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US prioritises ties with India
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ASAD MIRZA | 31 Oct, 2022
US President Joe Biden's administration unveiled the US National Defence
Strategy 2022 on October 27. It lists plans to boost its defence ties
with India to deter Chinese aggression in the region.
The
latest Defence Strategy states that China presents the most
consequential and systemic challenge, while Russia poses acute threats
to vital US national interests abroad and to the homeland.
"The
world is changing. We're at a significant inflection point in world
history. And our country and the world, the US has always been able to
chart the future in times of great change. We've been able to constantly
renew ourselves. And time and again, we've proven there's not a single
thing we cannot do as a nation when we do it together, and I mean that -
not a single solitary thing," President Biden stated in the
introductory note to the strategy.
Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin highlighted the different challenges posed by China and Russia as he unveiled the strategy.
According
to him the dangers are both conventional -- Moscow's aggression toward
its neighbours and Beijing's efforts to gain control of Taiwan -- and
nuclear, with Russia possessing an extensive arsenal and China's stocks
of atomic weapons growing fast.
The strategy likewise places the primary emphasis on China.
It
further asserts that Beijing is seeking to "refashion the Indo-Pacific
region and the international system to suit its interests and
authoritarian preferences", describing this dynamic as "the most
comprehensive and serious challenge to US national security".
The
strategy says Chinese rhetoric about and "coercive activity" towards
Taiwan, which Beijing has vowed to take control of, by force if
necessary, is a destabilising factor that risks miscalculation and
threatens peace in the area. As for Russia, it says the "acute threat"
posed by Moscow has been most recently demonstrated by its invasion of
Ukraine.
Though the strategy tries to portray the US ties in the
Indo-Pacific as the most important one, yet India as a whole is
mentioned in the strategy only five times and that too in the context of
the Indo-Pacific, and there too it refers to China's campaigns to
establish control over the East China Sea, Taiwan Strait, South China
Sea, and disputed land borders such as with India.
It proclaims
to promote a free and open Indo-Pacific, which could only be achieved if
the US builds collective capacity with other countries, like India. It
further asserts that no region will be of more significance to the world
and to everyday Americans than the Indo-Pacific, yet it fails to
demonstrate India's importance to achieve this goal as a partner.
The
document lists out the US Vision, Washington's role in the global
arena, and an overview of its strategic approach to different regional
issues. Focussing on Middle East, the strategy talks about tweaking its
policy in the Middle East and North Africa by eschewing grand designs in
favour of more practical steps that can advance US interests and help
regional partners lay the foundation for greater stability, prosperity,
and opportunity for the people of the Middle East and for the American
people.
The strategy sets forth a new framework for US policy in
the region based on America's unparalleled comparative advantage in
building partnerships, coalitions, and alliances to strengthen
deterrence, while using diplomacy to de-escalate tensions, reduce risks
of new conflicts, and set a long-term foundation for stability.
However,
it clearly states that the United States will not allow foreign or
regional powers to jeopardise freedom of navigation through the Middle
East's waterways, including the Strait of Hormuz and the Bab al Mandab,
nor tolerate efforts by any country to dominate another, or the region,
through military build-ups, incursions, or threats.
But if we
scrutinise the strategy in a little more detail then we realise the
emerging contradictions present in the strategy. When the strategy
declares the U.S. commitment to support countries "that subscribe to the
rules-based international order", will it include those OPEC countries
which recently snubbed the U.S. demands for increased oil production?
When
it talks about "military build-ups" then does it really mean that the
US will halt its longstanding efforts to advance its partners' "military
build-ups" in the face of the threat from Iran? Further how could the
US achieve the Israeli "dominance" of the Hamas and Hezbollah?
Further
the strategy lays stress on U.S. diplomacy to reduce tensions "wherever
possible", will it translate into normalising ties with Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad, or meeting with Hezbollah leader Hassan
Nasrallah?
All this double talk on various regional and global
issues and inherent contradictions of the strategy leads on to surmise
that it is more of a document to placate the American public and not
aimed at really achieving or changing substantially the US polices on
these issues.
Overall the National Security Strategy 2022 comes
out as a bit of disappointment though perhaps packaged coherently for
the first time.
(Asad Mirza is a political commentator based in
New Delhi. He writes on Indian Muslims, educational, international
affairs, interfaith and current affairs. He can be contacted on
www.asadmirza.in)
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