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National Security Council official: U.S. must keep building ties with India

By Isabella Alvarenga, Medill News Service
Peter Lavoy, National Security Council senior director for South Asia, said animosity between India and Pakistan is complicated to navigate. Photo courtesy of U.S. Department of Defense
Peter Lavoy, National Security Council senior director for South Asia, said animosity between India and Pakistan is complicated to navigate. Photo courtesy of U.S. Department of Defense

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The next president must build on the Obama administration's increased cooperation between the United States and India to ensure the United States retains international support for its efforts in Afghanistan and other conflicts, a top National Security Council official said Wednesday.

Peter Lavoy, National Security Council senior director for South Asia, said progress in U.S.-India security cooperation can be seen in India's over $2 billion contribution to stability efforts for the government in Afghanistan.

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"The U.S. India partnership has come a long way in the last eight years, but I believe the best years are still to come," Lavoy said in a speech at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

In 2012, the Obama administration and India started the U.S.-India Defense Technology and Trade Initiative to increase the level of shared research, technology and defense trade.

CSIS, in a report released Wednesday, offered recommendations on India-U.S. security relations for the next occupant of the White House.

Recommendations for the next president include meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi within the first 100 days in office and bolstering security in the Indian Ocean by providing aircraft, other equipment and training for the Indian navy.

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According to John Schaus, an author of the study, increased defense cooperation should include morer joint counterterrorism efforts and military cooperation.

Cooperation in Afghanistan runs up against tensions between India and Pakistan. The report outlines U.S. choices: Support a unity government in Afghanistan that would include the Taliban and other Pakistan-backed armed groups – an option that India would not support; or enforce a government with no affiliation to the Taliban, which would allow the United States to rely on India to protect American interests but which would largely isolate Pakistan.

Lavoy agreed that the animosity between India and Pakistan is complicated to navigate, but the administration has not chosen sides.

"We don't try to balance India-Pakistan," he said. "In previous years, different U.S. governments have tried to balance these two. That is not the approach of this government."

But Sarah Watson, another author of the report, said India and those skeptical of Pakistan's intentions "think the U.S. has coddled Pakistan, and we do continue to give Pakistan large amounts of money and weaponry."

Watson said the winner of November's election will have to act quickly if he or she wants to create new initiatives with India – the Indian election will be in 2019.

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