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September 5, 2018 3:51 pm

US, India To Discuss Sale Of Drones, Exchange Of Satellite Data

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WASHINGTON — The United States and India will seek to finalise a num­ber of defence agreements during high-level talks this week that aim to draw their two militaries closer and counter-balance China’s influ­ence in the region.

US Defense Secretary Jim Mat­tis and Secretary of State Mike Pom­peo will hold talks with India’s For­eign Minister Sushma Swaraj and Defence Minister Nirmala Sithara­man for the so-called two-plus-two discussions.

Already cancelled twice this year, it is the highest level of dialogue between the two countries and was agreed upon by US President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi last year. Officials and experts believe that the meeting is not only symbolically important, but will give the world’s two largest democracies a chance to make con­crete progress while ironing out sig­nificant differences, including over India’s ties with Russia and Iran.

“The 2+2 presents an historic opportunity to develop our growing partnership and to explore ways of enhancing our security coopera­tion,” the top US military officer, Marine General Joseph Dunford, told reporters travelling with him to the talks.

The talks will be held on Thurs­day. Randall Schriver, the Penta­gon’s top Asia official, predicted last week that the discussions would produce “a set of actual concrete outcomes.”

The United States and India have increased defence ties over the past decade, in part because of mu­tual concerns over an increasingly assertive China. India has been alarmed at China’s expanding se­curity and economic links in South Asia.

The nuclear-armed Asian giants were locked in a 10-week military stand-off last year in a remote, high-altitude stretch of a boundary in the Himalayas. Earlier this year, the US military renamed its Pacific Com­mand the US Indo-Pacific Command, a move underscoring the growing im­portance of India to the Pentagon.

Among the topics for discussion, the United States is hoping to final­ise an agreement on a communica­tions framework that would allow for securely sharing information. The Communications Compatibility and Security Agreement (COMCA­SA) has long been a demand of the United States and would open the door for Washington to sell sensitive defence equipment to India, like the armed version of Guardian drones.

India has historically been op­posed to the agreement because it sees it as being too intrusive. Ear­lier this year however, an Indian de­fence source told Reuters that New Delhi had shed its opposition to the agreement.

“That would be a big deal, if that announcement comes out of this…in terms of advancing the inter-opera­bility, that would really be a kind of big next step,” said Alyssa Ayres, a former US State Department official and now a senior fellow at the Coun­cil on Foreign Relations.

The two sides are also negotiating another agreement, a Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement (BECA), which would enable them to share advanced satellite data for navigation and missile targeting, Indian military sources said.

The United States is keen to tap into India’s large defence market. It has emerged as India’s No 2 weapons supplier, closing $15 billion worth of deals over the last decade. A senior US defence official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the two countries were looking at a carrying out a major joint exercise–involving troops on land, at sea and in the air.

Further details were not im­mediately available. The two coun­tries hold elaborate navy-to-navy manoeuvres, air exercises and even drills involving Special Forces, but war games involving all three arms represent a scaling up of defence co­operation.

Waivers from sanctions

Despite the optimism, US offi­cials acknowledge that the two coun­tries will also discuss significant disagreements.

“India wonders about the co­herence of US strategy and worries the US is pursuing policies inimi­cal to key Indian interests like its continued dependence on Russian military hardware and Iranian oil,” said Sameer Lalwani, co-director of the South Asia programme at the Stimson Center think tank in Wash­ington.

The United States is concerned about India’s planned purchase of Russian S-400 surface-to-air missile systems. The United States has im­posed sweeping sanctions on Russia, under which any country engaged with its defence and intelligence sec­tors could face secondary US sanc­tions.

However, a new defence bill gives the president the authority to grant waivers in case of national se­curity interests. Schriver, from the Pentagon, said there was no guar­antee India would get a waiver if it bought the Russian system but was open to speaking with India about providing alternative systems.

India has nearly concluded com­mercial negotiations with Russia for the missile systems and intends to proceed with it as part of its de­fences against China, a defence min­istry official said. For months, the two sides have been aiming to reach an agreement on the deal before Russian President Vladimir Putin’s visit to India, planned for early Oc­tober for annual summit talks.

The United States is also push­ing countries to halt oil imports from Iran after Trump withdrew from a 2015 deal between Iran and six world powers. India, Iran’s top oil buyer after China, has so far not

on the size of any cut to Iranian imports and continues to seek a waiver from the United States. US sanctions on Iran’s energy sector are set to be re-imposed after a 180-day “wind-down period” ending on November 4.

“I think we need to sit and have that very open, candid, sober dia­logue and see where we come out the other side,” Schriver said.

 

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