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Ties with US, Russia, trade talks India's diplomatic priorities in 2019
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Aroonim Bhuyan | 04 Jan, 2019
Maintaining a balance between ties with the US and Russia, talks on free
trade agreements with Europe and Southeast Asia, and making the
Indo-Pacific concept gain global acceptability will be among India's top
foreign policy priorities in the year ahead.
Analysts believe
that, for India, which has good relations with both the US and Russia,
maintaining a balance between ties with these two major global powers
will be a challenge through 2019.
In 2018, a new milestone was
reached when the first ever India-US 2+2 Ministerial Dialogue was held
in which External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, Defence Minister
Nirmala Sithraman, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and then Defence
Secretary Jim Mattis participated.
A key highlight of the meeting
was the signing of the Communications Compatibility and Security
Agreement (COMCASA) by the two sides. COMCASA guarantees India access to
critical US defence technologies and communication networks to help the
militaries of the two countries in their inter-operability.
Meanwhile,
Vladimir Putin, after being re-elected Russian President for the fourth
time, hosted Prime Minister Narendra Modi for an informal summit in the
resort city of Sochi, something unprecedented. Following, the meeting
Modi said that it took the Special and Privileged Strategic Partnership
between India and Russia to a new level.
This was before the
annual bilateral summit between Modi and Putin in New Delhi in October
during which the crucial agreement to procure the S-400 Triumf
long-range surface-to-air missile system from Russia was signed.
The
S-400 missile deal has been an issue of much speculation after the
Trump administration's Countering America's Adversaries Through
Sanctions Act (CAATSA) law came into effect in January. CAATSA targets
countries doing business with Russian, Iranian and North Korean defence
companies.
According to the analysts here, with the US on one
side and Russia on the other -- and with issue-based support from China
-- India will have its task cut out at international forums like the UN
Security Council, WTO and the Organisation for Prevention of Chemical
Weapons in trying to preserve its space.
"I think it is going to be challenge here and we will have to navigate very carefully," one analyst put it succinctly.
Another
challenge before the External Affairs Ministry will be to conduct
successful negotiations for the Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership (RCEP) with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(Asean) regional bloc and the Broad-based Trade and Investment Agreement
(BTIA) with the European Union (EU).
The RCEP is a proposed free
trade agreement between the 10 Asean member-states and the six
countries with which this regional bloc has existing free trade
agreements -- Australia, China, India, Japan, South Korea and New
Zealand.
Stating that the talks for the RCEP are reaching an
endgame, sources here said that India would risk losing out economically
if the agreement is not concluded at the earliest.
As for the
BTIA with the EU that has been hanging fire since 2007, it is learnt
that differences between the two sides are down to certain core areas.
Negotiations for BTIA have been on hold since 2015.
Those in the
know say that after India renounced its bilateral investment treaties
(BITs) with all countries, investments from European nations are now not
protected. India has terminated all BITs following a new BIT model New
Delhi released in December 2015.
The 28 EU member-states have now passed on the responsibility of investment protection negotiations to the EU.
According to the sources, the BTIA is getting held up because of the strong views of the domestic industry on both sides.
In
an important development in 2018, the EU released a Joint Communication
that sets out the bloc's vision for a strategy to strengthen
cooperation and the partnership with India. Following the release of the
Joint Communication, EU Ambassador to India Tomasz Kozlowski said that
the bloc is looking for the most conducive investment conditions in
India.
"Our assessment of the business environment and ease of doing business in India has improved considerably," Kozlowski said.
Trade
talks, though, are not limited to the External Affairs Ministry alone
and there are other coordinating ministries and stakeholders as well.
"It all depends on how well we co-opt and collaborate, but it is a
challenge," the source mentioned above said.
Another foreign
policy challenge for New Delhi in the year ahead will be to make the
Indo-Pacific concept gain acceptability internationally.
India,
along with the US, Japan and Australia, in 2017 revived a quad that
seeks to work for peace and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific, a region
that stretches from the east coast of Japan to the east coast of Africa.
It
was a strategically important move given China's growing footprint in
the region and Beijing's aggressive behaviour in the South China Sea.
China
did appreciate Modi's speech at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore in
June last year in which he said that India and China had shown wisdom
and maturity in handling their complex relations and "Asia and the world
will have a better future if the countries work together with trust and
confidence, keeping in mind each other's interests".
But China still has doubts about the concept of the Indo-Pacific, it is learnt.
In
his speech, Modi also stressed on the centrality of the Asean in this
region and the sources here said New Delhi's efforts would be to work
through the Southeast Asian bloc and other players to make the idea of
the Indo-Pacific acceptable.
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