Several years ago, this writer had suggested that the US extend its Lend Lease system to India. In particular, safeguarding the Indian Ocean from hostile activity called for much stronger naval forces than were available in India. Given budgetary constraints, it would not be possible to acquire the vessels needed for the Indian Navy to fulfill the enormous task of joining friendly navies in keeping the Indian Ocean safe. The Kitty Hawk, a huge aircraft carrier of the US Navy, was being decommissioned, and the suggestion was made that it should instead be transferred to India under a Lend Lease arrangement. Given the jugaad skills of India, the formidable vessel would serve the Indian Navy for at least ten more years. Given the strategic imperative of India and the US needing to work together to secure the Indian Ocean, a transfer of naval equipment from the US to India would serve the interests of both countries. The idea did not fly for long. In India, the lobby pushing for the purchase of the Admiral Gorshkov from Russia looked askance at it, as did the muscular pro-Pakistan lobby in the Pentagon. A later suggestion was for the US to station an information gathering system in India, preferably in the Andaman Islands, on the lines of those functioning in Australia and Japan. Another was to situate a THAAD unit in India, in place of the planned purchase of S-400 systems from Russia, which by then had by default become uncomfortably close to China where military matters were concerned. Only in 2017, due to the momentum imparted by Prime Ministers Narendra Modi and Shinzo Abe, was the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) retrieved from the freezer and brought back into focus, this time with Australia as an eager rather than as a reluctant participant. Much is made of President Donald Trump taking a combative stance towards the PRC after a period of flirtation with Xi Jinping. The problem with the 45th US President was that he mistook dollar signs for love, and insisted on not just top dollar but over the top dollar for any defence acquisition or even collaboration with the US. Even longtime allies such as South Korea and Japan were asked to pay large sums in excess of the commitments they had made, or face the prospect of a US military withdrawal from their shores. India entered the market for US weaponry in a major way, but got no discount on any purchase, despite these being used in the common defence of the democracies in the Indo-Pacific. As for THAAD, if Trump had his way, it would be an even more financially expensive system than the S-400. The logic of offering to set up such a system in India, as also an intelligence gathering mechanism that could jointly keep track of hostile activities in the Indo-Pacific, never entered into the cash register that was the mind of Donald J. Trump.
After Joe Biden had won the 2020 Presidential election, he had said that the African-American community had his back (having ensured through their votes his election) and that he would have theirs. That promise has been forgotten in President Biden’s propensity for spending vast amounts of taxpayer dollars in “defending freedom and democracy worldwide” in Ukraine. It is clear that the additional spending program on social services and on economic
MDN
Lend Lease for India
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