Trump’s India visit will be delightful spectacle, utterly successful: Experts - watsupptoday.com
Trump’s India visit will be delightful spectacle, utterly successful: Experts
Posted 15 Feb 2020 01:22 PM

Source: Tribune

President Donald Trump’s upcoming visit to India will be a “delightful spectacle” and “utterly successful” by many measures, eminent American experts on South Asia issues have said.

Trump, along with the First Lady, is scheduled to visit Ahmedabad and New Delhi on February 24 and 25, according to a White House announcement early this week.

This would be the President’s first bilateral visit in the third decade of the 21st century and also the first after his acquittal by the Senate in the impeachment trial.

“I think the Trump visit will be a delightful spectacle and utterly successful by many measures,” Ashley Tellis, who is Tata Chair for Strategic Affairs and a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told PTI.

Trump is expected to get a roaring welcome by lakhs of people when he arrives in Ahmedabad, Gujarat.

He, along with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, is expected to deliver a historic speech in front of thousands of people at the newly-built Motera stadium, the largest cricket stadium in the world.

One of the most prominent experts on India, Tellis, however, noted that at the moment, he was unsure whether the trade disputes between the two countries would be resolved.

Senior government officials are tightlipped on the issue, except for making comments in recent past that the two countries are on the verge of a trade package or a mini trade deal.

“Although the GOI (Government of India) has claimed that both sides are close to a deal, I don’t think there has been real progress — certainly none that will satisfy USTR (US Trade Representatives). We might get some progress on defence sales, but that’s uncertain too,” Tellis noted.

“Still, both the countries have done well where defence cooperation is concerned under the Trump administration, which is more than can be said for many other US relationships with its allies. I expect this will further deepen in the years ahead,” he said in response to a question.

“Even if the visit then produces only good optics, I’ll take it all the same if it strengthens Trump’s perceptions of India as a friend. Given his mercurial personality and policies, that is not a small achievement — and I think PM Modi understands that well,” Tellis said.

Rick Rossow, Wadhwani Chair in US India Policy Studies at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, hoped that the two leaders could finalise an agreement to remove some of the recent trade irritants.

“My own view is that India keeps digging a deeper hole in triggering trade tensions--notably through steep customs hikes in its February 1 Union Budget. So, a short-term deal may simply be a reprieve in our trade fight,” Rossow told PTI.

Observing that Trump will be the fourth consecutive president to travel to India, and the second consecutive president to visit India in his first term in office, Rossow was of the view that a visit to India is no longer a significant event.

“India is a large and growing market for exports and an emerging security partner for the United States... particularly important as we consider options to further draw down our forces in Afghanistan and seek a network of burden-sharing in areas where China’s rise poses a threat. India will be important on both counts,” Rossow told PTI.

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