Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
International

US Christens PM Modi’s Vision Of Indo-US Ties As 'Modi Doctrine

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Jun, 2016 12:17 PM
    Describing the just concluded US visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi as “historic”, the Obama administration has christened his vision of Indo-US ties that has overcome the “hesitations of history” and working for the betterment of the global good as “Modi Doctrine”.
     
    “The most important outcome in my mind of the visit this week and of the years of effort that preceded it is the clear and compelling vision that was laid out by Prime Minister Modi before joint session of the US Congress,” Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Nisha Desai Biswal said.
     
    “This vision which I have come to call The Modi Doctrine laid out a foreign policy that overcomes the hesitations of history and embraces the convergence between our two countries and our shared interests,” Biswal told a Washington audience.
     
    Biswal, the Obama Administration’s point person for South and Central Asia, said this at a discussion on ‘Security and Strategic Outcomes from the Modi Visit’ organised on Thursday here jointly by the Heritage Foundation–an American think-tank–and India Foundation, a New Delhi-based think-tank.
     
    Modi, she said, in his speech furthered his bold vision of India-US partnership that can anchor peace, prosperity and stability from Asia to Africa, from the Indian Ocean to the Pacific and help ensure the security of the sea lanes of commerce and freedom of navigation on the seas.
     
     
     
    “This Modi Doctrine notes that the absence of an agreed security architecture creates uncertainty in Asia and reiterates India’s adherence to and calls for others’ support for international laws and norms,” Biswal said.
     
    India, she said, is now key element of Obama Administration’s rebalance to Asia, a strategy which recognises that America’s security and prosperity increasingly depend on the security and prosperity of the Indo-Pacific.
     
    “The joint strategic vision which was issued last year laid out our mutual goals and interests in the Indo-Pacific and across the global commons. We are now implementing a road map that sets out a path of cooperation to achieve those goals and protect those interests,” Biswal said.
     
    In his remarks, US Ambassador to India Richard Verma said the US welcomed and shared the Prime Minister’s vision.
     
    “We have made a clear and strategic choice to support India’s transition to become, as Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar has articulated, a leading power. Our actions, as security partners in every sense of the word, speak to this endeavor,” he said.
     
     
    “We envision India as a leading power that can uphold international norms and support what Defence Secretary Carter called last week a “principled security network” in Asia. A leading power that can grow its economy while at the same time demonstrating global leadership on clean energy and climate,” he said.
     
     
    “And a leading power that joins likeminded partners to safeguard the global commons. Realising this vision will require diligent work on part of the bureaucracies in both Washington and Delhi and resilience to overcome obstacles that may arise,” Verma said.
     
    Indian Ambassador to the US Arun K Singh described the Prime Minister’s visit as “historic”.
     
    “There is a need step-by-step to build confidence and to build the habit of working together. That calls for regular meetings, including at the highest levels,” Singh said.
     
     
    On the political side, he said: “We are finding that even though we may not agree on every aspect there is an increasing convergence in our interest and assessment of issues.” In the Prime Minister’s speech to the Congress there was a reflection of the fact that this growing convergence is in the interest of India and the US. The areas of convergence are in the field of terrorism, situation in the Indian Ocean, Asia Pacific region, cyber issues.
     
    Singh said the two countries had recognised that clean energy would be an important area of partnership.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    British Royal Couple To Be Eagerly Watched During India Trip

    British Royal Couple To Be Eagerly Watched During India Trip
    When the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge arrive in India on what's being called their most ambitious tour to date, they'll encounter starry-eyed giddiness along with a hint of nostalgia harkening to a 1992 visit by Princess Diana.

    British Royal Couple To Be Eagerly Watched During India Trip

    'Pakistan Lying About Indian Arrested In Balochistan'

    'Pakistan Lying About Indian Arrested In Balochistan'
    A woman Baloch leader has said that Kulbushan Jhadav, arrested by Pakistan on charges of being an Indian spy, is not one because there is no Indian involvement in the restive western province of Balochistan.

    'Pakistan Lying About Indian Arrested In Balochistan'

    Poor Organization: How Trump Could Win Primaries, Lose Presidential Nomination

    WASHINGTON — An embarrassing string of news illustrates how poor organization could cost Donald Trump the Republican presidential nomination to a rival badly outmanoeuvring him.

    Poor Organization: How Trump Could Win Primaries, Lose Presidential Nomination

    Donald Trump Cries Foul Over Process As He Presses Campaign Forward

    Donald Trump Cries Foul Over Process As He Presses Campaign Forward
    Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump is blasting the way the country chooses presidential party nominees as "corrupt" and "crooked" as he grapples with the potential of a contested convention that he risks losing.

    Donald Trump Cries Foul Over Process As He Presses Campaign Forward

    Two Indian Medical Students Stabbed To Death In Ukraine

    Two Indian Medical Students Stabbed To Death In Ukraine
    Three Indian students in Uzhgorod Medical College in Ukraine were stabbed by three Ukrainian nationals

    Two Indian Medical Students Stabbed To Death In Ukraine

    South African President's Son Resigns From Gupta-Run Company

    South African President's Son Resigns From Gupta-Run Company
    South African President Jacob Zuma's son Duduzane Zuma has resigned as the non-executive director of Oakbay Resources and Energy owned by the Indian Gupta family

    South African President's Son Resigns From Gupta-Run Company