PM NaMo will be invited to a private dinner at White House. He will
be the only world leader attending the UNGA to get
special US Presidential attention.
US President Barack Obama intends to work towards making India a
$10 trillion economy. Hence he is disregarding advice from Clinton-era
officials to continue to adopt a hostile stance towards Prime Minister Narendra
Modi. Authoritative sources in Washington say that the US President has decided
to ensure that Modi receives "the same warm welcome that was extended to
Manmohan Singh in the White House". Apart from a formal meeting in the
Oval Office, "which would be the forum for substantive discussions and not
merely a photo-op", the Prime Minister will be invited to a private dinner
at the White House with President Obama, according to key sources on Capitol
Hill. They point out that Modi will be "the only world leader attending
the UN General Assembly in mid-September to get this level of Presidential
attention", and that "this is a clear indication that President Obama
seeks to distance his administration from the (George W. Bush-Hillary Clinton)
legacy of seeking to indict Narendra Modi for the 2002 Gujarat riots".
This reconsideration was first reported in The Sunday Guardian (Obama quietly
reverses Hillary's 'get Modi' policy, 20 April 2014).
In a sense what Barack Obama is seeking with India is similar to
the approach followed by then President Richard Milhous Nixon in 1972 towards
China, "of seeking to make the country a strong economic power". A
senior US official said that "the intention of President Obama is to help
India to become a $10 trillion economy", which would be five times higher
than the present level. Another official warned that "the $6 trillion gap
between Indian and Chinese GDP is upsetting the strategic balance in Asia, and
needs to be bridged". He said that initiatives which had been stalled by
Clinton-era officials in various departments for so long "will now get
fast-tracked". These will include much greater cooperation in defence, counter-terrorism,
space, education and science & technology than was permitted by the
Clinton-heavy US administration thus far. "Nearly 30 co-production
programmes between the US and India are to be proposed within the year," a
senior official said, adding that "some of these have already been
suggested, but were blocked by paralysis in decision-making of the Manmohan
Singh government." The US has already publicly announced that it would
like trade between the two sides to cross $500 billion annually in a few years,
up from the present level of $100 billion.
A source on Capitol Hill claimed that "Hillary Clinton and her
folks adopted the schoolmistress approach of telling countries what they should
do." In contrast, he said that "President Obama is more respectful of
the choices made by different countries, even when these do not conform exactly
to US needs." A high-level source added that "the intention is to
work out an equal relationship with India, which would create a balanced power
equilibrium in Asia and moreover tap into the synergies between US and Indian
(private) business". His assistant said that the intent behind the new
approach was to "integrate Indian business firmly within the global supply
chain" and to "maximise job-creating investment rather than just
financial inflows". He pointed out that "the hostile rhetoric (from
Washington) on trade protection that was evident in the past has been muted,
now that Modi has taken charge and there is finally hope of a businesslike
approach towards US-India ties".
Senior officials pointed out that "President Obama did not
wait for a formal declaration (appointing Narendra Modi as PM) but called him
personally on 16 May as soon as the electoral verdict was clear". He said
that President Obama "wants to make a genuine strategic partnership with
India among the most important parts of his foreign policy legacy, and towards
that objective, wishes to engage intensively with Prime Minister Modi".
Disappointing those who were hoping for a cool reception during the
new Prime Minister's first US visit in mid-September, it is now clear that
Narendra Modi will be given a full dose of the legendary Obama charm. "The
President has ensured that his entire team is on the same page on the question
of welcoming and working with Prime Minister Modi, including senior officials
such as Secretary of State John Kerry (who were earlier adopting the
Bush-Clinton line on him)," a key source on Capitol Hill claimed.
US Assistant Secretary of State Nisha Biswal arrived in Delhi from
Beijing on the early morning of 7 June for meetings with External Affairs
Minister Sushma Swaraj, Foreign Secretary Sujatha Singh and National Security
Adviser Ajit Doval. She is expected to assure her Indian interlocutors that the
bitterness of the past is now history, and that the Obama administration seeks
to engage "closely and fully in a spirit of mutual interest and
partnership" with Team Modi.
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