India, US discuss Narendra Modi White House visit


The Biden administration is in talks with Indian officials over a possible White House visit by Prime Minister Narendra Modi later this year, according to a US official aware of the discussions and another person briefed on the matter

US President Joe Biden is eager to deepen ties with the world's largest democracy as part of his bid to win what he has framed as a contest between free and autocratic societies, especially China

The White House and the Indian Embassy in Washington declined to comment

Dates are not finalised, the sources said

Discussions about a possible White House visit intensified this week as Indian National Security Adviser Ajit Doval met with his US counterpart, Jake Sullivan, and Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Washington

During the visit, the United States and India launched a partnership to deepen ties on military equipment, semiconductors and artificial intelligence

New Delhi has frustrated Washington by participating in military exercises with Russia and increasing purchases of the country's crude oil, a key source of funding for the war in Ukraine

Washington has been pushing New Delhi to do more to punish Russia for the Ukraine invasion

India proposed on Wednesday hiking military spending for the upcoming year by 13% to $72

6 billion as it seeks to add more fighter jets and roads along its tense border with China

India and China share a 2,100-mile (3,400-kilometer) frontier that has been disputed since the 1950s

The US president is expected to make his own trip to New Delhi in September for the G20 meetings hosted by India

Biden is also expected to meet with Modi during a mid-year meeting of the Quad countries, which is hosted by Australia and also includes Japan

Those countries, along with South Korea, are key to Biden's strategy of strengthening regional alliances and shoring up Asian security in the face of threats including China's claims of Taiwan and vast swathes of the South China Sea

President George W

Bush's administration in 2005 denied Modi a US visa after a 2002 incident where more than 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, were killed in sectarian riots in the Indian state of Gujarat, where he had been chief minister

Modi denied any wrongdoing

He was first invited to the White House after he became prime minister in 2014 by Barack Obama

Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won a record-breaking victory in his home state Gujarat in December and is widely expected to win the next general election in 2024



Date:05-Feb-2023 Reference:View Original Link