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India does not want to be caught in US-China game: Inderfurth

Last Updated 03 May 2018, 06:00 IST

"China has been watching very carefully the rise of the US-India relationship, including on the defense side," Karl F Inderfurth, the former Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs said.

Participating in a discussion on "Unlocking the full potential of US-India relationship" at Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a Washington-based think-tank, Inderfurth said, "We do more manoeuvres now with the Indian army than they do with any other country. We're looking to sell India 126 jet fighters". "Some of them are wondering -- and if you read the Chinese journals, they are wondering if this is part of a containment strategy of -- the Obama strategy of China," Inderfurth said referring to recent reports in this regard in the Chinese media.

"India does not want to be caught up in a US-China -- playing the card, the India card in that relationship. India wants good relations with China because they know that they are neighbours, and they know that they're both nuclear-weapons states, and they want to trade. They don't want to get caught up in a machination of US-China. So they're very concerned about being caught up in that. And so they're going to maintain their distance," he said.

Inderfurth is currently Wadwani Chair in US-India Policy Studies at CSIS. "India also has seen the rising, how do we say, assertiveness of China in the last year, 18 months. So they're quite happy to   continue building on the relationship with the United States," he noted.

"But they key to this is not to get into the mindset where it is two against the other, ganging up on the rest. Somehow our governments have to find a way to deal with each of the relationships on their own merits, and not try to out-strategize or manoeuvre the other," Inderfurth observed.

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(Published 18 February 2011, 07:43 IST)

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