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Opinion
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An upbeat note in Indo-U.S.ties
THE ENCOURAGING SIGNALS that the Finance Minister, Mr. Yashwant
Sinha, seems to have received now from his U.S. interlocutors
point to the possibility of an early move by the Bush
administration to scrap the economic sanctions still in place
against India. The confidence exuded by Mr. Sinha amplifies the
extraordinary note of optimism that the External Affairs and
Defence Minister, Mr. Jaswant Singh, had struck after his recent
talks with the U.S. President, Mr. George W. Bush, and other top
officials. Both Mr. Sinha and Mr. Singh did not take the
initiative to discuss the sanctions issue with their respective
American interlocutors and instead left it to them to do so from
their perspective. Not surprisingly, Mr. Sinha has now made the
point that the U.S.' initiative ``is an indication of their keen
desire to be able to do away with it (the sanctions regime) as
quickly as possible''. New Delhi has indeed taken a consistent
line that these sanctions ``hurt'' the U.S.' interests more than
those of India. The arguably punitive U.S.' economic measures at
stake were first imposed in the specific context of India's
nuclear arms tests of May 1998 under the Glenn Amendment on
American arms export controls as also foreign assistance and
banking laws. On a parallel plane, Washington subjected Pakistan
as well to an economic embargo following its own nuclear
detonations. So, the two South Asian neighbours are even now seen
in conjunction in the U.S.' portals of power. However, this
should not at all worry India, given the fact that Pakistan,
which has had the experience of being evaluated by the U.S. under
the Pressler Amendment over the nuclear issue as also a followup
American law, is in a somewhat different category. In any case,
the U.S. has increasingly sought to treat India and Pakistan on
their own respective merit or value to the American national
interest.
Mr. Sinha's latest impressions about some good tidings to come
confirm an incremental trend in Indo-U.S. ties. During Mr.
Singh's earlier visit to Washington, he was informed by the U.S.
Defence Secretary, Mr. Donald Rumsfeld, that the Pentagon would
have no reservations over any move by the State Department to set
in motion a process of lifting the India-related sanctions.
Around the same time early last month, the India Caucus, too, had
taken steps to introduce a bill in the U.S. House of
Representatives. The move, calling for an end to the sanctions,
was initiated on the ground that the Indo-U.S. nexus ``has become
one of the most significant emerging relationships in the
world''. In one sense, the relatively new feel-good mood in the
ties between the Governments of the two large democracies is
shared on the Capitol, too. Simply put, an economic embargo can
only erode, if not also stifle, the spirit of an expanding U.S.-
India engagement.
In a realpolitik sense, the resolution of the sanctions issue may
not fully determine the tone of New Delhi's future interaction
with the U.S. The same applies to Washington's expectations of
India in respect of the larger strategic questions such as
nuclear non-proliferation and missile defence as also the
conventional political controversies. Yet, the current move in
the U.S. to evaluate the disutility of the prevalent sanctions
acquires some strategic meaning, too, in the context of a
reported perception in the Bush administration that India has
earned the right to sit at the table of global powers. In
December 1999, the U.S. Commerce Department removed from the
sanctions list as many as 51 Indian entities, out of a total of
nearly 300 affected Indian and Pakistani entities. The stated
reason was to ``focus'' or rather re-focus the sanctions only on
``those Indian entities'' perceived to be ``most directly
involved in proliferation activities of concern'' to Washington.
Now, the question of a total embargo removal requires a new
political idiom.
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Section : Opinion Next : Traveller Tito | |
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