Saturday, December 20, 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

A COVID legacy? When doctors say we should still be masking up

A COVID legacy? When doctors say we should still be masking up
Although WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus noted Friday's declaration "does not mean COVID-19 is over," many people will likely interpret it that way, said Dr. Allison McGeer, infectious diseases specialist and microbiologist at Sinai Health Systems in Toronto.

A COVID legacy? When doctors say we should still be masking up

Drunk Indian-origin driver kills 2 teenagers in US car crash

Drunk Indian-origin driver kills 2 teenagers in US car crash
Amandeep Singh, 34, was driving his 2019 Dodge Ram south in the northbound lanes on North Broadway in Jericho on Wednesday when he smashed into a 2019 Alfa Romeo four-door sedan with four male teens inside.  While two teens -- identified as Drew Hassenbein and Ethan Falkowitz -- were pronounced dead at the scene, the other two, aged 16 and 17, were taken to a local hospital for treatment of injuries.

Drunk Indian-origin driver kills 2 teenagers in US car crash

Indian-origin man accused of murdering two men in US parking lot

Indian-origin man accused of murdering two men in US parking lot
Jobanpreet Singh, 21, was booked into the Multnomah County Detention Center on two counts of murder in the first degree on Thursday, the Portland Police Bureau said. Portland police are yet to publicly identify the two men who died. 

Indian-origin man accused of murdering two men in US parking lot

COVID19 no longer a global health emergency: WHO

COVID19 no longer a global health emergency: WHO
But even though the emergency phase is over, he's emphatic the pandemic hasn't ended, noting recent spikes in cases in Southeast Asia and the Middle East.  

COVID19 no longer a global health emergency: WHO

Canadians excited to witness first coronation in 70 years

Canadians excited to witness first coronation in 70 years
Sally Harris from Ottawa says she and other members of the Monarchist League of Canada are hoping to watch the coronation procession under a big Canadian flag and wave at King Charles and Queen Consort Camilla as they go by.

Canadians excited to witness first coronation in 70 years

Distracted driver kills Sikh couple on way to pick up kids in US

Distracted driver kills Sikh couple on way to pick up kids in US
Parminder Singh Bajwa and wife Harpreet Kaur died on the scene last week when their car was hit head-on by a distracted driver apparently reaching for his cell phone, the Washington State Patrol said. The distracted driver, who had suddenly crossed into oncoming traffic, was airlifted to hospital with life-threatening injuries.

Distracted driver kills Sikh couple on way to pick up kids in US