New bilateral investment model: 2-yr local remedy window, no MFN clause, Pg3
US-India 'special relationship' concludes, replaced by transactional ties as Washington re-evaluates India's strategic utility in a changing global order.
The "special relationship" between India and the United States has concluded, transitioning to a more transactional and modest engagement.
This shift is attributed to changes in America's geopolitical priorities and its reassessment of India's role in global challenges.
The US no longer views India as a primary strategic balancer against China or a significant partner in countering Russia or stabilizing the Gulf region.
India's neutrality in the Ukraine conflict and its continued Russian oil purchases diverged from US expectations.
The US now primarily sees India as a market for its products, investments, and arms, rather than a power to be strengthened.
The new US-China challenge focuses on economic and technological competition (commerce, chips, AI, critical minerals), areas where India is not considered a crucial player.
Detailed Insights:
For 30 years, India sought US support for strategic balance against China, counter-terrorism, market access, skilled professionals, and military equipment.
Historically, the US viewed India as a strategic partner to balance China, combat terrorism, and serve as a market and source of talent.
America's changed outlook stems from its evolving geopolitical strategy to contain Russia in Europe, Islamic radicalism in the Gulf, and China in Asia.
The US had hoped India would act as a diplomatic brake on Russia, a force for stability in the Gulf, and a balancer against China.
India's economic growth of 6-7 percent annually did not close the absolute GDP gap with China, limiting its perceived balancing role.
In the Indo-Pacific, India's aversion to a common front against China within the Quad led other members to deepen ties among themselves.
During the US-Iran deal negotiations, Pakistan was seen by the Trump administration as a more effective intermediary than India due to its influence in the region.
The US now prioritizes economic and technological competition with China over traditional security concerns like Taiwan, where India's role is deemed limited.
Key Concepts Involved:
Transactionalism: A foreign policy approach focused on specific, mutually beneficial deals rather than broad, long-term strategic alliances.
Quad: A strategic dialogue between Australia, India, Japan, and the United States aimed at promoting a free, open, prosperous, and inclusive Indo-Pacific region.
LEMOA (Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement): A foundational defence agreement between India and the US allowing for reciprocal logistics support between their militaries.