logo
India is way too eager to embrace Trump's America

India is way too eager to embrace Trump's America

Russia Today20-02-2025

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's working visit to the White House in Washington on February 13 sends a message that India is in a hurry to align with the United States, something it shrewdly avoided over the 75 years since liberation from British colonial rule. It stems from India's quest to carve out a place in the sun, a dream assiduously fostered by the Hindu nationalist government, which the country's elites largely have come to equate with a geopolitical alliance with the US.
Of course, there is the flip side to it insofar as getting closer to the sun has its inherent dangers; the moral of the Icarus myth of ancient Greeks.
The Trump administration hallmark seems to combine a religious zeal with a frankly colonial approach, which morally, politically and geopolitically, should be anathema to Indian sensibilities.
A realistic assessment is lacking among Indian elites about the international situation, almost entirely attributable to their delusional thinking that the US can help India become a superpower to match China.
Thus, a talking point for Modi with Trump might well have been the revival of the moribund India-Middle East Economic Corridor (IMEC) to rival China's belt and road initiative. But then Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu's blurted out that Saudi Arabia could be an ideal location to resettle Palestinians evicted from Gaza. Riyadh, which could have been the IMEC's main financier, went ballistic.
India has not uttered a word about the US-Israeli plans for ethnic cleansing in Gaza or Trump's bizarre idea of taking over Gaza and transforming into the Riviera of the Middle East — something that has drawn criticism from the rest of the world — and support for the Abraham Accords. It's the unipolar predicament, stupid!
Trump is unceremoniously cutting loose his European allies and expects them to fend for themselves, following the NATO's defeat in Ukraine. This vista arose when the new US Defence Secretary Peter Hegseth made his maiden appearance at the NATO defence ministers meeting in Brussels last week.
When asked about US commitment to Article 5 of NATO charter on collective security, Hegseth instead drew attention to Article 3 on the principle of resilience, which says, 'In order more effectively to achieve the objectives of this (NATO) Treaty, the Parties, separately and jointly, by means of continuous and effective self-help and mutual aid, will maintain and develop their individual and collective capacity to resist armed attack.'
What took the breath away was the plain speaking a couple of days later by Vice President J.D. Vance in his fiery remarks at the Munich Security Conference. He laid bare the collapse of the transatlantic alliance and signalled that the dispute between Europe and the US is no longer to do with sharing military burdens, or a perceived threat from Russia, but something more fundamental about Europe's society and political economy.
The greatest danger to Europe, Vance underscored, was not Russia, not China, but a 'danger from within'. Vance portrayed a continent that has lost its way, and stopped just short of warning that the moral purpose of NATO itself is falling away.
Indeed, the implications for Ukraine are enormous. It was left to Vladimir Zelensky to later lament at the Munich event: 'The US vice-president made it clear: decades of the old relationship between Europe and America are ending. From now on, things will be different, and Europe needs to adjust to that.'
How come when history is unfolding, the Indian elites behave like lotus eaters, myopic about the magnitude of US retrenchment? The malaise is prevalent even among India's elites in Congressan and its opposition party. The elites are oblivious to the geopolitical reality, that war is not an option for the US vis-a-vis China (if it ever was.) Basically, Trump is intensely conscious that the US should not exhaust its resources by waging wars and, therefore, must avoid making hollow promises to leaders like Modi or Netanyahu.
In fact, at the joint press conference with Modi on Friday, Trump openly called for peace between India and China and offered to help. Gone are the days when Americans would encourage India to show the middle finger to China across the Himalayas and the elites in India would get ecstatic. Trump also never once mentioned Quad group comprising Australia, India, Japan, and the US.
China's role as the economic engine that drives the world economy seems to weigh on Trump's mind 24/7. Whereas the US ended 2024 with a trade deficit exceeding one trillion dollars, China chalked up a trade surplus of the same amount! Trump openly acknowledged the global tech power shift following the arrival of China's AI model DeepSeek.
The bottom line is that Trump played Modi nicely by praising him as a 'tough negotiator' while also holding in suspended animation the weaponisation of 'reciprocal tariffs' like a sword of Damocles, to ensure India's good behaviour. And he ended up selling to India an additional $10 billion of energy annually, generating an export business of anywhere between $15bn to $25bn a year.
Trump sees the Modi government as a milch cow for lubricating America First and coaxes it to buy more weaponry from American vendors, including F-35 stealth fighters. According to a report last February by the US Government Accountability Office, it would take the Modi government at least $1.7 Trillion to purchase, operate and sustain F-35's through the aircraft's 66-year life cycle, due to high maintenance costs and developmental delays. In geopolitical terms, the purchase of such a futuristic weapon system virtually 'locks in' India as a US ally.
Where is it that Indian vulnerability lies is anybody's guess. Modi's visit to the US in such unseemly haste to insert India into Trump's foreign policy toolbox exposes clueless policymakers in Delhi in a dynamic global geopolitical environment.
A strategy of multi-alignment anchored firmly on India's time-tested relationship with Russia is an available option that suits India's needs,preserves its strategic autonomy and independent foreign policy. And that when the Trump administration too intends to 'potentially work together (with Russia).'
But at the joint press conference with Trump, Modi preferred to harmonise with the US stance on the Ukraine war, he robustly asserted India's distance from Moscow and equidistance vis-a-vis Moscow and Kiev, and he went on to echo Trump's mantra of an immediate ceasefire for vicarious reasons in the American interest.
What was the need to flaunt such eagerness when a peace settlement on Russia's terms is a plausible outcome, it appears, and is something Trump himself may have come to accept? Indeed, the paradox is, a nadir has been reached in the Indian elites' unipolar predicament at a juncture when even the Trump administration is getting accustomed to the growing signs of multipolarity in the world order, which renders obsolete the cold war style 'bloc mentality'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Serbia completely stops all ammo exports
Serbia completely stops all ammo exports

Russia Today

time3 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Serbia completely stops all ammo exports

Serbia has temporarily halted all ammunition exports and will focus on replenishing its domestic stockpiles, President Aleksandar Vucic announced on Monday. The move comes in response to Russian accusations that Belgrade has been secretly supplying arms to Ukraine. The president made the remarks following a meeting of the extended board of Serbia's General Staff. Speaking to local media, Vucic said the country has 'now stopped literally everything and [is] sending it to our army.' Belgrade is seeking new markets for its military production, Vučić noted, adding that he would not deprive some 150,000 Serbs – military plant workers and their families – of their livelihoods. However, Serbia will tighten its export rules, and any overseas shipments will now require special approval, he said. 'It will no longer be the case that permission is given by two ministers and the goods flow smoothly. We'll see what will happen in the future in accordance with the interests of Serbia,' Vucic stressed. The announcement came after Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) accused Serbia of covertly sending munitions to Ukraine, despite Belgrade's assertion of neutrality in the conflict and traditionally strong ties with Moscow. 'The ammunition produced at Serbian defense plants, primarily for heavy long-range systems, is sent to NATO countries in the interests of Ukraine in the form of full assembly kits. This allows Kiev to formally receive military products that are no longer Serbian but assembled at defense factories in Western countries,' the SVR said. A similar accusation was made by the SVR in late May, when the agency alleged that Serbian companies had covertly supplied around 100,000 munitions for multiple rocket launchers and one million small arms rounds to Ukraine. The ammunition was reportedly funneled through various countries and accompanied by falsified end-user certificates. At the time, Vučić denied the existence of any direct contracts with Kiev, noting that Serbian law prohibits arms sales to countries at war. He blamed third countries for possibly redirecting shipments to Ukraine and pledged to crack down on any attempts to circumvent Serbia's export restrictions.

Germany asking US for Europe troop withdrawal ‘roadmap'
Germany asking US for Europe troop withdrawal ‘roadmap'

Russia Today

time8 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Germany asking US for Europe troop withdrawal ‘roadmap'

German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius has repeatedly asked US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to provide a 'roadmap' for US troop withdrawal from Europe, Financial Times has said, citing three anonymous sources 'briefed on their discussions.' Since taking office in January, US President Donald Trump has repeatedly accused European NATO members of failing to equitably share the burden of defense spending. His administration has also suggested the US could reduce its military footprint on the continent in the coming years, as its geopolitical focus increasingly shifts toward the Asia-Pacific region. In a piece on Monday, FT reported that ahead of a NATO summit in The Hague slated for June 24, European leaders have been preoccupied with Washington's troop drawdown plans. The fact that the US has yet to provide details has contributed to the concerns, the publication reported, citing unnamed sources. According to the outlet, in recent months Pistorius 'has pushed Hegseth, his US counterpart, to provide a 'road map' for a US pullback from Europe.' FT quoted an anonymous senior German official as explaining that 'we all have trauma from Afghanistan,' referring to the botched withdrawal of US troops there in 2021. Germany's attempts have, however, reportedly come in for criticism from other members of NATO, supposedly wary that Berlin might unwittingly boost Trump's case for a withdrawal of US forces. Another source cited by the publication described the somewhat schizophrenic dilemma faced by European leaders as follows: 'Engage with the Americans like hell to keep them as close as possible, while at the same time preparing as fast as we can for them to walk away.' Giuseppe Spatafora, an analyst at the EU Institute for Security Studies, told FT that 'European allies in Nato may fear that they could set in motion the very outcome they seek to avoid.' The piece quoted an unnamed French diplomat as similarly insisting that 'we [must] do nothing that would encourage the Americans to leave, because that's not in our interest.' Carlo Masala, a professor of international politics at Bundeswehr University in Munich, concluded that at present 'all the Europeans are looking at the US like the rabbit looks at the snake… hoping that the snake won't bite them.'

Trump is not ‘dumb' like past US leaders
Trump is not ‘dumb' like past US leaders

Russia Today

time11 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Trump is not ‘dumb' like past US leaders

US Vice President J.D. Vance has pushed back against comparisons between his country's airstrikes on Iran and previous American wars in the Middle East, claiming that this time Washington's actions are truly limited and rooted in national security objectives – not a drive for regime change. In an interview with NBC's Meet the Press on Sunday, Vance emphasized that 'we're not at war with Iran – we're at war with Iran's nuclear program,' describing the overnight strike as 'a very precise, very surgical' operation that allegedly dismantled Tehran's nuclear capabilities. Responding to concerns that the United States could be drawn into another prolonged conflict, Vance said the difference lies in leadership. 'I certainly empathize with Americans who are exhausted after 25 years of foreign entanglements in the Middle East,' he said. But the difference is that back then we had dumb presidents, and now we have a president who actually knows how to accomplish America's national security objectives. 'We have no interest in a protracted conflict. We have no interest in boots on the ground,' he added. Vance further insisted that the United States is not seeking to topple the Iranian government. 'Our view has been very clear that we don't want a regime change,' he said. 'We do not want to protract this or build this out any more than it's already been built out.' However, President Trump appeared to leave the door open to regime change in Tehran in a post on Truth Social later in the day. 'It's not politically correct to use the term, 'Regime Change,' but if the current Iranian regime is unable to MAKE IRAN GREAT AGAIN, why wouldn't there be a regime change??? MIGA!!!' he wrote. Vance also echoed Trump's repeated warnings to Tehran against retaliation in any form, calling it 'the stupidest thing in the world,' and reaffirming that the US would respond with 'overwhelming force' if American personnel were targeted. Trump has faced criticism from lawmakers over the lack of congressional authorization, but Vance defended the legality of the strike, arguing that the president has the authority to prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. Moscow has criticized the Iranian WMD claim, drawing comparisons to the justification used by then-US Secretary of State Colin Powell in the lead-up to the 2003 Iraq invasion. 'Many today feel a strong sense of déjà vu,' Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia told the UN Security Council on Sunday. 'The current situation is essentially no different: we are once again being urged to believe in fairy tales in order to once again bring suffering to millions of people living in the Middle East.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store