Monday, November 1, 2010

Politics: Obama’s India Visit: No Good Deed Goes Unpunished

I am a big fan of the United States of America. I lived there for six years, and since then, have been back a few times. No other country in the world is freer, more diverse or tolerant. No other country in the world is more honest – Americans make no bones about the fact that you do need money to be happy, and a firm belief in capitalism is a cornerstone of the American way of life. It is a country that respects and encourages individualism, and believes that personal choices and not governmental intervention are the key to individual and societal happiness. I happen to agree with all these principles.

India and the US have had an indifferent, sometimes tense relationship over the last sixty years. During the Cold War, India was a Soviet ally and was in the ludicrous position of opposing the US ideologically, while being heavily dependent on US food aid to prevent mass starvation.

Over the last twenty years, however, the Indo-US relationship has thawed considerably. On the economic front, India’s economy has liberalized and the country has prospered. India views the US as the biggest market for its services and manufacturing exports. From the US perspective, the impressive purchasing power of India’s rapidly expanding middle class has resulted in US corporations making a beeline for India. On the political front, both the US and India view the rise of authoritarian China with increasing nervousness. India has an aggressive, authoritarian China as its immediate neighbour on its eastern border and crumbling, increasingly fundamentalist Pakistan on its western border. India and the US are both liberal, progressive, secular democracies and a strategic relationship between the two countries should be in the natural order of things. India needs the US to remain a superpower to guarantee its own future prosperity.

Under George W. Bush’s presidency, the Indo-US friendship improved considerably. Bush pushed aggressively for free trade as well as the Indo-US nuclear partnership. The Bush Administration agreed with India’s aspirations of becoming a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council. So, Indian hopes were running high when Barack Obama became US president.

However, Obama’s early pronouncements were not encouraging. He railed against jobs being outsourced to India (and probably invented the term“Bangalored”) to win cheap political brownie points, when any economist worth his salt would have told him that free trade is mutually beneficial. His administration’s message seemed to be – You must open your markets to our good and services, but our markets will remain closed to your goods and services.

Obama now wants India to buy billions of dollars worth military equipment. This will create jobs for American workers in a tough recession. I have no problem with that. But I do have a problem when he says that he also plans to give similar military equipment to Pakistan - FOR FREE. I find this mystifying.

Pakistan is indeed under attack from within, but I fail to see how providing it with the latest jet fighters and tanks will help it fight fundamentalists who live in caves in the mountains. The Obama Administration is also conspicuously quiet about China’s plans to supply Pakistan with nuclear technology, but at the same time, is pressing India to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). India has been a responsible nuclear power for nearly forty years, and has never exported nuclear technology to pariah states such as North Korea or dubious Middle Eastern tyrants.

India’s foreign policy has never been aggressive or expansionist. India has contributed billions of dollars of developmental aid to the redevelopment of Afghanistan. India has contributed troops and money to many of the UN’s interventions around the world – from Kosovo to Rwanda.

Despite India being a model international citizen, the Obama Administration seems to be indifferent to India, at least when it comes to concrete benefits on the ground. Which just goes to prove the old adage – no good deed goes unpunished. And Obama’s constant refrain about how much he admires Mahatma Gandhi doesn’t count. We would prefer free trade and equal access to US markets, thank you very much.

2 comments:

Ranjan said...

Sandeep, excellent post. Deserves greater readership.

Ramana Rajgopaul said...

India is now confident enough to tell the USA that we shall do what is in our best self interest. This has already been said before and one of the reasons that Obama has been luke warm to India till the Chinese assertiveness took the sail out of him has been our own assertiveness. I think that he will be on the defensive now that the mid term elections have shown him that Americans want quick action not the long term solutions that he has been coming up with. This would mean that he will push for quick businesses in the arms area and he will have to yield ground on other areas to secure this. It will be a very interesting visit.