Republican Party has asked US President Barack Obama to seek a large pie of India's estimated $35 billion defense expansion plan when he meets Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi next week.
In a letter to President Obama, Republican Congressman (rpt) Congressman Ed Royce asked him to build on the defence cooperation between India and the US that was initiated by his predecessors Bill Clinton and continued by George W Bush.
"As you know, six foreign companies are competing to sell India 126 new multi-role combat aircraft in a deal that could be worth as much as $11 billion. India's selection process for this aircraft is advancing, with two US companies under active consideration," senior Republican lawmaker from California Ed Royce said in a letter to Obama.
Royce, in his letter of October 26, said heads of state from France, Russia and the United Kingdom were moving aggressively to advocate for their countries' aircraft proposal.
"Moving India away from its tradition of purchasing Russian equipment toward a US supplier would provide New Delhi with the best product, enhance Indian military's role in the region and improve interaction amongst our militaries," he wrote in the letter, a cpoy of which is with PTI.
Royce, co-chair of powerful Congressional Caucus in the House of Representatives, had accompanied Clinton during his trip to India in 2000 but he would not be travelling with President Obama this time.
"Defence cooperation between the US and India has made impressive strides in the last decade. India-US Defense Policy Group was revived in 2001 and now meets annually. In 2005, the US and India signed a 10-year defence pact which outlines planned collaboration in multilateral operations and expanded two-way defense trade," he said.
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He said based on mutual struggle with terrorism and interest in maintaining regional stability, both the countries have held a series of unprecedented and increasingly substantive combined exercises involving all military services in recent years.
He expressed his agreement with the Commander of US Pacific Command Admiral Robert Willard, who testified to Congress earlier this year, that "India's strategic location, shared democratic values, growing economy and evolution as a regional power combine to make them a partner with whom we need to work much more closely."
The Congressman said India was expanding its military's reach and key to that transformation would increase defence trade between our two countries.