HomeNewsOpinionWill Joe Biden be bold enough to walk the talk on India-US ties?

Will Joe Biden be bold enough to walk the talk on India-US ties?

Since security cooperation is at the heart of any strategic partnership, how far the US would understand India’s concerns will be an important marker in deepening their defining partnership 

September 23, 2021 / 11:41 IST
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File image: US President Joe Biden and First Lady Dr. Jill Biden attend a COVID-19 memorial event at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC, United States on the eve of his inauguration as the 46th President. (Image: Reuters/Tom Brenner)
File image: US President Joe Biden and First Lady Dr. Jill Biden attend a COVID-19 memorial event at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC, United States on the eve of his inauguration as the 46th President. (Image: Reuters/Tom Brenner)

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is on his seventh visit to the United States since 2014; and this comes a month after the Taliban’s effortless takeover of Kabul which had confounded India’s worries about the regional security situation.

Besides attending the 76th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), and taking part in the first-ever in-person summit of the Quad grouping comprising the US, Japan, Australia and India, Modi will use the opportunity to review and reinforce the strategic partnership between New Delhi and Washington.

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When Modi met Joe Biden last in 2014, the then Vice-President had said the two sides should be “bold” in building the India-US ties as the defining partnership of the 21st century ambitiously and rapidly. (The ‘defining partnership’ was a coinage used by former US President Barack Obama, who Modi met in White House four times.) Seven Septembers later, Biden is hosting Modi in White House as the US President.

India and the US have for long remained close partners in Afghanistan. However, the way the end-game of the US war on terror unfolded in Afghanistan on Biden’s watch has brought in a litany of concerns for India. The Taliban is leading a non-inclusive government emboldened by the fact that many world capitals had rolled out the red carpet to them even when an elected government was in power in Kabul.