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INDO-US RELATIONS  
An Update 
  
 It would be unfair and ungenerous even on the part of the critics of the present Government in New Delhi to deny that in its handling of  the process of re-adjustment of Indo-US relations after the Pokhran-II nuclear tests, it has succeeded, to some extent, in imparting to the relations a certain dignity and equality which were previously lacking. 

This should be obvious to anyone, whose sense of fairness and objectivity had not been weakened by prejudices against the present Government, after the recently-concluded eighth round of  talks at New Delhi between Jaswant Singh, India’s Minister for External Affairs, and Strobe Talbott, the US Deputy Secretary of State.
 

There has been some confusion in New Delhi and Washington after the talks on the nature and timing of what a member of the US delegation has described as the mutually-reinforcing (he avoided using the phrase quid pro quo in view of its negative connotation in India) steps on which the two delegations reportedly agreed  in order to give the bilateral relations a forward-looking momentum instead of continuing to remain mired in Pokhran of May,1998.
 

In their non-attributable-by-name briefings for journalists in New Delhi, members of the US delegation have conveyed the impression that these steps would consist of a definitive commitment by India to sign the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) on a date earlier than September,1999, and   US support for the World Bank funding of  a power project in Andhra Pradesh.
 

While this impression is yet to be categorically confirmed by spokesmen of the Government of India, spokesmen of the State Department and the White House in Washington seem to have gone out of their way in dampening any undue expectations from India that a lifting of the economic sanctions was round the corner. 
 

They have been underlining in their open briefings of journalists in Washington that while the recent round in New Delhi was more positive than the preceding ones, it would be premature to talk of a consequent break-through in Indo-US relations.
 
 
In a presentation on “ Pokhran II : International Response” at the Centre For South-East Asian Studies of the University of Madras in August, 1998, (subsequently published in full by the “Indian Defence Review” of Lancer Publications,July-Sept,1998, Vol 13-3), this writer had drawn attention to the three voices with which Washington seemed to be talking to India—a voice of moderation and reasonableness emanating from Talbott and his deputy Karl Inderfurth, a voice of impatience and even virulence from Madeleine Albright, the Secretary of State, and her spokesman James Rubin, and the voice of the White House, which was reflecting sometimes the moderation of Talbott and sometimes the virulence of Albright.
 

This cacophony of reactions and assessments from Washington has since weakened, but not yet substantially. The virulence has disappeared from the remarks of Albright and Rubin, but not yet the rigidity of approach. The ambiguity of the White House is seemingly less, but its stand is not yet as predictable as India would have liked it to be. The only consistency in a forward-looking approach has been that of Talbott and Inderfurth.
 

Whether all this is part of a pre-agreed negotiating strategy at Washington or whether this is the way Washington always works is not clear.
 

Whatever  it may be, Indian diplomacy, while apparently showing tactical flexibility on the CTBT issue, has remained firm on certain other issues, which are of greater consequence for India’s future security and autonomy in decision-making on national security matters. These issues relate to the threat perception which impelled India to go nuclear and Indian requirements, conventional as well as nuclear, to enable an adequate response to future threats.
 

Through its firm and dignified refusal to indicate to the US what, in Indian perception, would constitute an adequate, minimum nuclear deterrence and to agree to any steps, such as the freezing of fissile material production and a moratorium on missile tests and development, which could amount to a freezing of India’s nuclear and delivery capability at the May,1998, level, the present Government, instead of letting itself be overawed by US badgering on such issues like its predecessor Governments had done, has made it clear that Indian decisions on India’s future security would be based on Indian perceptions and assessments, past experience in dealing with  potential adversaries and continuing concerns with regard to the future and not on US perceptions.
 

While India would listen to US views in the matter, the determining factor in policy-making would be Indian perceptions and concerns. The importance of a flexibility in determining the nature and extent of the minimum nuclear deterrence in order to continuously adjust it to the evolving regional situation in future has been underlined in no uncertain terms.
 

That is what the US itself does in national security policy-making as would be evident from its recent decision to step up funding on theatre missile defence after reports of the upgradation of North Korea’s missile capability. It is unreasonable on the part of the US to try to refuse to India a flexibility in national security policy-making which it allows to itself.
 

A close study of the eight rounds of Indo-US talks held so far would indicate two important gains for Indian diplomacy – an acceptance by the US of the inevitability and the irreversibility of  India’s de facto status as a nuclear power even though it is disinclined to  accord to India the de jure status and of the legitimacy of India’s concerns relating to China. 

However, it needs to be noted that while there is now a greater recognition of the legitimacy of India’s concerns vis-à-vis China, there is still a reluctance to express this recognition in categorical terms in public, in deference to China’s sensitivities. A similar deference to India’s sensitivities has been lacking in US policies which is partly responsible for the relations between India and the US, the two greatest democracies of the world, failing to blossom to their full potential despite the best of intentions on both sides. 
 

Another point which needs to be underlined in any analysis is that the US Administration, while now accepting the legitimacy of India’s concerns regarding China, continues to give the impression that in its belief  these concerns, while legitimate, are still overstated in order for India to justify having a nuclear and delivery capability much larger than warranted by ground reality.
 
 
At the same time, there is still an attempt to keep the focus narrowly on Indo-Pakistan relations while closing the eyes to the broader picture of  China’s continuing upgradation of its nuclear and missile capability, its close military relations with Myanmar which legitimately add to India’s nervousness despite assurances from China and Myanmar and China’s assertion by stealth of its territorial claims in the Spratly group of Islands.
 
 
The experience of the Philippines proves, if further proof was needed, as to what could happen to a country if it accepts Chinese professions of friendship and good intentions and neglects its defence.
 

While there has been a lot of spotlight on the so-called benchmarks approved by the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and the Group of 8 Countries and which the US has been using as a yardstick for measuring the progress of the talks, little notice has been taken in the American press and by US analysts of the  two benchmarks which the present Government in New Delhi has been using for measuring the seriousness of the US desire for improving its relations with India and for according to India the importance which it merits.
 

The first benchmark relates to India’s autonomy of decision-making in national security matters and the second to the removal of the unfair and discriminatory denial of advanced technology to India in various fields on the  baseless ground that such technology could enable India upgrade its nuclear and missile capability. 
        
The denial is unfair because there is no previous evidence of India misusing dual-purpose technology for military purposes and discriminatory in relation to the USA’s kid-glove approach to China.
 
        
On paper, similar technological disabilities have been imposed on China too since the Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989, but exemptions have been  given to Beijing on a case by case basis as in the case of nuclear power stations and China’s flouting of these restrictions to acquire sensitive technologies with the connivance of US companies, which has been well-documented by Congressional committees, has been overlooked in the long-term interests of Sino-US relations.
 
        
India’s praiseworthy record of refraining from misuse of technologies acquired from the US and of adhering to US restrictions however unfair they might be without trying to clandestinely circumvent them as China has been repeatedly doing, has remained unrecognised and unreflected in US policies.
 
        
The eight rounds of Jaswant Singh-Talbott talks have shown that given the required vision and understanding, the two countries could be on the threshold of a new era of  bilateral relations devoid of the complexes and mindsets of the past, but to what extent such relations would mature and flourish would depend, amongst other factors, on the US  giving up using two yardsticks in policy-making in nuclear matters—one for India and the other for China— and on its showing the same deference to the sensitivities of  India as it does to those of China. 
 
  

B.RAMAN                                                         7-2-99  

(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, and presently Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai.E-Mail Address:corde@md3.vsnl.net.in  ) 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 
            
               
 

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