Tuesday, August 23, 2011

 

U.S.-India ties a "zero-sum game" for Pakistan: Hillary



From The Hindu

Pakistan has viewed successive partnerships between India and the United States as a “zero-sum game” and always asked, “So are you our friend or are you their friend?” according to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who made rare, candid comments on Pakistan’s India-centric perspectives on possible outcomes in Afghanistan.

Addressing probing questions from Senators during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, Ms. Clinton said the U.S. had to recognise that the overriding strategic framework in which Pakistan thinks of itself was its relationship with India.

“Every time we make a move toward improving our relationship with India, which we started in [with] a great commitment to back in the ‘90s — and it has been bipartisan with both President Clinton and President Obama and President Bush — the Pakistanis find that creates a lot of cognitive dissonance,” she said.

Her comments came even as there was less than a month to go before the second round of the India-U.S. Strategic Dialogue in New Delhi.

The Secretary was especially pressed by the Committee Chairman John Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, and Ben Cardin, Democrat of Maryland, to explain why, despite $2.8 billion being channelled into Pakistan last year, “there is clear evidence that their intelligence agency, Inter-Services Intelligence, is assisting and funding a terrorist group, Lashkar-e-Taiba; and that is inconsistent with our laws.”

Ms. Clinton responded by painting a picture of the complex web of inter-relationships between India, Pakistan and Afghanistan.

On the Pakistan-Afghanistan equation she argued that Pakistan desired “strategic depth” in Afghanistan, by which it meant a regime in Kabul and a border that were not going to challenge its interests.

With its focus on the Durand Line, Ms. Clinton said, Pakistan “has in the past invested in a certain amount of instability in Afghanistan,” and it also feared Afghanistan might become a “satellite of India,” given that India and Afghanistan had a historical affinity.

On Indian interests

Yet Indian interests in this relationship could not also be denied, and the Secretary admitted that if the U.S. sought to assure Pakistan “that what would be left [behind in Afghanistan after U.S. troops withdraw] would be favourable to and even, in their view, subservient to Pakistani interests... the Indians aren't going to sit around and accept that.”

Noting that other groups such as the Uzbeks and the Tajiks would also be unwilling to accept such an arrangement, Ms. Clinton made a strong push for a strategy that focused on building up capacity within Afghanistan so that it was “strong enough to defend itself against all comers, but without falling back into civil war, because particularly the Northern Alliance constituents believe that they are threatened by Pakistan and the Pashtuns.”

Touching upon the U.S.’ engagement with India in this regard, the Secretary said that the State Department was “working very hard on our strategic partnership,” and it was “fair to say” that India believed that Pakistan’s continuing support for elements of insurgency against India in Kashmir made it very difficult for Indians to know which path of engagement to choose.

Nevertheless, she expressed some optimism for peace between the two nuclear-armed nations especially in the wake of recent cricket diplomacy between Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.

“I have been encouraged by the resumption of talks that had broken off in 2008, and we have certainly urged both sides to go as far as they could to build more confidence and to try to be able to develop an atmosphere of greater cooperation,” she said.

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Sunday, April 24, 2011

 

India-U.S. defence meetings kick off


From The Hindu

In the backdrop of the approaching United States-India Strategic Dialogue meetings in New Delhi this spring, the 11th U.S.-India Defence Policy Group (DPG) met in Washington during March 3-4 for extensive discussion on strengthening bilateral defence ties, particularly in the areas of maritime security, counterterrorism, disaster relief, and personnel exchanges.

According to officials at the Indian embassy here the meetings were co-chaired by Mr. Pradeep Kumar, Defence Secretary, Government of India and Michelle Flournoy, Under Secretary of Defence for Policy. Officials said that Mr. Kumar also met William Burns, Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs and William Lynn, Deputy Secretary of Defence.

Reaffirming that the bilateral defence cooperation was an “important facet of the overall India-U.S. strategic partnership,” Mr. Kumar and Ms. Flournoy expressed satisfaction at the progress in this area, noting in particular the increasing number of joint exercises that the two armed forces held regularly. Additionally India’s procurement of defence equipment such as C-130J aircraft was an important aspect of this progress, officials said.

In a statement Indian embassy also said that both sides had “welcomed the removal of Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) and Bharat Dynamics Limited from the U.S. Entities List,” especially as this relaxation of restrictions would likely open up new opportunities for cooperation in the field of defence supplies and industrial and technological cooperation between the two countries more generally.

During the meetings the reports of four sub-groups of the DPG were reviewed and a policy-level dialogue was held on the global strategic and security situation.

On broader regional themes both sides touched upon the multilateral security architecture in Asia and looked forward to continued cooperation in regional organisations, officials said, explaining that the two sides had agreed that the next DPG meetings would be held in New Delhi early next year.

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Tuesday, June 08, 2010

 

U.S. will not reopen Bhopal enquiries: Blake

From The Hindu

The United States government virtually ruled out any further review of the investigation into the Bhopal industrial disaster of 1984, and in particular, refused to discuss the extradition of American citizen Warren Anderson, CEO of Union Carbide behind the leak of poisonous gasses that led to the deaths of many thousands of people.

Speaking to media here shortly after an Indian court announced the conviction of the seven accused in the case, Robert Blake, Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, said, “Let me just say that we hope this verdict today helps to bring some closure to the victims and their families. But I do not expect this verdict to reopen any new inquiries or anything like that.”

Mr. Blake underscored the United States’ unwillingness to take the matter any further at its end, saying, “On the contrary, we hope that this is going to help to bring closure.” However, he acknowledged, “With respect to Bhopal, obviously that was one of the greatest industrial tragedies and industrial accidents in human history.” He also said the announcement made by the Indian courts was “an internal matter to India”.

In response to a question on whether the U.S. would be more receptive to any requests for extradition of Mr. Anderson or other American officials connected with the Bhopal disaster Mr. Blake said, “On the question of extradition — as a matter of policy we never discuss extradition so I cannot comment on that.”

Mr. Blake also did not comment on a question regarding whether the U.S. would be willing to exert any pressure on Dow Chemicals for compensation to victims, as the administration is currently doing in the case of British Petroleum and the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

At the State Department, spokesman P.J. Crowley struck a relatively positive note, saying, “Our economies are increasingly closely connected. So I certainly would hope that this particular case does not inhibit the continuing expansion of economic, cultural, and political ties between our two countries.” He added, “We fully expect that this will not be the case.”

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