Hedging Bets: Washington’s Pivot to India
Shehzad
Qazi
http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/article/hedging-bets-washington%E2%80%99s-pivot-india
http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/article/hedging-bets-washington%E2%80%99s-pivot-india
In November 2010, President Obama
visited India for three days. In addition to meeting with top Indian business
leaders and announcing deals between the two countries worth more than $10
billion, the president declared on several occasions that the US and India’s
would be the “defining partnership of the twenty-first century.” Afterward,
Obama flew straight to Jakarta without any plans to visit Pakistan, officially
the US’s major non-NATO ally in the region.
No president, except Jimmy Carter, had done such a thing before. The US has
traditionally seen its India and Pakistan policies as being deeply linked, and
except for Richard Nixon’s brief “tilt” in 1971, the US has been cautious of
elevating one neighbor over the other. Despite India’s non-aligned status and
pro-Soviet posture during the Cold War, Washington has tried to ensure that its
relationship with Pakistan would not disadvantage India.
Obama’s visit, however, illustrated that this era of evenhandedness was now
over. With India’s economic rise, fears of Chinese hegemony, and the unraveling
relationship with Pakistan, the US is now pursuing what previously would have
been regarded as an asymmetrical foreign policy agenda in South Asia. As part of
its new Asia-Pacific strategy, the US is committed to strengthening India in all
major sectors of national development, with the hope of making it a global power
and a bulwark against Chinese influence in Asia. Meanwhile, Washington is
looking for a minimalist relationship with Pakistan, focused almost exclusively
on security concerns.
Related Essay
Early signals of this gradual tilt toward India can be found in the final
years of the Clinton administration. During his 1999 visit to South Asia,
President Clinton spent five days in India, praising the nation’s
accomplishments, and mingling with everyday Indians. During his speech to the
Indian Parliament, Clinton referred to the US and India as “natural allies” and
offered a program for a close partnership in the twenty-first century. In sharp
contrast, his stop in Pakistan lasted only five hours and was blemished with
security concerns, a refusal to be photographed shaking hands with the country’s
military dictator, General Pervez Musharraf (who would become the country’s
president in two years), and a blunt warning that Pakistan was increasingly
becoming an international pariah.
The Bush administration took office wanting to take this policy even
further by actually de-linking the US’s India and Pakistan policies, and
enhancing its relationship with India. As former Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage explained to me, “The Bush administration came in with our
stated desire to obviously improve relations with India, but also to remove the
hyphen from ‘India-Pakistan.’”
And the administration did just that. While relations with Pakistan
improved dramatically in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, they were based
almost exclusively on combating terrorism. On the other hand, relations with
India, which deepened more slowly but also more surely, were focused on broad
economic, security, and energy sectors. The most significant achievement in this
regard was the US-India civil-nuclear deal that was announced during President
Bush’s 2006 visit to New Delhi. The fact that this agreement was extremely
controversial because India, like Pakistan, has not signed on to the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, was evidence of the US’s commitment to transforming
relations with India and facilitating its rise as a global power.
This redefinition of regional priorities has continued during the current
administration. While the strategic partnership with India continued to be
strengthened, Pakistan was declared the source of America’s Afghanistan troubles
in the first few months of the Obama presidency. Since then, as mutual mistrust
has grown because of policies such as US drone strikes in Pakistan’s tribal
areas and Pakistan’s eight-month blockade of NATO supply lines, the US-Pakistan
engagement has reached one of its all-time lows. The difference between
Washington’s relationship with India and its relationship with Pakistan is best
illustrated by the actual words used by members of the administration. While
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton describes US-India ties as “an affair of the
heart,” Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta characterized relations with Pakistan
as “complicated, but necessary.”
This affair of the heart is
hardheaded and unemotional. The defining feature of evolving US-India relations
is that, unlike the US and Pakistan, the two countries actually share a number
of common interests, and have also managed to create a broad-based partnership
centered along deepening trade ties and energy and security cooperation.
Bilateral trade and investment are the most significant components of the
two countries’ engagement. The US-India trade relationship has become
increasingly strong over the past decade—especially after the lifting of US
sanctions in 2001—with the result that today the US is India’s third-largest
trading partner (see Figure 1). India’s industrial and service sectors have now
become increasingly linked to the American market. In the first half of 2012
alone, the US imported almost $20 billion worth of goods and $16 billion worth
of services from India, while in 2011 US-India bilateral trade in goods and
services peaked at almost $86.3 billion. Standing at $18.9 billion in 2001,
bilateral trade in goods and services has doubled twice within a decade.
This steady rise has made the US one of the largest investors in the Indian
economy. According to the Office of the US Trade Representative, US foreign
direct investment in India was $27.1 billion in 2010 (latest available data), a
thirty-percent increase from 2009. Even Indian FDI in the US increased by forty
percent between 2009 and 2010, reaching $3.3 billion.
It was, of course, cooperation over energy that symbolized the
coming-of-age of Indo-American relations. The landmark civil-nuclear deal signed
in 2008 was intended to help India meet its growing energy demand through the
use of nuclear technology. The US agreed to supply nuclear fuel to India and
convince members of the Nuclear Suppliers Group to follow suit. In addition to
this, the US has also been helping India access oil from suppliers other than
Iran, with the aim of reducing Indo-Iranian cooperation.
Along with deepening economic and energy ties, the two countries’ defense
cooperation has also strengthened over the past decade. In addition to closely
cooperating with India over counterterrorism and conducting joint military
exercises with it since 2007, the US has included India in the “Quad” forum,
along with Japan, Australia, and Singapore, thereby making it an integral part
of its emerging Asian security architecture.
Moreover, during his visit President Obama also announced more than $5
billion worth of military sales to India, adding to the $8 billion of military
hardware India had already purchased from US companies between 2007 and 2011. As
reported by the Times of India, India will spend almost $100 billion
over the next decade to acquire weapons systems and platforms. This push for
sales comes partly from the US Defense Department’s strong desire to equip India
with modern weaponry, to collaborate with it on high-end defense technology such
as unmanned aerial vehicles (“drones”), and to become India’s largest weapons
supplier.
Beyond defense technology, the US and India have also cooperated
successfully in space. The joint venture between NASA and the Indian Space
Research Organization during India’s Chandrayaan-1 lunar mission, which detected
water on the lunar surface for the first time, is a significant example.
Moreover, members of the US and Indian public and private sectors have also
promoted the idea of cooperation to harness space-based solar power.
Finally, the US has offered New Delhi increasingly strong political support
as exemplified in Obama’s unequivocal backing of India’s bid to become a
permanent member of the UN Security Council. Furthermore, despite Pakistan’s
request for American assistance in negotiating the Kashmir dispute, the US has
yielded to Indian demands that it not get involved. When Richard Holbrooke was
appointed the US special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2009, India and
Kashmir, as revealed by US officials to the Washington Post, were
covered within Holbrooke’s mandate under “related matters.” The Indian
government, however, lobbied the Obama administration swiftly and strongly with
the result that Kashmir was eliminated from Holbrooke’s portfolio
altogether.
Although the evolving Indo-American
partnership is rooted in multiple areas of common interest, from Washington’s
perspective one priority looms larger than others in its partnership with India,
and that is China. Simply
put, India has become a central component in America’s grand strategy to balance
Chinese power in Asia.
China’s strengthening military capabilities and several moves in Asia, such
as its claim of territorial sovereignty in the South China Sea, assertiveness in
the Pacific Ocean, and growing naval and commercial presence in the Indian
Ocean, have increasingly worried the US. For example, China’s aggressive posture
and territorial claims inundated Secretary Clinton’s agenda when she visited the
region in September. Further, according to one report, in 2007 a senior Chinese
naval officer even suggested to the former US Pacific Fleet commander, Admiral
Timothy Keating, a plan to limit US naval influence at Hawaii. Moreover, through
its “string of pearls” policy China has acquired rights to base or resupply its
navy at several ports from Africa though the Middle East and South Asia to the
South China Sea.
Over the last decade Washington has considered several strategies to check
Chinese power, with India essential to all of them. The National Security
Strategy 2002 made it clear that India could aid the US in creating a
“strategically stable Asia.” George Bush’s secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice,
had also voiced this view in a Foreign Affairs article written during
the 2000 presidential campaign. Moreover, a 2011 report by the Council on
Foreign Relations and Aspen Institute India argued that “a militarily strong
India is a uniquely stabilizing factor in a dynamic twenty-first-century
Asia.”
India’s role in balancing China was most vividly described later on in the
Obama administration. The 2012 Defense Strategic Review recognized that
China’s rise would affect the US economy and security, and declared that the US
“will of necessity rebalance [its military] toward the Asia-Pacific region.”
Secretary of State Clinton had previously outlined this policy in greater detail
in an article titled “America’s Pacific Century,” explaining that to sustain its
global leadership the US would invest militarily, diplomatically, and
economically in the Asia-Pacific region.
The US security agenda, she highlighted, would include countering North
Korea’s proliferation efforts, defending “freedom of navigation through the
South China Sea,” and ensuring “transparency in the military activities of the
region’s key players.” Two of the three objectives, in other words, were
targeted directly at China.
While in the past the US had projected power into the Asia-Pacific through
colonization and occupation—notable examples being Guam and the Philippines in
1898 and Japan after 1945—its new presence is based on creating strong bilateral
economic and military alliances with regional countries, and efforts to organize
the region into multilateral economic and security institutions to balance
China’s economic and military influence. Thus, in addition to strongly
supporting the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), America also backs other organizations
like the Trans- Pacific Partnership and Pacific Islands Forum, and formal
security dialogue groups such as the “Quad” and the US-India-Japan trilateral
forum.
Not only is the US looking to enhance India’s Pacific presence by
integrating it into these organizations, but, as described in the Defense
Strategic Review, through its long-term goal of helping it become an
“economic anchor and provider of security in the broader Indian Ocean
region.”
The grand
strategies are in play, but will the US and India be able to manage a strong
alliance whose chief objective is enabling the US to effectively accomplish its
goals vis-à-vis China? To put the question more simply, will India play the
balancing game? And will India also support the US on other foreign policy
objectives in Asia?
The strategic goals of at least a section of the Indian foreign policy
elite can be gauged from the report Nonalignment 2.0, published in 2012
by the Center for Policy Research (CPR), an influential Indian think tank. The
report’s study group included prominent retired officials such as Ambassador
Shyam Saran, who helped negotiate the US-India civil nuclear deal, and
Lieutenant General Prakash Menon. The deliberations were also attended by the
sitting national security adviser, Shivshanker Menon, and his deputies, thus
signaling some level of official endorsement. The report
argued that “strategic autonomy” in the international sphere has and should
continue to define Indian foreign policy so that India can benefit from a
variety of partnerships and economic opportunities to spur internal development,
which in turn will propel its rise to great-power status.
Even if India were to abandon strategic autonomy, as some of the
report’s critics advocate, it is essential to note that the Sino-Indian
relationship is a little too complex for the sort of balancing game the US
played with the USSR during the Cold War. As highlighted by Mohan Malik, the
relationship faces several tensions, including territorial disputes, China’s
aggressive patrolling of borders, maritime competition, and the race for
alliances with littoral states in the Indian and Pacific Oceans. But China also
happens to be India’s second-largest trading partner. Sino-Indian bilateral
trade in 2011 peaked at almost $74 billion. In short, the relationship is
adversarial in certain areas, but symbiotic in others.
India is also engaged with China in international forums that are often
perceived as emerging balancers against US power, such as the
India-Russia-China forum and the Brazil-Russia-India-China-South Africa (BRICS)
group, which has not only criticized US policies, but also called for replacing
the US dollar as the international currency.
Furthermore, the Indo-US relationship has troubles of
its own, especially in dealing with Iran and Afghanistan, which signal the
limits of Indian support for US policies in Asia. Because Iran is a key resource
for energy supplies, India has not participated in efforts to pressure Iran
economically to curtail its nuclear program. When US sanctions against Iran were
heightened in early 2012, Iran and India proposed a plan to barter oil for wheat
and other exports. India is also perturbed by the US’s planned departure from
Afghanistan in 2014, which it fears may lead to chaos there. Moreover, it is
wary of US-Taliban negotiations, afraid that the Taliban’s return to power will
put Indian investments in Afghanistan at risk and also offer strategic space to
anti-Indian militant groups.
For these and other reasons, while the US and India
share a range of common interests now and have been cooperating in a variety of
areas, they still have a long way to go before establishing a truly close
partnership. While the growing strength of this relationship is obvious, so are
its limitations, and the ultimate nature of this relationship is as yet an open
question. India’s global rise and the position it can acquire within US grand
strategy is also dependent on things beyond America’s control—its continued
economic growth and ability to tackle domestic challenges such as poverty and
underdevelopment, infrastructural weaknesses, and multiple insurgent conflicts.
It also fundamentally depends on the US’s continued ability to financially and
politically afford a strong military and diplomatic presence in
Asia.
The current strategic commitments of American and
Indian policymakers have also placed limits on the relationship. In Washington’s
game plan, India is only one country in a larger web of alliances—stretching
from India to Japan and Mongolia to Australia—that the US is developing.
For its part, New Delhi is not looking to commit to an exclusive alliance with the US, but rather enter into a series of partnerships with a number of countries to gain what it can in terms of resources, trade, and security cooperation.
For its part, New Delhi is not looking to commit to an exclusive alliance with the US, but rather enter into a series of partnerships with a number of countries to gain what it can in terms of resources, trade, and security cooperation.
Nevertheless, while this affair of the heart may remain
unconsummated, both parties are growing more serious about each other and
implementing policies to strengthen the strategic partnership. As for the US and
Pakistan, they should limit their relationship to cooperation over issues that
are truly of common interest. Moreover, though Islamabad will remain uneasy with
increasing US-India coziness, this partnership does not necessarily forebode
trouble for it. Such an outcome is especially avoidable with continued
normalization of diplomatic relations and increased trade relations between
India and Pakistan. That the Pakistani military and civilian leaderships are
becoming committed to reducing tensions is a welcome sign.
Shehzad H. Qazi is a research associate at the Institute for Social
Policy and Understanding.
No comments:
Post a Comment