Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
International

US says it wants India to have good relations with China too

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Sep, 2014 08:46 AM
    Ahead of Chinese President Xi Jinping's visit to India, the US says it has a very broad relationship with India and wants New Delhi to have good relationships with all the countries in the region, including China.
     
    "We're all looking forward to welcoming Prime Minister (Narendra) Modi to Washington," State Department spokesperson Marie Harf told foreign media Monday when asked how the US viewed Xi's India visit ahead of Modi's upcoming US trip.
     
    Modi will have summit meetings with President Barack Obama Sep 29 and 30 and would have "a number of meetings, I'm sure, with my colleagues at the State Department as well", she said.
     
    "Our relationship with India really is a very broad one where we talk about a whole range of topics," Harf said when asked by a Chinese correspondent about US expectations about the bilateral meeting between Obama and Modi.
     
    "And I think that we want India to have good relationships with all the countries in the region, including China," she said.
     
    "This is a broad relationship we have with India in a whole host of areas: certainly security," she said.
     
    "I'm sure we'll talk a lot about security issues -- environmental issues, energy issues, economic issues."
     
    "And in a lot of these areas we have overlapping interests," Harf said.
     
    "So we certainly are welcoming the prime minister to Washington, have a full agenda, which I think we'll probably flesh out a little bit more as we get closer to his visit."
     
    "But suffice to say I think we will touch on a number of topics" including "Afghanistan, which obviously is important to a lot of people, but to the Indians. And I think that will certainly be a topic of conversation."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Ferguson Leaders Pledge Outreach, Urge Protesters To Stay Home To 'Allow Peace To Settle In'

    Ferguson Leaders Pledge Outreach, Urge Protesters To Stay Home To 'Allow Peace To Settle In'
    Ferguson's leaders urged residents Tuesday to stay home after dark to "allow peace to settle in" and pledged to reconnect with the predominantly black community in the St. Louis suburb where the fatal shooting of an unarmed black 18-year-old by a white police officer has sparked nightly clashes between protesters and law enforcement.

    Ferguson Leaders Pledge Outreach, Urge Protesters To Stay Home To 'Allow Peace To Settle In'

    Timeline of events following fatal shooting of Michael Brown in St. Louis suburb of Ferguson

    Timeline of events following fatal shooting of Michael Brown in St. Louis suburb of Ferguson
    FERGUSON, Mo. - A timeline of key events following the fatal police shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson, Missouri...

    Timeline of events following fatal shooting of Michael Brown in St. Louis suburb of Ferguson

    US terms cancellation of India-Pakistan talks 'unfortunate'

    US terms cancellation of India-Pakistan talks 'unfortunate'
    As India called off foreign secretary-level talks with Pakistan over its envoy's meeting with Kashmiri separatists, the US termed the cancellation "unfortunate"...

    US terms cancellation of India-Pakistan talks 'unfortunate'

    Police, protesters collide in Ferguson, a day after National Guard arrives in St. Louis suburb

    Police, protesters collide in Ferguson, a day after National Guard arrives in St. Louis suburb
    FERGUSON, Mo. - The National Guard arrived in Ferguson but kept its distance from the streets where protesters clashed again with police, as clouds of tear gas and smoke hung over...

    Police, protesters collide in Ferguson, a day after National Guard arrives in St. Louis suburb

    Anti-Government Protests, Including One Led By A Canadian, Cripple Pakistani Capital

    Anti-Government Protests, Including One Led By A Canadian, Cripple Pakistani Capital
    ISLAMABAD - Twin protests demanding the Pakistani government step down — one led by a Canadian — have wreaked havoc in the capital, Islamabad, where commuters must circumvent shipping containers and barbed wire to get to work, protesters knock on people's doors to use the bathroom, and garbage is piling up.

    Anti-Government Protests, Including One Led By A Canadian, Cripple Pakistani Capital

    Obama administration wants cars to talk to each other, saying the technology will save lives

    Obama administration wants cars to talk to each other, saying the technology will save lives
    WASHINGTON - The Obama administration said Monday it is taking a first step toward requiring that future cars and light trucks be equipped with technology that enables them to warn each other of potential danger in time to avoid collisions.

    Obama administration wants cars to talk to each other, saying the technology will save lives