Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
International

9/11 And Y2k Brought India, US Together In Post-Cold War Era: Indian Envoy Navtej Sarna

IANS, 15 May, 2018 12:51 PM

    Two major developments -- the 9/11 terror attack and Y2K bug -- brought India and the US together in a post-Cold War era, India's envoy to the US has said.

     

    As India faced US sanctions in the aftermath of the Pokhran nuclear tests, the two countries were initiating dialogue in the years thereafter, the Indian Ambassador to the US, Navtej Singh Sarna, told a Washington audience.

     

    Pokhran-II was the series of five nuclear bomb tests conducted by India at the Indian Army's Pokhran Test Range in May 1998. It was the second Indian nuclear test; the first test, code-named Smiling Buddha, was conducted in May 1974.

     

    "Those were the days of Y2K and suddenly Indian computer engineers began to solve problems and actually set things right all over the United States. And we went up in respect. The diaspora had become about one and a half million and was beginning to be heard not only in companies and in hospitals but also on the Hill. So that's where it all began," Mr Sarna said at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).

     
     

    The Y2K bug or the Millennium bug was a problem in the coding of computerised systems that was projected to create havoc in computers and computer networks around the world at the beginning of the year 2000.

     

    "Then somehow, a couple of years later the most significant thing happened, a tragic event actually, but it brought us together was 9/11 because we had known terrorism and cross-border terrorism and the evils of terrorism for the last three decades before that.

     

    "But in a very unfortunate way terrorism was brought transatlantic and hit America at home. I think the kind of understanding and the bonding that created on that has been a very important factor in bringing the two countries together, Mr Sarna said.

     

    The Indian Ambassador was speaking at an event titled 'US & India: From Estranged Democracies to Natural Allies' organised yesterday by the CSIS to mark the 20th anniversary of the Indian nuclear tests.

     

    Mr Sarna said now India is at a point when Prime Minister (Narendra) Modi can stand up in the joint address to the US Congress as he did in 2016 and say that the two countries have overcome the hesitations of history.

     
     

    "We are at a time when President Trump can declare that the relationship between India and US has never been stronger, has never been better; that we can be designated as a major defense partner by the United States; that we can be actually conducting more military exercises with the United States done with any other country;" he said.

     

    "(We are at a time when) we can be proclaimed from this stage itself as the other Asia bookended of stability of the Indo-Pacific," he said.

     

    India is now seen as a huge market; middle class will be half a billion strong by 2025. India is as a source of professionals as a source of investment and so many other things.

     

    "And a four million strong Indian-American community getting stronger in political terms, besides the economic terms, he said.

     

    In addition to that is the 70-year-old factor that both are democracies; that there is a multi-religious, multi-ethnic, multilingual society which sees the world in the same way as America does, Mr Sarna said.

     

    Noting that objective changes did take place, Mr Sarna said India unleashed its potential through economic reforms and other changes and global conditions changed to help this.

     
     

    "Fundamentally what changed was that we opened our minds to each other. That we began to trust each other and not to second guess each other. That we actually began to talk to each other rather than talk at or talk past each other, which we often had done in the past, Mr Sarna said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    British MP, Indian Community Groups Demand Action Over Indian Flag Desecration In UK

    British MP, Indian Community Groups Demand Action Over Indian Flag Desecration In UK
    The British government is under growing pressure to take action against protesters behind the desecration of the Indian flag at Parliament Square in London during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's UK visit last week.

    British MP, Indian Community Groups Demand Action Over Indian Flag Desecration In UK

    Kate Middleton Gives Birth To Baby Boy

    Kate Middleton Gives Birth To Baby Boy
    The baby was born at 1101 hrs local time, Kensington Palace said in a statement today. This is their third child.

    Kate Middleton Gives Birth To Baby Boy

    20 Indian Americans In Race For US Congress Raise Surprisingly Large Sum

    20 Indian Americans In Race For US Congress Raise Surprisingly Large Sum
    All the 20 Indian-American candidates in the Congressional elections this year have more than $11 million in all for the rest part of the campaign.

    20 Indian Americans In Race For US Congress Raise Surprisingly Large Sum

    After Modi's 'Terror Export Factory' Remark, China Backs Pakistan

    After Modi's 'Terror Export Factory' Remark, China Backs Pakistan
    China on Friday backed its all-weather ally Pakistan and called on the international community to support its counter-terrorism efforts after Prime Minister Narendra Modi described the neighbouring country as a “terror export factory”.

    After Modi's 'Terror Export Factory' Remark, China Backs Pakistan

    Queen Intervenes In Succession Plan, ‘Wishes’ Prince Charles Is Heir

    Queen Intervenes In Succession Plan, ‘Wishes’ Prince Charles Is Heir
    91-year-old Queen Elizabeth II, the Head of the Commonwealth, said it was her "sincere wish" that Prince Charles takes over "one day", as she opened the two-day Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in London, also attended by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    Queen Intervenes In Succession Plan, ‘Wishes’ Prince Charles Is Heir

    Turban Day In Times Square Gives Sikh Faith Respect That It Deserves

    Turban Day In Times Square Gives Sikh Faith Respect That It Deserves
    US Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney Commends The Celebration Of The Sikh Culture Through The Annual Turban Day

    Turban Day In Times Square Gives Sikh Faith Respect That It Deserves