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India-US Relations: Rahul and Modi Seek Meaning as US Elections Loom

India-US Relations: With the US elections approaching, both Rahul and Modi seek to redefine their influence within American politics and the Indian diaspora.

By Sanjay Kapoor
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India US Relations: Rahul and Modi

India-US Relations: Rahul and Modi Seek Meaning as US Elections Loom | Courtesy: Special arrangement

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India-US Relations: The Battle for Influence Between Rahul and Modi

In 1874, King David Kalakaua of Hawaii, then called the Sandwich Islands, came on a 91-day state visit to the United States looking at reciprocity in policies towards each other. Those were early days for a new nation when the US may have been perceived as a large island, but its influence was confined to its sprawling landmass, as traveling from one end to another took a long time. Now state guests do not come to the US for so long. They come and they go. Some may leave a mark, and some may not, but a state visit to the US was actively sought.

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In the past, when communication was limited, heads of state from India and elsewhere traveled to the US on a state visit once or never. The US was considered so powerful that, in diplomatic circles, there was a belief that those who can’t go to the US do not last long as heads of state.

Narendra Modi surely subscribes to this point of view, and he, therefore, wants to visit the US again and again. Unfazed by the fact that he was barred from entering the US after the Gujarat riots, he managed to surmount the challenge by becoming a PM.

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Ever since he became the PM in 2014, he has completed his 9th visit to Washington. Though he is considered to be the most pro-US PM ever, he is weighed down by India’s historical commitment to non-alignment, which has been rechristened as “strategic autonomy” by the present BJP government. To his credit, PM Modi has braved pressures from Washington to give up India’s traditional friendship with Russia, but no one in Washington thinks he is anything but a close ally.

During the time Narendra Modi was earning his spurs as a young BJP leader in the ’80s, he went on a long trip to the US under the International Visitor Leadership Program (IVLP). Thereafter, he traveled to the US quite a few times and leveraged the formidable network of those who believed in the RSS and Washington’s ability to support those who were aligned with their free-market, anti-Soviet Union policies. In those days, the US was obsessed with taking on the Soviet Union and its communist supporters in different parts of the world. From this standpoint, Modi, like other BJP leaders who went to the US, represented a perfect fit.

Brought up on the staple diet of anti-Congressism, Modi has been fighting the ghost of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, who recognised long years ago the importance of the US in spurring the development of countries in the Third World. In 1949, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru visited Washington as Prime Minister and conveyed to the leadership that he had a mind of his own. He received support from the US populace, but not from the leadership. He returned demeaned from the US, though he developed subsequently close ties with President Dwight D. Eisenhower. US President John F. Kennedy thought Nehru’s trip was the most difficult, though he had a good relationship with his wife, whom he hosted in Teen Murti Bhavan when she visited the country.

Since then, India-US relations have changed dramatically. Now no one talks about socialism, the public sector, or poverty. The conversation is more focused on technology, reining in China, and bringing bulky investments in various sectors. More rich Indians go to the US now than ever before, allowing for greater influence of the US on both our domestic and foreign policy. To his credit, PM Modi has sought to leverage this growing wealth among Indians to forge a powerful pressure group. He has tried to show that electorally, Indians count. This is all hogwash, as proved in the 2020 US elections. Modi held a “Howdy Modi” event that promised a “Donald Trump government,” obviously with the support of Indians. Trump came to grief thereafter.

Modi and India also lost their traditional bonhomie with the Democrats. This time around, Modi is not trying to be an electoral factor. During his latest trip, he did not meet Donald Trump, seemingly under foreign ministry advice, which invariably goes wrong. Despite playing it straight, Biden’s US has not made life easy for Prime Minister Modi. A US judicial court has summoned India’s National Security Advisor, Ajit Doval, and a few other officials for allegedly plotting the murder of an American citizen. India has also been criticised by the latest Freedom of Religion report for treating its Muslim and Christian minorities shabbily. Modi’s India is trying to brave these unhappy events that could set the course for the new administration next year, more so if the Democrats regain power. Due to these reasons, India would like Trump to come to power.

India-US Relations: The Rising Influence of Indian-Americans in US Elections

Electorally, the number of Indians may not be enough—just 1.35 percent of the total population—but they have begun to represent significant f

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