Test of Endurance: Why America Will Stand By India
Political platforms periodically change with every election in democratic countries, but regardless of what path India takes, its alliance with America is now solidified by numerous agreements and congressional acts.
Until recently, it is not a public secret that the United States considers India as one of its most important allies in the evolving American rivalry with China in the Indo-Pacific region. In January 2021, a few days before President Donald Trump vacated the White House, his National Security Council (NSC) released a declassified “U.S. strategic framework for the Indo-Pacific” document that confirms Washington’s pro-Indian approach to maintaining the American “diplomatic, economic, and military preeminence” throughout the region. The declassified document acknowledges India as a “like-minded” democratic nation and gives New Delhi the “leading role in maintaining Indian Ocean security” by encouraging it to strengthen relationships with the other two Quad members: Australia and Japan.
The unprecedented release of the classified operational document by the NSC confirmed the significance of India policy in the American strategic posture, reinforced by a stream of laws enacted by the Congress during the last few years. Bilateral interactions with New Delhi were crowned by signing the Basic Exchange and Cooperation Agreement (BECA) for Geospatial and Intelligence Cooperation in October 2020. The accord was signed only one week before the U.S. presidential election in the midst of the prevailing uncertainty of domestic politics, signifying the importance of the military alliance between New Delhi and Washington.
Undoubtedly, these accelerated decisions and actions are meant to deepen the U.S.-India alliance against their strategic competitor and source of potential conflict—China. To accomplish stated national “interests” and promote American “values,” President Joe Biden and his new NSC team must now navigate their Indo-Pacific strategy within the contours of Trump’s foreign policy framework.
Two Continental Challenges
The declassified operational policy document recognizes the complexities of the China-India relationship by identifying two “continental challenges:” India’s territorial dispute with China and the river-water access issue.
The first territorial challenge stems from the over seventy-year-long China-India border conflict, which resulted in countless border clashes, including the one-month-long war in 1962. The clash in June 2020 in the Galwan River valley was the first deadly confrontation in forty-five years as it left twenty Indian soldiers dead. Until mid-February 2021, the number of Chinese casualties was unknown; however, eight months post-battle, Beijing finally admitted that four Chinese soldiers died fighting with the unspecified “foreign military.”
The fatal skirmish had serious consequences in several dimensions of China-India relations. It resulted in economic retaliation, as New Delhi banned over one hundred Chinese apps like the popular TikTok and WeChat, for which India was supposed to become the biggest foreign market. In the military dimension, the summer tensions led to an unprecedented deployment of one hundred thousand Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and Indian soldiers along the Line of Actual Control in the Himalayas for the winter of 2020-21. After nine rounds of negotiations, however, both Beijing and New Delhi agreed on a “synchronized and organized disengagement” from the Pangong lake area in Ladakh in mid-February 2021. Nonetheless, it is premature to celebrate diplomatic victory as the general consensus between the two rising powers is still contentious.
The U.S.-India military cooperation within the BECA treaty has seemingly played a convening role in the geopolitical game of chess against China. If Washington wants New Delhi on the American side, then it has to convince the Indian government about lasting territorial security. However, there is no free lunch for India in joining the military agreement with the United States by removing the mask of its non-aligned foreign policy for the first time in its post-colonial history. Moreover, the new alliance is politically and economically costly for India as it has already forced New Delhi to withdraw from the Beijing-led Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) due to American pressure. Arguably, Washington’s open support for New Delhi against Beijing might actually make the evolving situation potentially more dangerous, provoking not only Beijing but also inviting Moscow, Tokyo, and other important players into the Indo-Pacific conundrum in the Himalayan dispute and beyond.
The second “continental challenge” recognized by the declassified document is access to water. The document does not pointedly criticize Beijing, but it references China’s control over the Tibetan Plateau. Beijing essentially regulates access to the Tibetan Plateau, which is the source of several rivers providing a lifeline to the world’s two most populous nations of China and India as well as many South and Southeast Asian countries. With numerous dams built on the Brahmaputra, Irrawaddy, and Mekong rivers, China is now able to store or divert water in a way that might lead to the drying out of vast territories downstream, threatening the livelihoods of almost half of the global population.
The global community should perceive it as a warning each time Beijing unilaterally decides to “turn off” the taps of those dams on the Mekong river, flowing to Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam. Moreover, back in 2017, China did not share the crucial river data with India despite their existing agreement, making it impossible for the Indian government and ordinary people to prepare for the Brahmaputra river flood. This decision might be considered retaliation after the Doklam standoff, during which for two months Chinese and Indian troops kept eyeballing and threatening each other by the Bhutan-China-India border.
Within the global politics of water access, the new U.S. legislation towards Tibet is potentially a game-changer. The Tibetan Policy and Support Act of 2020, signed by Trump in December, states that the United States will place sanctions—including the denial of entry—on Chinese officials who interfere in the election of the current Dalai Lama’s successor. The U.S. legislation also calls for creating a new American consulate in Lhasa, the capital city of the Tibet Autonomous Region of China. Although the legislation does not, at first glance, seem to be directly connected to the water access, it proves that Washington is fully aware of the gravity of the Tibetan water issue, and understands that whatever happens on the Tibetan Plateau—in political, cultural, or military dimension—might impact the whole region of South and Southeast Asia.
Beyond the Alliance
In addition to a series of enduring connections in the U.S.-India alliance, there is also a string of U.S. laws that support Taiwan not by stating its independence but by strengthening its bilateral relations with other countries and the family of UN agencies, like the World Health Organization and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. Although there are no direct connections between the two sets of U.S. laws related to India and Taiwan, the Tibetan Policy and Support Act and the Taiwan Assurance Act signed by Trump in December 2020 were both included in the same National Defense Authorization Legislation. Thus, Washington sent a coded message to show that the United States is tying India and Taiwan together militarily, containing language objectionable to China. Beijing immediately responded that China “resolutely opposed” both congressional acts.
In response to the U.S. legislations, there might be some unexpected consequences that would potentially emerge from the independent objectives of India’s Act East Policy and Taiwan’s New Southbound Policy—especially when these policies overlap in Southeast Asia in particular, and in the Indo-Pacific region in general. Indeed, the United States would serve as a silent broker to facilitate their broader foreign and military policy objectives against China, while New Delhi and Taipei administrations might calculate ways to step out of the shadow of the One China Policy and tighten their relations in various dimensions.
From an economic perspective, for example, a window for successful cooperation has already been opened by allowing Taiwanese investments in India and constructing innovative industrial parks in Bangalore, India’s silicon valley in Karnataka. On the people-to-people platform, Indian and Taiwanese people got unexpectedly connected in 2020 after the Chinese Embassy in New Delhi issued a provocative message to Indian media, instructing them not to comment on the National Day of the Republic of China (Taiwan). Contrary to the expectations of the Chinese Embassy, Indian media widely covered the news on Taiwanese celebrations. As a result, many Taiwanese citizens expressed their gratitude by circulating memes showing President Tsai Ing-wen and Prime Minister Narendra Modi establishing the India-Taiwan “Milk Tea Alliance” by toasting with bubble tea and Indian chai. India’s independent approach toward Taiwanese affairs was also appreciated by Taiwanese leaders as Foreign Minister Joseph Wu openly thanked Indian politicians and media for standing up to China’s “wolf warrior” diplomacy.
Ironically, this would be the first “encounter” between India and Taiwan that might truly unleash the great potential of their bilateral relations which so far has been largely untapped and unrecognized by the United States. As the Biden White House intends to continue the Trump administration’s Indian and Taiwan policies, the anti-authoritarian, pro-democratic alliance in Asia might grow stronger—provided that India does not stray from the path shown by its own secular constitution.
American Values Over Interests
Even though the declassified document gives boundless support to New Delhi against Beijing, the Biden White House should not be under any illusion of India as a guardian of peace and stability and the unanimous defender of American values and human rights in the Indo-Pacific region.
Modi’s India led by Hindutva—the ideology of Hindu nationalism— bears responsibility for enhancing communal divisions within Indian society and unleashing anti-Muslim hysteria. Examples include the Citizenship Amendment Bill of 2019, which makes it easier for immigrants from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan to get Indian citizenship provided that they are not Muslims. The same year, the enacted constitutional and administrative modifications stripped the former and predominantly Muslim-based Jammu and Kashmir of its special status, which led to arrests and communication lockdown. These two examples are significant enough to raise questions as to whether India should be internationally supported or condemned for human-rights violations.
Since the declassified document does not mention a single word about protecting human rights, the Trump White House’s blind eye for New Delhi does not come as surprise. Although human rights might not have appealed to policymakers under the transactional presidency of Trump, the traditional American values and democratic ideals have now found their way to the global stage. Speaking to G7 leaders in Germany on February 19, 2021, Biden said that “democracy doesn’t happen by accident. We have to defend it, fight for it, strengthen it, renew it.” Certainly, the Biden White House should not then forget that the Modi administration has its own nativist, Hindutva-driven interests. And in response, New Delhi should be reminded that the largest democracy in the world has the responsibility to honor its secular constitution and restrain itself from violating human rights.
Even in the realms of Realpolitik, which prioritizes national interests over values, the fact that India might use the very same military and intelligence support it gets from the United States not just against China but also against Pakistan, should raise red flags for the Biden White House. Nonetheless, the success of the U.S. engagement in the Indo-Pacific region is as important for its own security and development as its support for India and other “like-minded” democracies in the region. Although in every democratic country, political platforms might periodically change as a result of each election, the American alliance with India is now solidified by numerous agreements and congressional acts. Hence, it is manifestly clear that the alliance between the United States, the world’s most powerful democratic state, and India, the largest democratic country, will remain resolute for at least the next few years to come.
Dr. Patrick Mendis, a former American diplomat and a military professor, is a distinguished visiting professor of global affairs at the National Chengchi University and a senior fellow of the Taiwan Center for Security Studies (TCSS) in Taipei.
Dr. Antonina Luszczykiewicz, a faculty member of the Jagiellonian University in Krakow, is a visiting scholar at Tamkang University and TCSS. Both served as Taiwan fellows of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the Republic of China. The views expressed in this analysis do not represent the official positions of their current or past affiliations nor governments.
Image: Reuters