Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
International

After people's resounding mandate, US ready to engage Modi

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 23 May, 2014 01:38 PM
    With Narendra Modi set to assume office as India's Prime Minister Monday, the US has expressed keenness to engage a man it had shunned for over a decade, following his "resounding" victory.
     
    President Barack Obama was quick to acknowledge the Indian people's mandate and effectively ended the visa ban on him for his alleged role or inaction during the 2002 Gujarat riots with an invitation to visit Washington. Secretary of state John Kerry "echoed" the invitation a couple of days later.
     
    "We recognize the Indian electorate has weighed in with a resounding mandate for Prime Minister Modi and we want to work with him for advancing his goals for India as a regional and global player," US assistant secretary of state for south central Asia Nisha Desai Biswal told reporters.
     
    "The President stated definitely that we will be welcoming Prime Minister Modi. We, like rest of the world, have seen a remarkable election and a remarkable transition," said America's first Indian-American point person for the region.
     
    "The mandate the Indian electorate put forward is one that we strongly support and we stand ready to engage and assist when the new government is ready," she said.
     
    Biswal, whose parents emigrated from Dahod in Gujarat, said Obama saw the Indian election in a very positive light and looked forward to welcoming Modi in Washington at the earliest opportunity. Kerry too is keen to travel to India.
     
    "We have stated quite definitely that he will be welcomed here. That he will travel on A1 visa as a head of State, which is the appropriate category for all heads of State when they travel to the US," Biswal said.
     
    "We are eager to engage but we also don't want to overwhelm the new government with our priorities and dates," she said.
     
    Although it's Washington's turn to hold the annual India-US strategic dialogue this summer, Biswal indicated that it was open to new dates and venues. "We are waiting to hear from new government about their preference," she added.
     
     
    Challenging doubts in some quarters about the future of India-US relationship, she said, "To say this is not a strategic relationship is categorically false; it is one in every way."
     
    Biswal also saw Modi's invitations to the leaders of South Asian countries, including Pakistan, to attend his swearing-in ceremony Monday as "a strong and positive signal".
     
    "I certainly think that having the regional leaders come is a strong and positive signal. Beyond that I think, it is really for India and its neighbours to react and respond to," she said.
     
    Meanwhile, at a symposium organised by US India Political Action Committee (USINPAC) on Capitol Hill, Biswal again declared: "It is indeed a time for us to be looking forward and looking ahead."
     
    Several lawmakers from both sides of the aisle, including Republican chairman of House Foreign Affairs Committee Ed Royce, also expressed keenness to engage India.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Did Pakistan know about Osama bin Laden's hideout?

    Did Pakistan know about Osama bin Laden's hideout?
    The denunciation came in the light of a New York Times report published Wednesday stating Pakistan's then Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) chief Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha knew where Bin Laden had been hiding, Xinhua reported

    Did Pakistan know about Osama bin Laden's hideout?

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: Suspicious Objects Give Fresh Twist

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: Suspicious Objects Give Fresh Twist
    Chinese naval vessels were heading for the south Indian Ocean off the Australian coast Thursday after a fresh twist was given to the mystery of the missing Malaysian airliner with Australian authorities reporting that suspicious objects were found in the area.

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: Suspicious Objects Give Fresh Twist

    Ukraine to move UN for demilitarisation in Crimea

    Ukraine to move UN for demilitarisation in Crimea
    Kiev will ask the UN to grant the crisis-hit Crimean peninsula the status of a demilitarised area, the Ukrainian foreign ministry said.

    Ukraine to move UN for demilitarisation in Crimea

    Russian parliament approves accession of Crimea

    Russian parliament approves accession of Crimea
    The Russian State Duma or lower house of parliament Thursday approved a federal law on the accession of the Republic of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol, where the Russian Black Sea fleet is based.

    Russian parliament approves accession of Crimea

    Breaking: Possible Debris of Missing Malaysian Jet Located In Indian Ocean

    Breaking: Possible Debris of Missing Malaysian Jet Located In Indian Ocean
    Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott announced Thursday that objects possibly related to the Malaysian airliner that went missing March 8 have been found in the southern Indian Ocean.

    Breaking: Possible Debris of Missing Malaysian Jet Located In Indian Ocean

    Pro-Russian forces seize Ukraine's naval headquarters

    Pro-Russian forces seize Ukraine's naval headquarters
    Pro-Russian forces Wednesday captured the Ukrainian naval headquarters in Crimea even as UN chief Ban Ki-moon got ready for a visit to Russia and Ukraine.

    Pro-Russian forces seize Ukraine's naval headquarters