Obama set visit to India


Afp June 04, 2010

WASHINGTON: US President Barack Obama set a visit to India in November as he pledged to push forward ties between the world’s two largest democracies as part of his busy diplomatic agenda.

The US also offered full support for India’s role in Afghanistan after high-level talks in Washington, despite Pakistan’s lingering suspicions about its historic rival’s influence in the war-torn country.

Relations between India and the US have steadily warmed over the past decade.

But many Indian policymakers have remained anxious about Obama, who has set an early priority on broadening cooperation with Asia’s other rising power China and on supporting Pakistan in fighting Islamic extremism.

In a symbolic show of his commitment, Obama journeyed to the State Department for the first time since the days after his inauguration to address a reception for the “strategic dialogue” between the United States and India.

“The relationship between the United States and India is fundamentally unique,” Obama told a reception of senior officials and members of the increasingly influential Indian-American community.

“We share common interests, but we also share common values, as the world’s two largest democracies, and as countries that are rich in diversity, with deep and close connections among our people.”

Obama did not give an exact date for his first presidential visit to India other than to indicate it would take place in “early November.”

He is unlikely to travel abroad close to the November 2 mid-term elections, in which his Democratic Party is fighting to retain control of the Congress.

After the talks, the United States and India pledged to “regularly consult” on Afghanistan.

“It is in our common interest that the people of Afghanistan succeed in their reconstruction and development efforts without outside interference, in an atmosphere free from violence and extremism,” said a joint statement by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna.

“Afghanistan’s success is vital for the security and stability of the region.”

At a joint news conference, Clinton thanked India for its “generous contributions” in Afghanistan.

Islamabad has voiced concern about India’s role in Afghanistan.

Obama has supported a five-year, 7.5 billion-dollar aid package that aims to build the economy and democratic institutions in hopes of chipping away at Islamic extremists’ allure in the nuclear-armed nation.

India has pressed the US to turn up pressure on Pakistan to rein in extremists such as Lashkar-e-Taiba, a group implicated in the bloody 2008 siege of Mumbai.

“The trust deficit in relations between India and Pakistan needs to be specifically addressed. The continuing threat of terrorism is a cause of great concern for us in India,” Krishna said. Obama last year welcomed Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh for the honour of the first state dinner of his presidency.

But if his visit goes on schedule to India, Obama would have headed there a full year earlier than to China, with which his administration has pledged broader ties.

Published in the Express Tribune, June 5th, 2010.

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