{ "id": "R42823", "type": "CRS Report", "typeId": "REPORTS", "number": "R42823", "active": true, "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "versions": [ { "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "id": 418015, "date": "2012-11-13", "retrieved": "2016-04-06T21:37:55.077202", "title": "India-U.S. Security Relations: Current Engagement", "summary": "U.S.-India engagement on shared security interests is a topic of interest to the U.S. Congress, where there is considerable support for a deepened U.S. partnership with the world\u2019s largest democracy. Congressional advocacy of closer relations with India is generally bipartisan and widespread; House and Senate caucuses on India and Indian-Americans are the largest of their kind. Caucus leaders have encouraged the Obama Administration to work toward improving the compatibility of the U.S. and Indian defense acquisitions systems, as well as to seek potential opportunities for co-development or co-production of military weapons systems with India. In the 112th Congress, the Senate Armed Services Committee (S.Rept. 112-26) opined that a deepened partnership with India is critical to the promotion of core mutual national interests.\nThe United States and India have since 2004 been pursuing a \u201cstrategic partnership\u201d that incorporates numerous economic, security, and global initiatives. Defense cooperation between the two countries remains in relatively early stages of development. However, over the past decade\u2014and despite a concurrent U.S. engagement with Indian rival Pakistan and a Cold War history of bilateral estrangement\u2014U.S.-India security cooperation has flourished. American diplomats now rate military links and defense trade among the most important aspects of transformed bilateral relations in the 21st century. The United States views security cooperation with India in the context of common principles and shared national interests such as defeating terrorism, preventing weapons proliferation, and maintaining regional stability. After initial uncertainty, under President Barack Obama, senior Pentagon officials assured New Delhi that the United States is fully committed to strengthening ties through the enhancement of the defense relationship made newly substantive under President George W. Bush. \nMany analysts view increased U.S.-India security ties as providing a perceived \u201chedge\u201d against or \u201ccounterbalance\u201d to growing Chinese influence in Asia, although both Washington and New Delhi repeatedly downplay such motives. While a complete congruence of U.S. and Indian national security objectives is unlikely in the foreseeable future, meaningful convergences are identified in areas such as the emergence of a new balance-of-power arrangement in the region. Still, indications remain that the perceptions and expectations of top U.S. and Indian strategic planners are divergent on several key issues, perhaps especially on the role of Pakistan, as well as on India\u2019s relations with Iran. Moreover, given a national foreign policy tradition of \u201cnonalignment,\u201d Indian leaders are averse to forming any \u201calliance\u201d with the United States and are clear in their intention to maintain India\u2019s \u201cstrategic autonomy.\u201d Questions remain about the ability of the Indian economy to grow at rates sufficient to improve its security capabilities at the pace sought in both Washington and New Delhi. Despite these factors, U.S. leaders only expect India\u2019s importance to U.S. interests to grow steadily, and they foresee India taking on new security roles commensurate with its status as a major power and stakeholder in the international system. This expectation is a key aspect of the Obama Administration\u2019s policy of \u201crebalancing\u201d toward the Asia-Pacific, which is conceived as including the Indian Ocean region.\nThis report reviews the major facets of U.S.-India security relations with a focus on military-to-military contacts, counterterrorism and intelligence cooperation, and defense trade, while also discussing some of the many obstacles to deeper cooperation in each of these areas. The strategic aspects of the bilateral security relationship are in the companion CRS Report R42948, U.S.-India Security Relations: Strategic Issues, by K. Alan Kronstadt and Sonia Pinto. U.S.-India relations are discussed more broadly in CRS Report RL33529, India: Domestic Issues, Strategic Dynamics, and U.S. Relations, coordinated by K. Alan Kronstadt.", "type": "CRS Report", "typeId": "REPORTS", "active": true, "formats": [ { "format": "HTML", "encoding": "utf-8", "url": "http://www.crs.gov/Reports/R42823", "sha1": "3aadd9b518956b2e273e458eaad7254abf60520c", "filename": "files/20121113_R42823_3aadd9b518956b2e273e458eaad7254abf60520c.html", "images": null }, { "format": "PDF", "encoding": null, "url": "http://www.crs.gov/Reports/pdf/R42823", "sha1": "7f7e565375e9559156785603ac413b2d9ff1222d", "filename": "files/20121113_R42823_7f7e565375e9559156785603ac413b2d9ff1222d.pdf", "images": null } ], "topics": [] } ], "topics": [ "Asian Affairs", "Foreign Affairs", "Intelligence and National Security", "National Defense" ] }