Published: 7:10PM Tuesday November 24, 2009
Source: Reuters
Source: ReutersPrime Minister of India Manmohan Singh speaks to the US Chamber of Commerce in Washington
President Barack Obama hosts Indian Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh for talks considered critical to showing Washington's
commitment to New Delhi in a region where its rivals, China and
Pakistan, are US priorities.
Obama's challenge will be to ease the emerging Asian power's
concerns that it is slipping down his foreign policy agenda,
dominated recently by efforts to craft a new war plan in
Afghanistan and curb Iran's nuclear ambitions.
India hopes for a clear message from Obama that he intends to
sustain momentum in improving diplomatic and economic ties that
deepened under his predecessor, George Bush.
Seeking to reassure Singh of the importance Obama places on India,
the prime minister will be honoured with the first state visit of
the 10-month-old US administration, complete with the pomp and
ceremony of a formal White House dinner.
"This is a show of respect for the value that we've put on that
relationship," Obama's press secretary, Robert Gibbs, said.
The US-India summit will focus heavily on efforts to enhance
economic links that have blossomed since India's market reforms in
the early 1990s.
Two-way trade grew to nearly $68 billion last year from just
$6.8 billion in 1990, turning the United States into India's
largest trading partner.
The two leaders are also expected to try to narrow their
differences over climate change and seek to speed up completion of
a 2005 civilian nuclear deal that has yet to be implemented.
While Washington and New Delhi have moved beyond the chilly
relations of the Cold War era, sore points remain between the two
giant democracies.
Indian suspicions centre on US ally Pakistan - which many in India
blame in part for Islamist violence such as the 2008 attack on
Mumbai - and Obama's increased focus on the relationship with
China, another old India rival.
But a senior US official insisted any notion in India of us tilting
in one direction or another is a misperception.
Tensions
As Obama decides on the deployment of thousands of additional
troops to an increasingly unpopular war in Afghanistan, Washington
wants to keep tensions low between nuclear-armed India and
Pakistan, which have fought three wars since independence in
1947.
The US hope is that the Pakistani army can devote more resources to
fighting Islamic militants who threaten the stability of Pakistan
as well as of neighbouring Afghanistan.
"The more India and Pakistan lessen tensions, the easier it is for
each to do what has to be done," the administration official said
as Obama prepared to announce a new Afghanistan strategy as early
as next week.
While the official said Obama and Singh would agree to boost
cooperation on counterterrorism, India is likely to press the
United States for a tougher line on Pakistan, which it accuses of
sheltering militants like the ones that hit Mumbai.
Reflecting continuing mistrust, Singh said in a CNN interview
coinciding with his visit that Pakistan's goals in Afghanistan were
not necessarily those of the United States.
Singh is also likely to bring up China, a rising Asian giant that
has a long-running border dispute with India.
Obama's visit to China last week drew heavy criticism at home that
he has been too conciliatory toward Beijing, the largest holder of
US government debt.
Washington, however, regards a strong India as a useful
counterweight to an increasingly assertive China in the balance of
power in Asia.
While it remained unclear what if anything might be announced on
Tuesday regarding a still-unfinished US-India nuclear accord,
several modest energy deals will be signed.
Those will include what will be billed as Green Partnership, a set
of agreements on clean energy and climate change technology plus a
$411 million investment fund.
Expectations were low, however, for bridging the US-India divide before next month's climate summit in Copenhagen.
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