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Top level US visit strengthens strategic ties with India
By Vilani Peiris and K. Ratnayake
21 May 2003
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The recent visit by US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage
and nine other senior US officials to the Indian subcontinent
coincided with a flurry of diplomatic activity aimed at strengthening
US involvement in the region and Washingtons ties with New
Delhi in particular.
At the same time as Armitage was in South Asia, Indias
national security adviser, Brajesh Mishra, travelled to Washington
for a week of high-level talks with his US counterpart, Condoleezza
Rice. Emphasising Indias importance to the US, President
Bush also met with Mishra. Indian Deputy Prime Minister L.K. Advani
is due to visit Washington next month.
While Washington counts both rivals Pakistan and India as allies,
the Bush administrations diplomacy is strongly weighted
towards establishing a strategic relationship with the latter.
The emphasis was evident in the different messages delivered by
Armitage, particularly over the key issue of Kashmir. In Islamabad,
the deputy secretary used strong-arm tactics to extract concessions
from Pakistan. In New Delhi, notwithstanding recent Indian threats
of preemptive action against its rival, he praised Prime Minister
Atal Behari Vaypayee for his statesmanship for offering
to hold talks with Pakistan.
Armitage arrived in Pakistan for discussions with President
Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Zafarullah Khan Jamali on
May 8. At a press conference in Islamabad, the US official announced
that Musharraf had given an absolute assurance that
Pakistan would shut down any training camps in Pakistan-held Kashmir
used by Islamic militia opposed to Indian rule in neighbouring
Jammu and Kashmir. Previously, the Pakistani president has denied
Indian claims that terrorist camps in Pakistani territory
were being used to train and infiltrate fighters into Indian-controlled
Kashmir.
The Pakistani-based newspaper, the Nation, quoting a
senior military officer, claimed that Musharraf had made a further
concession during Armitages visitthat Pakistan would
not continue to seek to have applied the existing UN resolutions
on Kashmir. If true, the move represents a major Pakistani backdown
which goes to the heart of the dispute over Kashmir dating to
the communal partition of the subcontinent in 1947 into Muslim
Pakistan and predominantly Hindu India.
The first war between the two countries erupted in 1948 over
Kashmir where a Hindu maharaja ruled over a majority Muslim population.
As part of efforts to end the fighting, a UN resolution in 1949
called for a plebiscite throughout divided Kashmir to decide the
territorys future. Successive Pakistani regimes have insisted
that a UN plebiscite be held, while their Indian counterparts
have rejected any international involvement, fearing that Kashmirs
Muslim majority would vote for separation.
Pakistan has not publicly confirmed the dropping of its demand
for a plebiscite. But Pakistans UN envoy made no reference
to the 1949 resolution last week when his country took over the
rotating presidency of the UN Security Council. Instead, he spoke
of the need for bilateral talks with India to resolve
the Kashmir issue. Washington, which previously supported the
application of UN resolutions on Kashmir, has shifted its stance
in line with its closer ties with India.
As a sign to Washington that it intends to crack down on armed
Islamic groups, the Musharraf regime last week prevented the leader
of Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), Mazood Azhar, from attending a rally
in Pakistan-held Kashmir. Indian deputy prime minister Advani
and the India media immediately praised the move. JeM is one of
two groups accused by New Delhi of organising an attack on the
Indian parliament building in December 2001.
In return for making concessions to India, the US has promised
to consider writing off part of Pakistans $1.8 billion in
bilateral debts. Despite political opposition at home, Musharraf,
who collaborated with Washington over the US invasion of Afghanistan,
has few alternatives but to bow to US pressure and accept the
money to prop up his cash-strapped regime. A US financial package
is expected to be announced during Musharrafs scheduled
trip to Washington in June.
Having extracted guarantees from Musharraf, Armitage flew to
New Delhi for talks with Advani, Vajpayee and Foreign Minister
Yaswant Sinha. In early April, Sinha sharply raised tensions by
suggesting that India had a much better case for preemptive action
against Pakistan than the US had for invading Iraq. He rapidly
altered his stance after US officials began to exert pressure
on Pakistan to halt terrorist infiltration in Indian-controlled
Jammu and Kashmir.
Closer US-India ties
New Delhis sabre rattling appears to have been aimed
at gaining firm US backing over Kashmir. Having drawn Washingtons
attention, Vajpayee announced his offer of talks with Pakistanon
Indias terms, that is provided Islamabad halts cross
border terrorism. Pakistan has repeatedly denied that it
offers more than moral and political support to the armed separatists,
which it regards as freedom fighters for the liberation
of Kashmir from Indian rule.
Armitage confirmed US support for New Dehli. Speaking at a
press conference at the end of his tour, he not only praised Vajpayees
statesmanship but also stressed the importance that
the Bush administration places on India. He told the media that
President Bush had sent him to South Asia to make a point
that although United States was heavily engaged in Iraq
it wants to promote relations with India.
A similar message was spelled out to Indias national
security adviser Mishra in Washington. After meeting with Bush
on May 7, Mishra said the president had emphasised the importance
of continuous dialogue between India and the US and [the]
deepening of friendship. The talks covered US-Indian trade,
US technology transfers to Indian and the sensitive issue of civil
nuclear cooperationall of which were subject to bans
and restrictions following Indias nuclear tests in 1998.
In return for its backing on Kashmir and economic cooperation,
the Bush administration is seeking to establish India as a close
military ally as part of plans for US intervention in the region.
In a speech to the American Jewish Committee, Mishra signalled
Indias willingness to collaborate with Washington by proposing
an alliance of US, India and Israel as part of the war on
terrorism.
A Pentagon document leaked on the Indian web site rediff.com
last month indicated the extent of US military plans for links
with India. Entitled India US military relations: Expectations
and Perceptions, the study stated: Indias strategic
location in the centre of Asia, astride the frequently travelled
sea lanes of communications linking the Middle East and East Asia
makes India particularly attractive to the US military.
The document cited an US military source as saying: The
US navy wants a relatively neutral territory on the opposite side
of the world that can provide ports and support for operations
in the Middle East. India not only has a good infrastructure,
the Indian Navy has proved it can fix and fuel US ships.... In
the same vein, the US Air Force would like the Indian bases and
landing rights during operations, such as counter terrorism and
heavy air lift support.
A US alliance with India is aimed at broadly securing US interests
in the Middle East and Central Asia as well as acting as a counterweight
to China, which Bush has branded as a strategic competitor
of the United States. A recent article published in Foreign
Policy In Focus pointed to rapidly developing defence ties
between the US and India, including joint naval patrols in the
Malacca Strait, workshops on ballistic missile defence and cooperation
in defence technology.
The article, entitled US and Indiaa dangerous alliance,
cited the remarks of Lloyd Richardson from the right-wing
Hudson Institute who declared that India has the economic
and military strength to counter the adverse effects of Chinas
rise as a regional and world power. India is the most over looked
of our potential allies in strategy to contain China. It
also quoted a leaked US Defence Department document which argued
that China represents the most significant threat to both
countries [India and US] security in the future as an economic
and military competitor.
More immediately, Washington has requested India supply a substantial
military force to assist in the US occupation of Iraq. New Delhi
is yet to give a formal reply. In response to widespread opposition
in India to the US invasion of Iraq, the Vajpayee government made
rather muted criticisms of the US attack. Now it appears that
New Delhi is considering doing Washingtons bidding and joining
a US-led stabilisation force in Iraq.
Deputy Prime Minister Advani hinted this week at the favour
that India may be asking in returnmore US pressure on Pakistan.
He noted that Pakistan had transferred more than 500 Al Qaeda
suspects to American authorities over the last year but refused
to hand over 20 suspects on Indias wanted list for terrorist
attacks. He said that he intended to discuss the matter during
his Washington trip next month.
Just as the Bush administration regards India as a useful tool
to further its global ambitions, so the Hindu chauvinists of Indias
ruling Bharathiya Janatha Party (BJP) view an alliance with the
US as the means for aggressively asserting their interests, particularly
against rival Pakistan. Far from lessening tensions, such actions
lay the basis for potentially explosive conflict in the region.
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