The maiden visit of US President Donald Trump to India (February 24-25), with the distinctive high visibility that was on display in Ahmedabad, has led to a semantically significant politico-diplomatic outcome, in that the two nations are now framing their bilateral relationship as a 바카라Comprehensive Global Strategic Partnership바카라 (CGSP).
This was publicly announced by PM Narendra Modi in the Motera stadium on Monday to a crowd of over 100,000, when he described the texture of India바카라s relationship with the US and used the words 바카라comprehensive바카라  and 바카라global바카라  to precede the strategic partnership that had been mooted with the US as far back as 2004.
It was formally noted in the joint statement issued when Trump and Modi 바카라vowed to strengthen a India-United States Comprehensive Global Strategic Partnership, ancÂhored in mutual trust, shared interests, goodwill, and robust engagement of their citizens바카라.
India has almost 30 strategic partnership agreements, beginning with France in 1998, but this is the first time that such a lofty turn of phrase has been invoked and the contour and content of the freshly minted CGSP with the US merits preliminary scrutiny.
India-US bilateral ties have had a remÂarkable trajectory, given that the two nations had a bitter 바카라estranged바카라 relationship for almost four decades (since 1965), with sharp and seemingly intÂractable divergences in their strategic orientation and security interests. The US was deeply invested in military alliances during the Cold War decades to contain the former Soviet Union, while India preferred to remain non-aligned. Regional security compulsions saw New Delhi signing a friendship pact with the former USSR even while being a recipient of US development aid in many sectors, including food. But even with the USSR, though the military inventory relationship was very substantive, India adhered to its principle of not becoming part of any military alliance.
Partnership diplomacy with the US acquired traction after the end of the Cold War and was formalised after the Indian nuclear tests of May 1998 and the Kargil war of 1999. Under PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee the Indian nuclear optÂion that had been kept 바카라open바카라 was weaponised and India became a state with proven nuclear weapon capability. However as a non-NPT (nuclear non-proliferation treaty) signatory, Delhi remained outside the global nuclear framework . Yet the Indian rapprochement with the US began on the Vajpayee-Clinton watch and the phrase 바카라natural allies바카라 was used. Â
However, the nuclear nettle continued to bedevil India-US bilateral ties and it was the Bush administration that picked up the gauntlet and embarked upon a radical rewiring of the Washington-New Delhi relÂationship. This began in early 2005 and a civilian nuclear agreement was outlined that allowed the complex nuclear circle to be squared. Thanks to the political perspicacity and resolve of President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, the civilian nucÂlear agreement was finally brought to successful closure in late 2008 and had its share of high political tension involving not just the US and India but also China.
The long estrangement between the US and India was finally over and a cautious, closer engagement began in 2009 with the Obama adminisÂtration. Due credit must be given to the professionals on both sides who navigated choppy waters deftly to steer the relationship towards a positive orientation; over the past decade, relations have evolved into a stable partnership바카라albeit imbalanced.
In an insightful comment on the eve of the Trump visit to India, William J. Burns, the former US deputy secretary of state noted: Â 바카라The relationship was born of a shared sense of values, a shared economic stake in India바카라s modernisation, a shared (if usually unspoken) concern about China바카라s rise, and a shared realisation that Americans and Indians need to work togÂether to tackle big, overarching challenges like climate change and transnational terrorism.바카라
The sub-text of the partnership was that India바카라s rise was welcomed and enabled by the US and its allies and the existential dimension of India as a vibrant democracy that had shared values with the liberal global constituency was acknowledged. The strategic partnership template acquired a visible military focus as India diversified its military acquisitions to include the US and over the last decade, this has reached a total of US $17 billion. Major military platforms acquired from the US include a landing ship, transport aircraft, helicopters and artillery guns, among other weapons.
Predictably, in the Trump visit, there was no significant breakthrough in the trade domain and this remains a discordant issue with the US president referring to Indian tariff rates in his press conference in New Delhi. A substantive 바카라deal바카라 is expected later in the year to redÂress the trade deficit now in India바카라s favÂour (a modest $20 billion), but the Trump fidelity to the transactional and reciprocal remains unwavering.
Thus the comprehensive tag is more applicable to the security sector and here the focus is on the maritime domain. The joint statement notes that 바카라a strong and capable Indian military supports peace, stability, and a rules-based order in the Indo-Pacific바카라 and locates the acquisition by India of the multi-role naval helicopters. Along with attÂack helicopters for the army, the Trump visit will add $3 billion plus to US military sales to India.
It is instructive to note that the CGSP prioritises deepening of 바카라defence and security cooperation, especially through greater maritime and space domain awareness and information sharing바카라 along with a broad spectrum of areas that had been first envisioned in mid-2005 in the Rumsfeld-Mukherjee defence cooperation agreement.
Strategic convergence in the Indo-Pacific is a section by itself in the joint statement and notes that 바카라A close partnership between the United States and India is central to a free, open, inclusive, peaceful, and prosperous Indo-Pacific region. This cooperation is underpinned by recognition of ASEAN centrality.바카라
Acknowledging India as a net security provider and one that could render development and humanitarian assÂistance in the Indian Ocean region, the joint statement has one reference that will be carefully examined in Beijing. It adds:Â 바카라The United States and India took note of efforts toward a meaningful Code of Conduct in the South China Sea, and solemnly urged that it not prejudice the legitimate rights and interests of all nations accÂording to intÂernational law.바카라
While the China factor has been a driver in the India-US relationship going as far back as 1962, what would be deeply 바카라strategic바카라 for New Delhi is how to harmonise its complex engagement with both Washington and Beijing over the next few decades. A binÂary choice which casts India as a junior military partner of the US would be short-sighted. Yet India has to contend with an assertive Beijing that has been indifferent to India바카라s security concerns바카라hence, the critical nature of the defence partnership with the US.
Harmonising 바카라Make in India바카라 with the robust military supplies that the US is now providing will be both a challenge and opportunity for the Modi-Trump strategic bromance. And for both leaders, the manner in which they remain committed to the democratic principle that they have championed in public will be the core litmus test of the integrity and purpose that they can imbue to a strategic partnership that has truly global potential.
(Views are personal)
The author is director, Society For Policy Studies