in time, with some movement to raise the ceilings in the financial sector.

The prospects of nuclear cooperation with the US have dimmed because of India’s nuclear liability act, much to the disappointment of the US side which had counted on large opportunities for its companies in this sector.

The US side is pressing for signing an ‘early works agreement’ between Westinghouse and NPCIL to register some progress in the fulfillment of India’s commitment to the US to order 10,000 MWs of nuclear power from US reactors at two sites.

Other issues have contributed to a distinct lowering of enthusiasm for the India relationship in the US, such as perceived Indian protectionism exemplified by India’s Preferential Market Access decision to force foreign companies to set up manufacturing facilities in the telecom sector in India, the Indian Supreme Court judgment on the patents issue which has exacerbated concerns about IPRs and the retroactive application of India’s tax legislation as in the Vodafone case.

The US corporate mood towards Indian has soured of late, and this needs to be reversed. The US is pushing for a Bilateral Investment Treaty. On climate change and WTO-related issues, India and the US have unbridged differences. The general view is that the relationship is now suffering from the fatigue factor.

The slowdown in India’s growth and other structural problems that have appeared in the Indian economy have taken the shine off the India story for the time being, but the medium and longer term prospects remain very positive for the India-US relationship.

On the Indian side, India has problems with the new Comprehensive Immigration Bill that will put more restrictions on movement of personnel from India to the US in the IT sector, the increased cost of H1B and L1 visas that will impose sizable costs on the Indian IT sector and the whole campaign against outsourcing led by the White House. India has its own concerns about US protectionism and market access for some of its products, which don’t receive a sympathetic response.

All in all, however, ties with the US are decidedly better than they were a decade ago. Even if the relationship has ‘plateau-ed’ as some say, the plateau is at a high elevation today.

Ambassador Kanwal Sibal is a former Foreign Secretary of India
 
Since China occupies about 100,000 square miles of India, it looks like India could use some help.
 
Since China occupies about 100,000 square miles of India, it looks like India could use some help.

What do you imply by "100,000 square miles" ??

Tibet is 474,000 square miles ... not 100,000 square miles.
India doesn't agree with chinese invasion of Tibet, but maintains that it has to be resolved between Tibet and China.
India could be a mediator, if both parties agree.

On the other hand, Aksai chin is only 14,300 sq miles (not 100,000 sq miles)... and this is the one which is the dispute between India and China which needs to be resolved.

In any case, both India and China agree that the issue of Aksai chin will be resolved by bilateral talk; hence how is this relevant to the topic of this thread ??
 

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