On strengthening India-U.S. ties
If promotion of a warm relationship with India is top priority, Obama must drop common practice of insisting on matching concessions.
If the promotion of a warm relationship with India is a top priority, President Obama must drop the common practice of insisting on matching concessions for every concession the US offers.
By all accounts, like Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, President Barack Obama is keen to strengthen the India-US ties. Sadly, however, recent actions by the United States have only reinforced the feeling on the part of many in India that the President assigns significantly lower priority to India-US relations than did his predecessor, President George W Bush. This is unfortunate since the US interests in the region align most closely with those of India, at least from a longer-term perspective. Whereas China is already positioning itself as a rival, even belligerent, power and the future of Afghanistan and Pakistan remains highly uncertain, India is a rising democratic power whose national interests are better served by partnership rather than rivalry with the US.
By all accounts, like Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, President Barack Obama is keen to strengthen the India-US ties. Sadly, however, recent actions by the United States have only reinforced the feeling on the part of many in India that the President assigns significantly lower priority to India-US relations than did his predecessor, President George W Bush. This is unfortunate since the US interests in the region align most closely with those of India, at least from a longer-term perspective. Whereas China is already positioning itself as a rival, even belligerent, power and the future of Afghanistan and Pakistan remains highly uncertain, India is a rising democratic power whose national interests are better served by partnership rather than rivalry with the US.