Saturday, December 6, 2025
ADVT 
International

Draw India closer, not push it away, ex-US top officials urge Trump administration

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Sep, 2025 10:48 AM
  • Draw India closer, not push it away, ex-US top officials urge Trump administration

Former top officials in the US's previous Joe Biden administration have called for deepening ties with India, terming New Delhi as "one of the United States’ most important global partners". 

Writing in the Foreign Affairs Magazine, former National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and former Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell have warned that the current tensions risk "a split that would be difficult to mend".

The article, titled "The Case for a US Alliance With India", advises the Trump administration to draw "New Delhi closer, not push it away".

The ex-officials believed that the relationship had "remained vulnerable to misunderstandings, missteps, and missed opportunities because of lingering distrust and misaligned expectations". 

They also noted that given the current trajectory, "the United States could end up driving India directly into its adversaries’ arms".

In a rebuke to the Trump administration, the former officials said that "Washington must also refrain from hyphenating its relations with India and Pakistan: there should be no India-Pakistan policy".

"US diplomacy in recent years has been heavily weighted toward New Delhi for a reason. The United States has enduring interests in Pakistan in combating terrorism and limiting nuclear and missile proliferation, but these pale in significance to Washington’s multifaceted and consequential interests regarding India’s future," they added.

Both Sullivan and Campbell emphasised that "US President Donald Trump’s theatrics are often the prelude to dealmaking".

Despite the setbacks, they proposed a 10-year "strategic alliance" between the two countries.

"They must create a firmer and more ambitious foundation: a strategic alliance between the United States and India based on a series of mutual commitments regarding technology, defence, supply chains, intelligence, and global problem solving. An alliance, in other words, not based on a traditional mutual defence pact," they wrote.

The former senior officials rejected the perception that a "strategic alliance is not mutually exclusive with strategic autonomy".

"India and the United States are both proud and independent countries. Alliances are about alignment and common purpose—not about sacrificing sovereignty," they noted.

In an interview with PBS NewsHour, Campbell also said that he’s “most concerned about India.”

"I think all of us who played a role in building this relationship are in shock and concerned by what we've seen in terms of the substantial degradation in relations in just a couple of weeks, and (Indian PM Narendra) Modi is sending a very clear message to the United States: I have other options," he added.

Picture Courtesy: X/ Narendra Modi

MORE International ARTICLES

Wordle, White Sox and more: Fast facts about Pope Leo XIV

Wordle, White Sox and more: Fast facts about Pope Leo XIV
Pope Leo XIV, now the successor of St. Peter, leads the 1.4 billion-strong Catholic Church in a sacred role that few others will ever hold.

Wordle, White Sox and more: Fast facts about Pope Leo XIV

Canadians could stay visa-free longer in U.S. under proposed bill

Canadians could stay visa-free longer in U.S. under proposed bill
Canadian snowbirds could stay longer in the United States without a visa if a bill recently proposed in the U.S. House of Representatives becomes law.

Canadians could stay visa-free longer in U.S. under proposed bill

Travel to the U.S. takes another hit in April as Canadians vacation elsewhere

Travel to the U.S. takes another hit in April as Canadians vacation elsewhere
Travel to the United States took another hit in April with booking agents saying an "elbows up" attitude over the trade war has Canadians pulling back. 

Travel to the U.S. takes another hit in April as Canadians vacation elsewhere

Two dolls instead of 30? Toys become the latest symbol of Trump's trade war

Two dolls instead of 30? Toys become the latest symbol of Trump's trade war
NEW YORK (AP) — President Donald Trump's tariffs crusade has taken aim at a number of foreign goods, from European wines and car parts from Mexico to films made abroad. Lately, the president's wandering ire has found another rhetorical poster child: toy dolls.

Two dolls instead of 30? Toys become the latest symbol of Trump's trade war

Expert in B.C. says India-Pakistan tension at highest point since 1999

Expert in B.C. says India-Pakistan tension at highest point since 1999
A British Columbia researcher in South Asian affairs said Thursday that concerns about the current India and Pakistan tensions are justified, given that the region has not seen conflicts this intense in more than 25 years. 

Expert in B.C. says India-Pakistan tension at highest point since 1999

Canada's South Asian diaspora on edge in light of mounting India-Pakistan tensions

Canada's South Asian diaspora on edge in light of mounting India-Pakistan tensions
Canada's South Asian community is on edge after conflict erupted between India and Pakistan in the form of missile strikes that killed 31 people in Pakistani-administered areas.

Canada's South Asian diaspora on edge in light of mounting India-Pakistan tensions