The importance of strong US-India ties goes beyond merely abstract geopolitical balancing today and is in fact increasingly an operational imperative, Ashley Tellis from the Carnegie Endowment for International Relations told members of the Senate Armed Services Committee during a hearing.
"The Trump administration must continue the transformation of US-India relations undertaken by its two immediate predecessors because India is a vital element in the Asian balance of power and, along with Japan, remains one of the key bookends for managing the rise of China," Tellis said in his testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee on the Asia Pacific region.
As such, closer US-Indian cooperation in regard to surveillance of Chinese naval actions in the Indian Ocean is highly desirable.
Also Read
"In general, US policy should move toward confirming a commitment to building up India's military capabilities so as to enable it to independently defeat any coercive stratagems China may pursue along New Delhi's landward and maritime frontiers, thereby easing the burdens on Washington's 'forward defence' posture in other parts of the IndoPacific," he said.
Tellis told lawmakers that most of America's allies and friends in the region, including the smaller states of Southeast Asia, desire to protect their own strategic autonomy vis-a-vis China.
"The stronger regional states, such as Japan and India, will in fact balance China independently of the US," Tellis added.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content