By RAHUL DIXIT :
The most critical aspect
that India must insulate
itself after the return of
Donald Trump as
President is the American
penchant to disrupt
status quo to serve its
own interests.
Washington has a history
of deserting its allies
right in the middle of an
acute crisis. India will do
well to remain ready with
its own back-up plans to
deal with an aggressive
Trump 2.0.
J
J
UST like the Big Fat
Weddings in India generate global interest for its lavishness and massive
spread, the Presidential
elections in the United
States are also seen as some sort
of festival, with no direct connection. Political pundits choose
to describe the Indian people’s
interest in the US elections as a
case of “begani shaadi me
Abdullah deewana” and yet the
result is latched upon by all and
sundry as a possible gamechanger in the Indo-American
relations. The landslide victory
by Donald Trump in the
Presidential election has also
piqued the same interest as India
welcomes return of the flamboyant President seen as a close
buddy of Prime Minister
Narendra Modi.
Indeed, the re-entry of Trump
into White House comes with
many positives for India as it
consolidates its position of
advantage in the changing global order. Since the first term of
Trump, India has travelled a great
distance in handling geopolitical nuances while protecting its
own interests.
The Indian stand on issues of
border security with China and
Pakistan are bound to find resonance in Trump’s foreign policy as the US is set to seek a hawkish approach on nailing the
Dragon.
This spells good news
for New Delhi in its efforts to
bring down the Chinese aggression in eastern Ladakh. An open
and full backing from a belligerent US President to keep India’s
counterbalance intact in the
region will be an extra cushion
for efforts to ensure status quo
ante at the friction points.
It is a win-win situation for
India which allows use of the US
defence technology even as it
builds its own arsenal to counter the Chinese.
In focus of the Trump administration will also be the grudging acceptance of India’s business relations with Russia by the
Western countries after the military conflict against Ukraine.
The good terms of the POTUS
with Russian President Vladimir
Putin will come extremely handy
to lend a proper perspective to
India’s oil purchases and continued engagements with
Moscow. New Delhi can hope to
make the West see reason with
the help of America.
The list of positives being
counted under the new
Republican administration looks
attractive for India and yet New
Delhi cannot assume that it will
be business as usual with the US.
There are grudge subjects for
which Trump has already rallied
mass support during his re-election campaign.
The biggest threat
India will have to counter is the
tariffs to be imposed on imports.
The US is India’s largest export
destination and consistently
ranks among its top two trade
partners. Trump has already
threatened a 60 per cent tariff on
Chinese products and India, too,
is on the hit-list. In the previous
stint also Trump was vocal about
India being a major charger of
tariffs and promised a similar
imposition on Indian products.
He had also ended preferential
trade status for India amid a bitter tariff war. The issue is delicate and costly too for India.
Another soft issue that New
Delhi will need to guard against
is Trump’s dislike for issuance of
H-1B visas of which Indian tech
workers are major beneficiaries.
In its bid to ‘Make America Great
Again’ with the help of only local
talent, the previous Trump
administration had escalated the
H-1B visa denial rate from 6 per
cent in 2016 to 21 per cent in 2019.
The anti-immigrant rhetoric during Trump’s election campaign
is also set to be a reality and
threatens to stoke new tensions
in India-America relations.
India has undoubtedly factored in the threats after handling
the transactional nature of
Trump’s dealings in the last term.
It must prepare to cede some
things without any sentimental
baggage to gain something substantial in other areas.
However, the most critical
aspect that India must insulate
itself is the American penchant
to disrupt status quo to serve its
own interests. Washington has a
history of deserting its allies right
in the middle of an acute crisis.
The latest display of the US recklessness is the withdrawal of
troops from Afghanistan in 2021
by leaving the country fend for
itself against the raging Taliban
militia. The American administration played all sides during
the facade of peace talks between
the then Afghanistan
Government and Taliban with
strategic use of Pakistan as a facilitator. Al the Indian interests were
promptly abandoned as
Pakistan’s stalled military aid was
clandestinely restored by the US
Government.
It was a mini-version of a similar betrayal by Washington when
it did not mind ignoring
Pakistan’s sins when Zulfiqar Ali
Bhutto was making a nuclear
bomb. That was the time when
Pakistan was made an integral
ally of the US and Saudi Arabia
during the Soviet-Afghan War of
1979. New Delhi had sent a series
of intel to Washington about
Pakistan’s preparation to go
nuclear.
The US had shown initial concerns but quickly ignored
the evidence as Pakistan was
marked as a useful pawn to fight
the Afghan Jihad. Then US
President Jimmy Carter’s national security advisor Zbigniew
Brzezinski declared supplying
arms and money to Pakistan for
the Afghan resistance. He also
advised the US Government to
review its policy towards Pakistan
and release more guarantee and
arms aid.In the later years, Carter’s successor Ronald Reagan toed the
same line to hoodwink India. He
brushed aside Pakistan’s nuclear
weapons programme as “nothing of America’s business” and
kept getting Congressional clearance for funds to be given to
Pakistan. All Pakistan’s sins were
forgiven and overlooked till the
end of the war.
When history repeats itself, it
comes with silent signals. India
will do well to remain ready with
its own back-up plans as Trump
2.0 begins in the US.