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US-Indian military ties: an incendiary factor in an unstable
region
By Aruna Wickramasinghe
10 June 2002
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Even as India and Pakistan have moved to the brink of war,
Washington has been quietly strengthening its strategic ties with
New Delhi in a range of areasincluding military training,
intelligence and the sale of sophisticated hardware. The Bush
administrations promotion of the Indian government, led
by the Hindu chauvinist Bharatiya Janatha Party (BJP), as a strategic
partner has added a further profoundly destabilising factor
to relations on the Indian subcontinent.
Although barely reported in the international press, the US
and India last month held their first joint military exercises
in more than four decades. The two-week war games, which were
held in the Indian city of Agra and concluded on May 28, were
code-named Balance Iroquois and involved Indian para-commandos
and US Special Forces, along with military aircraft from both
countries.
Exact details of the exercise have been kept secret but its
basic object was training in air-borne assault and closer collaboration.
US Embassy spokesman Gordon Duguid said it was the largest
army exercise ever to take place between US and India and reflected
a growing military cooperation. It is taking place in the framework
of our ongoing military-to-military relationship and it will be
the first of a regular series of exercise.
The most significant aspect of Balance Iroquois
was that it took place at all. With India poised for war against
Pakistan, the decision not to cancel the exercise could only encourage
the BJP-led government to take a more belligerent stance. It was
a clear indication of Washingtons determination to consolidate
close ties with New Delhi, regardless of the consequences.
Further combined exercises are planned later in the year. In
October, joint naval manoeuvres will take place in the Arabian
Sea for the first time involving a cruiser-destroyer group of
three or four warships and maritime reconnaissance aircraft. Indian
solders will train with American Special Forces from the US Pacific
Command in Alaska. The site of the exercise is worth notingthe
cold, mountainous terrain in Alaska being similar to that of Indias
borders with its two regional rivals Pakistan and China.
The developing US ties with India mark a sharp shift from the
relations that prevailed on the Indian subcontinent during the
Cold War. India maintained a close economic and strategic relationship
with the Soviet Union from where it obtained the bulk of its military
hardware. For decades, Washington used its alliance with Pakistan
and a succession of military juntas as a counterweight to New
Delhi and Moscow in the region. In the 1980s, the CIA used Pakistan
as its base to train, fund and arm anti-communist Mujaheddin groups
in Afghanistan to the tune of billions of dollars as a means of
undermining the USSR.
But with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the whole
strategic equation began to shift as Washington sought to establish
its domination over the huge oil and gas reserves in former Soviet
Central Asia. The Clinton administration imposed sanctions on
both Pakistan and India following a series of rival nuclear tests
in 1998. But in 1999, Washington exploited clashes between Indian
troops and Pakistan-backed Islamic militants in the Kargil region
of Kashmir to open up new relations with New Delhi.
Defence and intelligence links developed by Clinton received
a further boost under the Bush administration, especially after
the September 11 terrorist attacks in US. The US lifted the remaining
sanctions on India over the nuclear tests and accelerated its
intelligence sharing with the Indian military establishment, in
particular over Islamic extremist groups in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
The US global war on terrorism and its invasion of
Afghanistan tied in with Indias branding of all Islamic
fundamentalist groups, including those opposed to Indian rule
in Kashmir, as terrorists.
Over the past year around 50 high-level defence and state visits
have taken place between the US and India, including by Indian
Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and Foreign Minister Jaswant
Singh. Reciprocal visits by US Defence Secretary Rumsfeld to India
and Indian Defence Minister George Fernandes to Washington took
place last November and January respectively. The US top brassincluding
General Myers, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, his predecessor,
General Henry Shelton, and Admiral Dennis Blair, Commander of
US forces in the Pacifichave all visited India.
Top-level ties
The cornerstone of US-Indian military relations is the Defence
Policy Group (DPG), formed last year to consolidate previous attempts
to coordinate military policies. Joint executive steering groups
have also been established between the two countries for each
of the three servicesarmy, navy and air force. Like the
training exercise in Agra, the DPG has continued to function throughout
the current standoff with Pakistan, even amid the acute tensions
that followed the attack on an Indian army base in Kashmir on
May 14.
An Indian team was invited to Colorado Springs, ahead of the
DPG meeting, for a US presentation on its missile defence project.
As one Indian official noted with satisfaction: Ordinarily,
at any other time, the tense border situation would have simply
sidelined the DPG meeting. But it is a measure of how far we have
come that discussions moved ahead even during this crisis.
The formal DPG meeting took place in Washington on May 21-24
in Washington, with Indian Army Chief and chairman of the Chiefs
of Staff Committee General S Padmanabhan in attendance. The joint
statement following the meeting boasted that the two countries
had charted a new course in past year, which entails
rapid growth in cooperation on defence and security matters. In
a matter of months, the US and India defence establishments have
translated the broad vision for the relationship into action.
While New Delhi previously relied on the Soviet Union, then
Russia, for military supplies, US arms sales to India are accelerating
rapidly.
In April the Indian army acquired eight AN/TPQ-37 Firefighters,
an artillery-locating radar system, at a cost of $US146 million.
The AN/TPQ-37 can pinpoint mortar, rocket launchers and artillery
at a range of up to 300 km after tracking a shell for just a few
seconds. A US Defence Security Co-operation Agency spokesman commented
with delight: We have no one here who can recall our ever
having sold a major weapons system to India.
The US Defence Department underscored the key role of India
in US strategic planning, declaring: This sale [of the radar
system] will contribute to the foreign policy and national security
interests of the US by helping to improve the security of a country
that has been and continues to be a force for political stability
and economic progress in South Asia. As far as stability
and progress are concerned, it should be noted that
the sale took place as around a million Indian and Pakistani troops,
backed by artillery, tanks, missiles and warplanes, confronted
each other on high alert along the border.
The Bush administration has already cleared the sale of engines
and avionics for the long-delayed Indian Light Combat Aircraft
(LCA) project. Senior Indian defence officials are expected to
hold talks in the near future with their US counterparts to explore
possibilities for joint research, development and production of
military weapons systems. On May 13, a joint US-India defence
industry seminar was held in Washington to discuss Indias
acquisition and procurement policies, the opportunities for private
sector investment in the Indian defence market and the streamlining
of technology and export licensing to speed up military sales.
US-Indian military collaboration is not confined to the Indian
subcontinent but extends to naval cooperation in a swathe of ocean
from the Middle East to South East Asia. In February 2001, the
US Navy participated for the first time in an international fleet
review organised by the Indian Navy in Bombay. Last December the
two countries reached an agreement on naval cooperation to secure
the maritime routes between the Suez Canal and the Malacca Strait.
In March, the two navies conducted a combined training exercise
in the Malacca Strait.
While the joint patrols are taking place under the banner of
the war against terrorism, the real aims are to ensure
US control over key naval routes such as the Malacca Strait, through
which a substantial portion of world trade, including in oil and
gas, pass. Known as chokepoints, these sea-lanes provide
Washington with a means for exerting pressure, direct and indirect,
on its rivals in the region.
Yossef Bodansky, the Director of the US Congressional Task
Force on Terrorism and Unconventional Warfare, recently pointed
to the strategic significance of the Malacca Strait, saying: The
global strategic growth and expansion of aspiring powers can be
contained and regulated through the mere control over the movement
of their naval forces through the Strait of Malacca.
Bodansky also identified the primary US target, declaring:
For Beijing, this reality is increasingly a vital interest.
Any Chinese naval and military surge into the Indian Oceana
major strategic priority of Beijingmust pass through the
Strait of Malacca. Beijing considers its surge into the Indian
Ocean as part of a strategic surge of global proportions... in
a strategic grand design that anticipates the possibility of a
major military clash with the US in the foreseeable future.
His comments are in line with Bushs aggressive stance
toward China. In the course of the 2000 election campaign, Bush
declared Beijing a strategic competitor. The war
against terrorism has been used as the pretext to set up
US military bases in Central Asia, provide military aid to Nepal,
establish close military ties in South East Asia, particularly
in the Philippines and strengthen relations with Taiwan, Japan
and South Korea. Control over the Malacca Strait is a key element
in this strategy of encirclement and the choice of India as a
partner in this exercise is not accidental.
New Delhis willingness to participate is bound up with
the ambitions of the Hindu chauvinist BJP and more broadly of
the political establishment to transform India into a world power.
Jasjit Singh, director of New Delhis Institute of Defence
Analysis, gave voice to these sentiments when he bluntly declared
China to be our central strategic competitor economically,
technologically, politically and militarily.
The BJPs advocacy of an alliance with the US stretches
back to the 1962 war with China in which the Indian military suffered
a humiliating defeat. The first-ever joint Indian-US war games
took place in the aftermath of the conflict. The Jana Sangh, the
forerunner to the BJP, called for the establishment of permanent
military ties with the US, arguing that India would have defeated
China if it had had American backing.
Four decades later, substantial sections of the ruling elite
are backing the BJPs position as a means of advancing Indian
interests on the subcontinent and more broadly. The combination
of a Hindu chauvinist government in New Delhi and a US administration,
which demonstrated its willingness to recklessly engage in military
adventures, is an explosive mixture in an already unstable region.
See Also:
Tense military standoff between India
and Pakistan continues
[5 June 2002]
Bush speaks at West Point: from containment
to "rollback"
[4 June 2002]
A socialist strategy to oppose
war on the Indian subcontinent
[31 May 2002]
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