Barack Obama's visit to India - 2015

Nicky G

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US asks for a no-fly zone over Rajpath on R-Day, India says no

A no-fly zone would have led to the customary flypast on January 26 being cancelled.
Do these US people even know what their president has agreed to be a part of when they ask for a no-fly zone?

"In any case, only twin-engine military aircraft and helicopters fly during the Republic Day parade. The actual flypast duration over Rajpath is around 10 minutes. Otherwise, throughout the year there is a no-fly zone over Rashtrapati Bhavan, South and North Blocks, the PM's residence and other nearby places," he added.
 

sorcerer

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No terror attack during Barack Obama's India trip: US warns Pakistan

WASHINGTON: Ahead of President Barack Obama's India visit, the US has asked Pakistan to ensure that there is no cross-border terror incident during the trip and subtly warned of "consequences" if any such attack is traced back to the country.

Obama will travel to New Delhi later this week to attend the Republic Day parade on January 26, the first US president to do so.

The US and Indian security agencies are taking extra care for Obama as he will be on an open air platform at Rajpath for more than two hours, witnessing the parade.

It is believed that the US has asked Pakistan to ensure that there is no cross-border terrorism or even attempts of it during Obama's trip.

Pakistan has been subtly warned of the "consequences" of any terrorist attack during Obama's trip if that is traced back to their country, sources said.

The warning has been issued keeping the track record of Pakistan-based militant groups that have carried out attacks in India coinciding with high-profile visits from the US.

Militants had shot dead 36 Sikhs in March 20, 2000, in the Anantnag district of Jammu and Kashmir, coinciding with the visit of the then US President Bill Clinton to India.

The US forces in Afghanistan are also keeping a close eye on the activities of the terrorist groups in the region.

The US Embassy in Pakistan too has been alerted. Ahead of the presidential trip, there is an unprecedented level of intelligence sharing between India and the US.

At least 10,000 paramilitary troops will be deployed along with the 80,000-strong Delhi Police to ensure fool-proof security in and around Rajpath -- the main venue.

A seven-layer security ring will be thrown around the VVIP enclosure at the venue and the airspace over the area would be monitored by a radar to be specially set up.

This will form part of the planned unprecedented ground-to-air security drill that will turn the national capital into an impregnable fortress during Obama's visit.


No terror attack during Barack Obama's India trip: US warns Pakistan - The Economic Times
 

rock127

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Fortress Delhi For Obama's Visit. These Are the Arrangements.

NEW DELHI: The capital will turn into a virtual fortress for US President Barack Obama's visit this weekend with heightened security measures including an extended no-fly zone to protect the world's most powerful leader.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, President Obama and other dignitaries from the world's two largest democracies will attend the Republic Day celebrations on Monday, January 26, which include a massive military parade.

Security agencies previously enforced a no-fly zone with a radius of 300 km, but it will be extended to 400 km this year, covering cities such as Jaipur in the west, and Agra, and extending to the border with Pakistan.

"The no-fly zone has been extended around Delhi ... no civil aircraft can take off or land during that time," said one Indian security official, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the security details.While a no-fly zone bars commercial flights during the two-hour procession, the programme wraps up with a fly-past by military planes.

On-the-ground security has been beefed up, with extra police patrols and checks at metro stations. Snipers will be deployed at more than 70 high-rise buildings around central Delhi, the security official said. But Delhi has made it clear that Rajpath -the wide avenue where the Republic Day parade marches - and India Gate will be protected entirely by its own guards and officials. Secret Service Agents will be a part only of the inner-most circle of security around the US President.

Home Minister Rajnath Singh has said all security arrangements are in place for Mr Obama's visit. The stakes are high. In December, India issued a nationwide alert after Pakistan Taliban killed 132 people in a school in Peshawar. Clashes across the border in Kashmir have intensified, along with concerns that militant commanders in Afghanistan and Pakistan have renewed their focus on India as foreign forces leave the region.

Late last year Al Qaeda set up an Indian Subcontinent branch, and other militants are looking to Islamic State for inspiration.

Obama will be accompanied by First Lady Michelle Obama on his three-day trip and is expected to travel in 'The Beast', his heavily-armoured limousine. They plan to tour the Taj Mahal, about 200 km south of the capital.

A team of 40 US security experts has already inspected the Taj Mahal, a police official said.
 

ladder

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Previewing President Obama's Trip to India

Brookings Institution

Video actually starts at 15 min mark.
 
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ezsasa

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Video actually starts at 15 min mark.
Going by the video we should not be expecting anything substantial from the visit.
Other thing i got from the video is that american boardrooms are taking more notice about the rapes reported rather than economy.Can somebody go and tell the TV channels this please.Image is something hard to build and MSM is doing more harm than good.
 

ladder

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#ObamaInIndia: Can Obama's visit to New Delhi revive US-India relations?

American Enterprise Institute
 
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tarunraju

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King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia died. Something tells me this will wreck Obama's India trip, because an American leader will be obligated to be at a Saudi King's funeral throughout.
 

ezsasa

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King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia died. Something tells me this will wreck Obama's India trip, because an American leader will be obligated to be at a Saudi King's funeral throughout.
Bush did not go to Fahd's funeral, Vice President Cheney went. So I guess some representation is ok, need not necessarily be president.
 

sorcerer

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Obama, Modi to Appear on Indian National Radio Together


U.S. President Barack Obama will visit India next week to attend India's Republic Day celebrations in New Delhi as the chief guest. The visit will be the second major U.S.-India bilateral summit since Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power, with energy cooperation and climate change both high on the agenda. The Diplomat has already run a good deal of coverage on what expect out of Obama's visit (see here, here, here, and here). The already-unorthodox visit is growing stranger by the minute, it seems: a series of tweets by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi noted that Obama would join him on India's national radio.

Obama will appear on a special Republic Day edition of Modi's monthly nationwide radio address known as Mann Ki Baat. "This month's 'Mann Ki Baat' episode will be a special one, where our Republic Day guest @BarackObama & I will share our thoughts together," Modi noted on Twitter. "I am eagerly looking forward to the special 'Mann Ki Baat' programme with President @BarackObama, which will be aired on 27th January," he added. Modi started delivering his nationwide radio addresses beginning in October 2014. So far, no specific details have been released for the topics that Obama and Modi will discuss over the radio, but expect plenty of platitudes on the bright future ahead for the United States and India.

Obama's trip to India is already unusual by the United States' diplomatic standards. Obama will become the first U.S. president to travel to India twice while in office. Additionally, by agreeing to attend India's Republic Day parade and spend multiple hours in an open-air venue, Obama is breaking with standard U.S. presidential security protocol (though both India and the United States have come together to ensure air-tight security for the visit). Generally, the U.S. president does not spend more than 15 minutes in an open-air venue during a foreign trip.

This radio appearance with Modi is particularly out-of-the-box when it comes to a bilateral visit. Modi is reportedly inviting Indian citizens to submit questions via an online portal; the two leaders will then answer the questions together. The move could be an attempt for Obama to repair negative perceptions of the United States that grew in India following the December 2013 arrest of an Indian diplomat in New York City. That incident led to widespread protests and criticism of the United States across India, damaging the prospects for closer ties. While the Modi government has done a good job of setting U.S.-India relations back on track — particularly after the prime minister's successful trip to the United States in September 2014 — Obama's radio appearance could be an important positive step for perceptions of the United States in India.


Obama, Modi to Appear on Indian National Radio Together | The Diplomat
 

Free Karma

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Not sure how much of this is true:
Bending over Backwards - The New Indian Express
In his pronouncements, US president Barack Obama has indicated that American companies will be actively discouraged from investing in production plants abroad, offshoring operations, and exporting jobs; Indian pharmaceutical industries would come under the intellectual property rights hammer, and the H1B visa regime will not be loosened. Taken cumulatively, they pretty much muck up prime minister Narendra Modi's plans for productively courting America.

The serious clash of economic interests only highlights the even more severe collision of strategic interests which, despite the good intentions of both sides, will ensure that, as in the past, only a limited India-US partnership will accrue. This reality, not fully grasped by Delhi, is compounded by the fact that the Indian government operates without any definite ideas about what the national interest is or where it lies on particular issues, whence a lot is negotiated away in return for nothing.

One expected Modi to not turn national interest into a fungible commodity as his predecessor, Manmohan Singh, had done and, as a canny insider in the evolving global politics in which India's centrality in an Asian security scheme to contain China is readily conceded, that he would extract maximum concessions from the US while surrendering little. This hope is belied by the list of giveaways in the offing.

On climate, Modi has apparently agreed to 20% reduction in carbon emissions by 2030, bringing India in line with the Western consensus at the upcoming Paris summit. This presumes India can skip the smokestack industrial stage and absorb the inordinately high cost of going in massively for clean energy. It begs the question: Where are the resources for such rapid switching to come from?

Modi's eagerness to buy enriched uranium-fuelled American reactors of untested design that the US is unwilling to risk installing on its own territory is equally puzzling. Especially because the contemplated executive action to get around provisions in the Civilian Nuclear Damage Liability Act 2010 imposing "unlimited" liability on nuclear technology suppliers is subversive of this Act, which the BJP voted for in Parliament and, which in fact represented a congealing of the opposition to the 2008 civilian nuclear cooperation deal with the US. But consider the proposed solution: An insurance pool is to be created by the public sector General Insurance Corporation (GIC), meaning that the Indian people will be the guarantors of untested foreign nuclear technology and in case it proves faulty and leads to an accident, will have to pay up for the thermal and radiation deaths in the hundreds of thousands and for damage to public and private property running into billions of rupees in case of a nuclear accident traced to faulty foreign nuclear technology beyond the measly $300 million the supplier company coughs up per the Convention on Supplemental Compensation Manmohan Singh hurriedly signed. With the perpetrators thus going scot-free, it could be the 1984 Bhopal gas tragedy plus all over again.

For surrendering so much India gets the promise of entry into the Nuclear Suppliers Group and the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR). Though why Modi is keen on joining these groups, considering they are means to drag India into the 1968 non-proliferation treaty net, is a mystery. Indeed, by not buying foreign reactors or joining NSG India can at any time resume testing to obtain a credible thermonuclear deterrent, export without any restraint its highly evolved natural uranium reactors and technology under the International Atomic Energy Agency safeguards, and the billions of dollars saved from not buying the inordinately expensive foreign reactors, could be invested in realising the three-stage 1955 Homi Bhabha plan for energy self-sufficiency, by developing on a war-footing the indigenous advanced pressurised heavy water, breeder, and thorium reactors. Indeed, the GIC "insurance pool" could be more imaginatively deployed to insure Indian companies producing indigenous nuclear reactors and ancillary hardware and erect any number of power stations in the country and to export to friendly states in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. This will spur Indian industry, generate more industrial employment, increase the value of India's share of global trade, and more vigorously push the "Make in India" policy than putting Indian money in American pockets.

Modi buying into the MTCR is still more troubling. It will mean abandoning the option of paying back China for nuclear missile arming Pakistan by transferring nuclear missile and related technologies to countries on its periphery and compelling Beijing to share in our "nuclear nightmare". But if pleasing Washington is priority then the rumour doing the rounds gains substance that Avinash Chander was kicked out of DRDO because he was pushing for the 12,000km intercontinental ballistic missile frowned upon by Washington to complement its disapproval of India's acquiring high-yield thermonuclear warheads/weapons.

The one bright spot is the military-to-military links the 2005 defence cooperation framework has delivered with joint exercises. Its extension to 2025 will mean more of the same laced with billion-dollar buys of US hardware (such as C-17 and C-130J airlifters), a transactional slant Washington is satisfied with. As regards, military technology transfer, Delhi seems reconciled to the US policy of starting low, going slow—hand-launched drones and surveillance modules—as the way to go!

Acknowledging the global power shift, America has been inclined to pass the baton of the predominant power to China in the manner the "weary Titan" Great Britain did to the US during the turn of the previous century. Such a policy was proposed by Obama's deputy secretary of state James Steinberg and enunciated in 2008-2009 as the doctrine of "strategic reassurance". It led to the "G-2" concept and president Xi Jinping's conceiving of "core relations" to, in effect, run the international system. This is the strategic disjunction keeping India-US ties from becoming intimate. Because to brighten the prospects of a possible US-China condominium, Washington since the 1990s has been systematically hindering India strategically, hugely complicating the Indian national security calculus. In the circumstances, bending over backwards to please the US will only invite derision, not win India respect, even less international standing. It is a lesson that remains unlearned.
Hmm..any comments... this fear mongering?
 
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Srinivas_K

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Democracy and Freedom are not new concepts for India. Ancients Greece, which is considered as the cradle of western civilization, and ancient India share similar kind of views on Philosophy, Science and views on human societies. India has lot in common with the Western idea of democracy, liberty and freedom. In this world of Globalization where "Unity in Diversity" the concept India practices is considered as the pillar on which the peace , harmony and prosperity are being built. Countries are coming together to fight against common issues like global warming, human rights and problems that are common to all societies across globe.
India is on a path of achieving higher economic growth rates again thanks to the reforms of current Modi Govt. with the economic muscle India's influence will also set to increase. India is determined to play a positive role and has its strengths to bring positive change and Impact across the globe.

India is a natural strategic partner for USA. But USA proved to be unreliable when it comes to India in 1962 Indo-China war when the CIA were asked to leave by the Indian establishment. The major National security challenges for India in this 21st century are issues like dealing with its two hostile nuclear neighbours. Western liberal regimes who constantly criticize China, chose a communist regime and played their part for its growth . The rise is phenomenal, occurred in two decades like the Germany of 1930's. which also brings forward questions like

What is "US Pivot to Asia" all about?
What kind of reordering Asia will go through?
What role is China going to play?
What is at stake for the countries in Asia?

It is an illogical and irrational to deny India the Permanent seat in UN Security council, every time India raises the issue India is greeted with diplomatic circus. Territorial Integrity and keeping the country united are the major goals once that is done Naturally India will grow and make an positive Impact on the globe which many countries are expecting from India.

I think one must view the global strategic game by putting USA in the centre, if anyone wants to rate the countries based on Soft and Military power a country projects. The first five positions goes to USA and then the rest of the countries follow.

Even with the Chinese rise the world is still dominated by USA because of the Economy, Military and the number of allies all over the globe it has. The strategic vision of USA is all about retaining their dominance and adopting to the changes that always occur on the globe. Be it 'Chinese rise' or 'War on terror'.


--Srinivas
 
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SADAKHUSH

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USA has come to realization that besides financing their internal obligations they can no longer afford to finance terror trainers and also can not trust countries who do not want to protect the patents of USA institutions therefore the future looks very positive for the relationship between these two giants of democracy. I hope USA does not elect President like their late President Nixon.
 

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