India and the United States: The Contours of an Asian Partnership (original) (raw)
Related papers
Indo-US Strategic Partnership and its Security Implications for Asia Pacific Region
Global Social Sciences Review, 2016
Due to unprecedented rise of China in the economic, political and social domains world is shifting its strategic focus from the European Politics to both continental and maritime domains of Asia resulting in a challenge for the US and its allies. US, China and India are tied into strategic ingredients of cooperation, competition and containment. US intends to assign India an appropriate, competitive and probable offshore balancing role against China - that is, a strategy of balancing without containment. Engaging into an active conflict is not envisaged due to close integration of these powers in terms of economic, political, social and cultural domains. Indo US close strategic coordination is win-win situation for both the countries. India may become an offshore balancing power for US to retain its influence in Asia Pacific region against China and its allies; On the other hand it brings treasure of opportunities for India to strengthen its military arsenal with open doors of US so...
India-US Relations: From Confrontation to Cooperation
isara solutions, 2020
This article examines how India-US relations during the Cold War period, marked by confrontation and mistrust, ushered in mutual cooperation in various fields ranging from defence and security cooperation to the nuclear deal, and counter-terrorism initiatives to the “strategic partnership” between them. The article further argues that during the Cold War era, India’s relations were examined purely from the ideological perspective but after the end of the Cold War in 1990 and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991, geopolitical equations changed. The article evaluates those factors which brought New Delhi and Washington closer to each other.It discusses how the two Cold War antagonists-India and America- became close strategic partners in defence, security, space, trade and investment fields. Also, it discusses how China has emerged as a crucial factor in the growing ties between New Delhi and Washington.
2020
The Indo-US strategic bonding is shifting the security dynamics of the South Asian balance-of-power in Indian favour. From the signing of 123 US-India Nuclear Deal to the facilitation in becoming a member of the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR), the US has clearly designated India as an instrumental element in the American grand strategy of devising a ‘new world order’. As a result, India has grabbed the opportunity of alleviating its status as a credible regional and global power. In this regard, the US tilt towards India is significantly paving grounds for a strategic imbalance in the South Asian region, thus creating challenges for Pakistan. Therefore, this paper argues that the growing bonhomie between the US and India is a destabilizing factor in the region which reinforces Pakistan’s fast falling into the Chinese orbit; thereby cementing the old friendship into a new strategic partnership. This dynamic certainly gives China and Pakistan an incentive to work together so...
STRATEGIC SWAY IN INDO-US RELATIONS
Eurasia Review, 2022
In the light of the Ukraine war, there is a brief mention of how China has become a source of strategic sway in U.S.- India relations, in this article. It also describes how the United States’ military assistance forced China to end its attack on India in 1962. The essay also explains how the United States and India were unable to foster the kind of strategic proximity that the 1962 conflict initiated, which ultimately developed into a kind of the cruelest enmity in 1971 during the Bangladesh war.
American Foreign Policy in India
Why India needs to remain a 'very important strategic partner' for the United States vis-à-vis the geo-political atmosphere of South-East Asia Part I: Over the past decade, despite history of bilateral estrangement U.S.-India cooperation has thrived. The current U.S.-India arrangement on shared security interests brings in a new chapter of American foreign policy, where instead of fighting proxy wars, or enabling nongovernmental actors; the US has engaged in empowering another country to balance its interest in a region. The change in U.S.-India security ties seems as an attempt on part of the US to counterbalance the growing Chinese influence in Asia, its antagonistic attitude towards other nations in the region.
India and the US as enduring global partners: An assessment
Journal of Public Affairs, 2020
This paper examines the nature of India and the US relations. The relations between two the states have improved in the post−/11 era. The willingness of the US to provide India political support at the regional and global level is one aspect that resulted in changing the nature of that relationship. Second, growing defense ties both in conventional and nonconventional sectors fundamentally galvanized the nature of that relationship. This paper further analyzes the geopolitical compulsion of both states to counter various state and non-state actors' threats such as China's increasing maritime presence in the Indian Ocean region and terrorism. Moreover, this discussion argues about the political, strategic, commercial aspects of the strategic partnership till date. Much part of this paper analyzes what is the nature of this relationship and how it developed?
“INDIA’S PERCEPTION OF THE STRATEGIC ENVIRONMENT IN SOUTH EAST ASIA”
India’s recognition as a great power is preceded by the development of a partnership relation with the United States. That partnership, which has now become irrevocable, was set forth in March 2000, with the visit to India by President Bill Clinton. In its “rebalance” policy toward Asia, the United States has been trying to position India as an important strategic partner. However, India has recently begun to carry out a cautious debate about whether or not to further strengthen its strategic relation with the United States, from the perspective of strategic autonomy. In the Asia-Pacific and Indian Ocean regions, India has been promoting multifaceted bilateral defense and security cooperation. Two forms of cooperation can be observed: one oriented toward classical defense cooperation, primarily cooperation in military equipment and hardware, the other through cooperative military-to-military relations, with its Navy as the main proponent. With Chinese influence growing in the region since the mid-2000s, India has been accelerating its defense and security cooperation with countries of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Also, on the global stage, India is now urging greater participation in the United Nations (UN) decision-making process, utilizing its score in UN peacekeeping operations as a new diplomatic resource. In this aspiration to address the global South, one of the most successful tools of the Indian foreign policy is the ‘Look East Policy’ [LEP], which is currently aiming for the LEP 2.0. The origin of LEP , in fact, is a fallout of the withering away of the former Soviet Union and the rise of the unipolar world. The restructuring done, thereby, has in fact also altered the concept of the ‘core and the periphery’ . The re-defined Indian foreign policy has thus, also altered the security policy of India, which is today , not only ‘containing China’, but also extending to Southeast and East Asia, and the encouragement to get involved with USA. In this backdrop, this paper seeks to analyse the Indian foreign and security policy from the perspective of India’s “Look East” Policy: Developments in the Security Arena.