澳门六合彩

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Ground Truth Briefing: What Does India Expect of President-elect Trump?

Date & Time

Tuesday
Dec. 13, 2016
10:00am聽鈥撀11:00am ET

Location

Teleconference

Overview

The Takeaways

Michael Kugelman, of 澳门六合彩鈥檚 Asia Program, began the discussion by underscoring that the U.S and India have had deepening ties since the Clinton administration in the 1990s.聽 Both George W. Bush and President Obama have continued this path and in early December 2016 Secretary of Defense Ash Carter designated India a 鈥渕ajor defense partner鈥 of the United States, a status unique to India which institutionalizes the progress made to facilitate defense trade and technology sharing.聽 Kugelman also highlighted areas of optimism stating, 鈥淥ne often hears that the U.S.-India relationship is one of the few that commands bipartisan support.鈥 Possible areas of friction include President-elect Trump鈥檚 stated positions on immigration and his willingness to serve as a mediator in India鈥檚 troubled relationship with Pakistan.

Michael Kugelman noted that with President-elect Donald Trump we know relatively little of his views and opinions on India. In the past he has offered positive comments on India鈥檚 economy and stated that he believes India is a natural ally of the United States.聽 Trump has business interests in India and Prime Minister Modi was quick to send his congratulations to the President-elect.聽 Kugelman asked the panel on their general reaction to the Trump victory.

Suhasini Haidar, Diplomatic and Strategic Affairs Editor at The Hindu newspaper, emphasized that very few people in India were expecting a Trump win.聽 It was expected that a Clinton administration would carry over many of the Obama policies between the two nations. While there was a negative reaction from many in the mainstream press in the United States, there has been more mixed reactions among Indians.聽 While there had been negative reactions from many in India over Trump鈥檚 positions on immigration, Haidar noted that traditionally 鈥渢here has been a certain comfort in the Indian establishment when it comes to Republican administrations over those of Democrats.鈥

Dipankar Gupta, a former Wilson Center Fellow and now Professor of Sociology at Jawaharlal Nehru University, suggested that one key issue ahead for the Trump administration鈥檚 relations with India would be if the President-elect would take Obama initiatives on clean energy forward. Another is the U.S. relationship with Pakistan. Gupta explained that many in the Indian academic community expressed hope that Trump would be much more supportive of anti-terrorism initiatives and that his administration would have a renewed focus on stemming terror attacks staged in Pakistan.

Gupta also suggested that populist movements around the world should be taken much more seriously.聽 鈥淚f the United States and United Kingdom behave badly, this sets a bad example for aspiring democracies around the world.鈥澛 Gupta stated that the U.K. and U.S. are 鈥渓ode stars鈥 for the world鈥檚 perception of democracy and Trump did not have a positive impact on this perception in general.聽 Gupta pointed out that President-elect Trump鈥檚 candidacy being seen by the American electorate as anti-immigrant was one of the key factors in his victory.聽 Despite the fact that the U.S. economy performed well under President Obama, the 鈥減assions that drove people to vote for Trump are not the kind many openly espoused but were covertly embraced.鈥

Ambassador Kishan Rana, a former Wilson Center Fellow and former Indian Ambassador to Kenya and Germany, suggested that promises made by U.S. presidents during the campaign often mean little in terms of foreign policy implementation.聽 Rana expressed his belief that Trump will not drastically reverse many of the paths set out by the Obama administration in the region.聽 President-elect Trump may ask for more burden-sharing by Japan, South Korea, and others in Asia but the 鈥渟ituation on the ground鈥 would most likely shape policy.聽 鈥淒oes he really want to meddle in Kashmir affairs and does he really want to act as a mediator?鈥 asked Rana.聽 鈥淚 really don鈥檛 think so.鈥 Rana concluded by observing that a key positive impact on India-U.S. relations by Donald Trump could be the fight against terror.聽 Rana stated that while Pakistan also suffers from terrorism, it is nonetheless one of the largest supporters of terrorism in the world today. Rana believes Trump should be a natural ally in this fight, along with the Indian government.

Rana also expressed three key points which factor into deepening relations between the U.S. and India.聽 The Indian-American community has been key in stabilizing the relationship since the 1990s, according to Rana, and observers frequently overlook this community as a factor. Also, India鈥檚 current economic dynamism and Trump鈥檚 role as a businessman could keep the relationship progressing.聽 Finally, Rana concluded by emphasizing that 鈥淚ndia doesn鈥檛 want to play the China card with the United States or anyone else. We treat each bilateral relationship on its own basis. We will not fall into the trap of becoming part of any of these coalitions against China.鈥

Dipankar Gupta highlighted one area of serious concern in the relationship. Trump鈥檚 stated anti-immigrant rhetoric may affect H1 visas for Indian citizens attending U.S. universities and training based in the United States. Also, the services sector, specifically information technology, could be drastically hurt by these policies as well.

Kugelman concluded by examining how the warm and productive relationship between President Obama and Prime Minister Modi fueled improved relations and asked if this would change after President-elect Trump takes office. He highlighted similarities between the two men including close ties to the business world, conservative constituencies, and 鈥渙ur country first鈥 rhetoric.

Gupta noted that while there are similarities, the slogans 鈥淢ake America Great Again鈥 and 鈥淢ade in India鈥 differ in key ways.聽 Trump鈥檚 statements are inward focused and Modi鈥檚 are outward, connecting India to the rest of the world.聽

Haidar suggested the relationship between Trump and Modi may even be closer than that which existed under President Obama, as both are viewed as 鈥渄ealmakers and risk-takers.鈥 Rana concluded by observing that both Trump and Modi are 鈥渕aster communicators鈥 and this may serve as a catalyst for improved ties.


Hosted By

Indo-Pacific Program

The Indo-Pacific Program promotes policy debate and intellectual discussions on US interests in the Asia-Pacific as well as political, economic, security, and social issues relating to the world鈥檚 most populous and economically dynamic region.聽  Read more

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