Reference Text
Time Left10:00
The
United
States
has
recently
taken
two
major
steps
towards
sustaining
the
defence
relationship
with
India.
One,
the
US
Congress
passed
a
new
sanctions
bill
against
Russia
that
allowed
for
a
qualified
exemption
for
India
and
other
legacy
buyers
of
Russian
weapons.
The
bill
now
awaits
White
House
approval.
Two,
the
Donald
Trump
administration
announced
India
would
be
given
Strategic
Trade
Authorisation
One
(STA-1)
status
when
it
came
to
acquiring
advanced
US
military
equipment.
This
status
has
so
far
been
granted
only
to
very
close
US
allies
only
36
countries
in
the
world
and
none
in
South
Asia
have
this
standing.
The
exemption
from
anti-Russian
sanctions
has
still
become
actual
law.
More
importantly
it
has
yet
to
be
tested.
Even
the
present
language
requires
evidence
of
a
reduced
defence
relationship
with
Russia
to
be
eligible
for
an
exemption.
And
whether
a
country
even
deserves
an
exemption
is
left
to
the
discretion
of
the
White
House.
But
the
signalling
from
Washington
indicates
that
the
US
accepts
New
Delhi's
Moscow
connection.
The
cynical
will
argue
all
this
does
is
help
the
US
to
sell
more
expensive
weaponry
to
India.
This
is
certainly
a
factor.
US
commerce
secretary,
Wilbur
Ross,
when
announcing
the
move,
noted
the
lack
of
STA-1
status
for
India
had
affected
over
$
9
billion
worth
of
US
arms
sales
to
India.
However,
the
real
import
of
this
decision
is
strategic.
Underlying
the
years
of
tortuous
defence
negotiations
between
New
Delhi
and
Washington
is
the
recognition
that
if
India
is
to
maintain
a
military
edge
over
China
that
edge
would
come
from
technology.
While
the
US
is
easily
the
world
leader
in
defence
technology,
it
has
also
surrounded
this
with
a
thicket
of
legal
and
administrative
safeguards
to
ensure
it
does
not
get
into
the
wrong
foreign
hands.
India
has
been
a
victim
of
these
rules
because
it
is
not
a
formal
US
ally.
The
Barack
Obama
administration
redesignated
India
a
'major
defence
partner'
and
thus
a
STA-2
country.
But
it
also
ruled
India
would
have
to
join
the
Nuclear
Suppliers
Group
(NSG)before
it
could
be
promoted
to
STA-1.
The
Trump
administration
has
now
removed
that
requirement.
There
are
more
milestones
to
be
passed.
India
needs
to
sign
up
to
the
US
Communications,
Compatibility
and
Security
Agreement,
better
known
as
Comcasa,
so
it
can
access
to
advanced
communications
and
surveillance
technology.
Ultimately,
Indo-US
defence
cooperation
needs
to
move
faster
than
the
expansion
of
Chinese
power
on
India's
periphery.
The
United
States
has
recently
taken
two
major
steps
towards
sustaining
the
defence
relationship
with
India.
One,
the
US
Congress
passed
a
new
sanctions
bill
against
Russia
that
allowed
for
a
qualified
exemption
for
India
and
other
legacy
buyers
of
Russian
weapons.