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The Rediff Special/

The American Plan

Washington is keen to strengthen Indo-US ties. But is Gujral interested?

The American gaze is resting on India these days with positive signals flowing fast and thick. Engagements is the buzz word, 'strategic dialogue' its vehicle and New Delhi can barely keep up with the crush of high-level US visitors coming to make it happen.

The second Clinton administration has made a public commitment to try to engage India and remove the roller-coaster aspect of the relationship which puts everything into reverse gear the moment difference occur. There is recognition that the old US approach of always 'telling' India what they should do has failed and it is time to try a new tack. The superpower-in-a-hurry is willing to give New Delhi some time to respond and make a go of things.

The meeting between I K Gujral and Bill Clinton went well although as an US official described it: ''The two are not about to become bosom buddies." They can call each other on the phone if need be and that is a start. But the big question remains: will Gujral take time off from his rallying cries for the barely-breathing non-aligned movement and his misplaced enthusiasm for anachronistic alliances to invest some political energy into the Indo-US dialogue? The realists in Washington are not so sure, given the PM's penchant for sharp rhetoric and a surprising lack of tact on foreign policy issues.

US officials watched with consternation the recent public spat between India and Britain over Kashmir and wondered if New Delhi and Gujral were 'over-reacting' a bit. So adept are the Americans now on handling the Kashmir question that they repeat the policy of non-interference like a 'mantra'.

''The general mood towards India is very positive,'' said one state department official. If both play their cards right, the India-US relationship could emulate the US-China dialogue which has been difficult at times but never broken because of the varied aspects of bilateral ties. There is a slow shift from Pakistan to India within the state department and just as Washington seems willing to ignore friction with New Delhi, it seems to be heaping snubs on Islamabad.

Can Gujral seize the initiative is the million dollar question. True, the Gujral doctrine made the Americans sit up and take notice of India and South Asia. True, the Americans have at last begun to recognise the vast potential hidden in India's large markets and its crucial geo-political situation in Asia. True, Robin Raphel is gone and Karl Inderfurth is the welcome new face of US policy on South Asia and he is trying hard not to be a Raphel. But nothing real will happen unless Gujral decides to make it happen.

New Delhi's attitude so far has been one of uncreative inactivity. Whether 14 parties make that inevitable or Gujral's heart is simply not there in forging a new path is debatable. Right now the White House and the state department are taking their chances with him but goodwill will run dry unless some counter-proposals can be seen from the PMO. And talk of India playing a global role will quickly begin to sound phoney unless New Delhi can exploit the chances in front of it.

Gujral's stream-of-consciousness speech on Indian foreign policy in August created a stir in Washington for the pointers it gave to the PM's mind. Some were bewildered at the stridency of his thoughts, other wondered if he were still India's ambassador to Russia. He talked about standing by friends, but he doesn't seem to have noticed that 'friends' are busy striking their own deals and unwilling to support New Delhi on major issues.

For many US officials, Gujral seems to live in the past and hasn't quite made the transition to the new order. Other attribute these 'Third World' lectures to the compulsions of having to survive with the support of Left parties. But irritation is creeping in the PM's tendency to deliver a whack against the West at every opportunity.

''If he puts half the effort that he does in reviving NAM into the Indo-US dialogue, things would change. Younger Indians don't care a fig about NAM,'' said one US official. ''He comes to New York via Tanzania only so that the US won't be his first stop." Gujral's apparent 'reluctance' to change his dates to accommodate Clinton in New York was duly noted, but the Americans refrained from making a statement. They recognise that he is too busy 'surviving' as PM to spend precious political capital on foreign policy.

One area where they await some movement is the stalled Indo-Pak dialogue, one of the most important foreign policy initiatives in South Asia. US officials are carefully watching its (lack of) progress, but staying out of the talks. ''The foreign secretary can't fix the Indo-Pak dialogue. There has to be some political push from above,'' said one South Asia watcher.

On the other major frontier-trade-there is dissonance in New Delhi. The fiasco unfolding at the WTO has once again shown the UF government is anything but united.

Similarly, in the area of defence co-operation, India once again has shown extreme reluctance to even meet for the regular annual encounters agreed to during former defence secretary William Perry's visit to India in 1995. The Pentagon is wondering whether New Delhi is interested at all in these talks aimed at increasing military-to-military co-operation.

Seema Sirohi/Washington

Kind courtesy: Sunday magazine

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