Washington: Describing India as an “all-weather partner”, the US has said the first 2+2 dialogue with it next month is an important opportunity to enhance engagement on a range of diplomatic and security issues and discuss how to operationalise India’s status as a ‘Major Defence Partner’.
US Secretary of State Micheal Pompeo and Secretary of Defence James Mattis will travel to New Delhi on September 6 for the 2+2 Dialogue, the format of which was agreed upon between the two sides during the visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Washington in June 2017.
Earlier, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj and Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman were to travel to Washington to take part in the meeting with their US counterparts in July. But the US had postponed the dialogue citing “unavoidable reasons.”
After June last year, the two countries have tried to schedule the dialogue many times with several dates having been considered.
Earlier this year also, the ‘2+2 Dialogue’ had been postponed due to uncertainty over the confirmation of Pompeo as President Donald Trump’s new Secretary of State.
“With India, we are looking forward to the inaugural 2+2 Dialogue with Secretaries Pompeo and Mattis traveling for these meetings in New Delhi on September 6,” Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Alice Wells told reporters on Monday.
“It is an important opportunity to discuss and enhance our engagement on a range of diplomatic and security priorities and really is an indication of the deepening strategic partnership that we enjoy with India,” she said.
Wells was addressing a Foreign Press Centre video conference from Washington on “US Policy in the Indian Ocean Region” during which she previewed her upcoming travel to the Indian Ocean Conference hosted by the India Foundation in Hanoi on August 27-28.
She said India plays a central role in US national security adding that it is “enshrined in the President’s national security strategy as well as the administration’s South Asia and Indo-Pacific strategies.”
She said at the upcoming 2+2 ministerial, the US is looking to discuss “how do we operationalise India’s status as a major defense partner.” India has said the 2+2 meeting will cover a broad range of bilateral, regional and global issues of shared interest, with a view to strengthening strategic and security ties between the two countries.
The US designated India as a Major Defence Partner in 2016.
The new status is expected to enable easier procurement of American weapons and the transfer of sophisticated technologies. Defence cooperation between India and the US has grown from “essentially zero dollars” in 2008 to USD 18 billion today, Wells said.
The US does more military exercises with India than with any other country in the world “but how do we take this partnership to a new level so that it is not just going to be defense acquisitions but really a way of framing how we see challenges and how we want to be able to respond together to address these challenges,” she said. (PTI)