Posted on 12/21/2009 6:14:26 PM PST by cold start
Nearly a year after the Obama administration took office, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that US-India relations are drifting, lacking the focus, momentum and salience they had when George W Bush occupied the White House, David J Karl writes for PacNet #77.
By David J Karl
It is a disconcerting indicator of the condition of U.S.-Indian relations that much of the attention in Washington regarding Prime Minister Manmohan Singhs state visit was focused, first, on the accouterments of the lavish banquet President Obama gave in his honor and, then, on the bizarre exploits of the aspiring reality-TV contestants who managed to slip into the dinner uninvited. In contrast, the substantive agenda of the Obama-Singh summit received very little notice. Indeed, the dinners five-course menu garnered wider media coverage than the summits numerous deliverables.
In terms of high symbolism and rhetoric, the Obama administration certainly pulled out all the stops to gladden the status-conscious Indians, especially since Singhs visit was fast on the heels of President Obamas own high-profile trip to China. Singhs trip was the first official state visit of the Obama presidency and the White House repeatedly took the line that the special honor was purposefully accorded to India. The prime minister had forged a close personal relationship with Bush, even famously telling him that the people of India deeply love you. Not to be outdone in the bonhomie department, Obama let it be known in the run-up to the summit that he considers Singh and India part of his family.
The administration prepared an elaborate arrival ceremony for Singh on the White House South Lawn, though at the last moment foul weather forced it indoors. At the welcome, Obama spoke of his high esteem for Singhs wise leadership and hailed India as a leader in Asia and around the world. At the joint press conference, Obama assured New Delhi that it has no better friend and partner than the United States of America and at several points during the day he called the bilateral relationship one of the defining partnerships of the 21st century.
The White Houses hospitality reached a high point with the state dinner, which The New York Times called Washingtons most exclusive social event this year. The banquet generated a great deal of buzz in Washington circles and the press chattered over who would be on the official invitation list. The dinner had been planned for months under First Lady Michelle Obamas supervision and, by all accounts, it was an impressive affair. A guest chef was even brought in from New York to ensure that the fare suited prime ministers vegetarian palate. Recalling the words Jawaharlal Nehru used on the eve of Indian independence, Obama in his toast urged both countries to look toward the future that beckons us now.
Beyond the ceremony and camaraderie, however, the summit failed to live up to the high standard Obama suggested. Rather than give new impetus to relations, the meeting confirmed that U.S.-India affairs are gripped by inertia. The visit did produce a raft of agreements deepening ties in such diverse areas as economic cooperation, clean energy and climate, educational, and health linkages. To be sure, these are laudable endeavors and strengthen the societal bonds that give fuller texture and equipoise to the bilateral partnership than could be hoped to be achieved at the intergovernmental level alone.
But they are also relatively minor accomplishments, the type of things that could have been unveiled during Secretary of State Hillary Clintons trip to India this past summer. The lack of landmark initiatives and attention-grabbing headlines is in stark contrast to Singhs first state visit to Washington in July 2005, when he and Bush launched the path-breaking civilian nuclear agreement that instantly energized bilateral relations.
Unlike Bush, Obama appears reluctant to apply the requisite bureaucratic will or invest political capital in undertaking bold new bilateral projects. Although Secretary Clinton, a staunch India-phile, speaks of taking relations to a higher plane, the administration as a whole has not yet displayed much interest in continuing its predecessors high-profile engagement with New Delhi.
Indeed, the summit provided fresh evidence that U.S. policy toward India is now subordinate to other priorities. New Delhi had hoped that critical details relating to the implementation of the nuclear accord would be wrapped up by the time Singh arrived in Washington, particularly a spent-fuel reprocessing agreement. Were it still in office, the Bush administration would no doubt have already made greater progress on this front. But the Obama emphasis on containing nuclear proliferation has reportedly played a large role in delaying agreement.
In the final reckoning, major differences in strategic outlook between the Bush and Obama administrations account for the summits lackluster outcome. Bush saw New Delhi as a key player in the evolving geopolitical equation in Asia and was willing to make extraordinary efforts to assist in the development of Indian national power. To that end, he pushed the nuclear agreement through an often-intransigent U.S. bureaucracy. But with the Obama administration preferring to emphasize engagement with Beijing on global governance issues, New Delhi has lost its primacy of place in Washingtons strategic calculus.
This loss of salience was made plain in President Obamas trip to Asia in mid-November. Much was made in the Indian press about Obamas rather anodyne comments, made while he was in Beijing, about Chinas role in South Asia. Much more significant and troublesome, however, were his remarks at Suntory Hall in Japan a few days earlier. Vowing to strengthen old alliances and build new partnerships in Asia, he failed to mention India even in passing. It was a telling omission and one that Indian leaders, due to arrive in Washington just a week later, must have found glaring.
David J Karl (dkarl@usc.edu) is president of the Asia Strategy Initiative, a consultancy based in Los Angeles. He recently served as project director of the Bi-national Task Force on Enhancing India-US Cooperation in the Global Innovation Economy, jointly sponsored by the Pacific Council on International Policy and the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry.
Didn’t the Indians really want Obama in office?
So how’s that “hope and change” working out for them?
I’ll try to act surprised when the Indians back Obama again in 2012.....
“Obama let it be known in the run-up to the summit that he considers Singh and India part of his family. “
And they recognize how ridiculous that sounds. One meeting does not make you a part of the family. He (Obama) is trying to make it out to be as if he has the same relationship that Bush had with Singh, but he doesn’t. Copenhagen proved that beyond any doubt.
India and America are natural allies. GW Bush understood this intuitively. Obama has no concept of what that alliance could mean. He’d rather suck up to China which has been a loser’s bet for a millennium. The foreign policy Amateur Hour continues...
no, they didn’t want O — Bush had a 60% approval rating in India.
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