Why US Expert Says Stronger India Ties Are Key to Countering China

A leading American foreign policy expert is making the case for stronger India-US cooperation. Walter Russell Mead believes closer ties between the two nations are essential to counter China's growing influence. He argues that both countries share aligned interests in the region, particularly regarding China's efforts to pull neighboring countries into its orbit. The expert warns that failure to strengthen this relationship would significantly complicate future US foreign policy.

Key Points: Walter Russell Mead Advocates Stronger India-US Ties Against China

  • Close US-India tech ties counter Chinese strategic domain leadership
  • Regional interests align against China's influence in neighboring countries
  • Pakistan's troubling nuclear and terrorism record limits US partnership
  • Failure to resolve India-US issues would stain Trump presidency record
3 min read

Stronger India-US ties key to counter China, says leading American expert

Leading American expert Walter Russell Mead argues deepening India-US relations crucial to counter China's influence and build future defensive coalition amid regional tensions.

"India still wants to work with US - Walter Russell Mead"

Washington, Oct 21

Walter Russell Mead, a leading expert on American foreign policy, has advocated for stronger India-US ties, terming deepening ties with India an “important way” to counter China in the short term and “build a strong defensive coalition for the future.”

In an article titled ‘India still wants to work with Trump’ in the Wall Street Journal, Mead, who is a Distinguished Fellow at the Hudson Institute, believed that despite the recent tensions, “the Trump administration remains well-positioned to take US-India relations to a new level.”

“On tech policy, building close ties between the US, India, and friendly countries like Israel and Japan offers a path to countering the Chinese push for leadership in a strategic domain. On regional issues, American and Indian interests are broadly aligned. Chinese efforts to pull countries like Nepal, Bangladesh, Myanmar, the Maldives and Sri Lanka into its orbit threaten both India and the US,” he elaborated.

Mead argued that the current bonhomie between the Trump administration and Pakistan isn’t likely to “attract much long-term love from Mr Trump” as Islamabad has a “troubling record” on nuclear proliferation and terrorism.

“In the Cold War, America valued Pakistan as an ally against the Soviet Union. But in the emerging cold war with China, Pakistan has chosen Beijing. It has a troubling record of supporting illegal nuclear proliferation, and its hands are far from clean when it comes to supporting terrorism,” he added.

In early October, Mead led a US delegation to India and met Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other senior Ministers like Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister Hardeep Singh Puri.

After meeting with the delegation, Prime Minister Modi posted on X. “Glad to interact with a US delegation of thinkers and business leaders led by Mr Walter Russell Mead. Value their contribution in strengthening India-US ties and advancing our partnership for global peace, progress and prosperity.”

Reflecting on his recent visit, Mead wrote that most Indians hope the new US Ambassador to India, Sergio Gor’s mission will be a "success."

“In meetings with Indian government, opposition and business leaders from Prime Minister Narendra Modi on down, your Global View columnist heard a consistent message. India’s political and business leaders still want to work with the US,” he said.

In the last few weeks, the India-US relationship has stabilised after months of sustained tensions. Trade talks between the two sides are underway to finalise the first tranche of an agreement soon.

Mead also asserted that a failure to resolve the pending issues in India-US ties would be an “indelible blot” on the Trump presidency.

“An improved US-India relationship would be one of the president’s most important accomplishments. Failure would be an indelible blot on his record and vastly complicate life for his successors. Let’s all hope Mr Trump finds a way,” he signed off.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While I welcome stronger ties, we must be cautious. America has been an unreliable partner historically - remember how they abandoned us during the 1971 war? We need strategic autonomy alongside cooperation.
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Arjun K
Good to see recognition of Pakistan's double game. They play both sides while supporting terrorism against India. Hope US finally sees through their facade. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
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Sarah B
As someone working in tech sector, India-US collaboration in technology is the way forward. We can build alternatives to Chinese tech dominance together. This benefits both our economies.
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Nikhil C
The timing is perfect. With China becoming increasingly aggressive on our borders, we need strong allies. But let's ensure this partnership is based on mutual respect, not just strategic convenience.
K
Kavya N
Hope this leads to more job opportunities and technology transfer. Indian students in US also need better visa policies. The relationship should benefit common people, not just governments.

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