I think I can see a balls up brewing for the West & two timer India

Quad faces reality check as alleged plot to kill U.S. Sikh dents trust
Whether Biden attends Jan. 26 India parade will be test of partnership

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The Quad leaders, from left: U.S. President Joe Biden, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. (Pool photos)

KEN MORIYASU and KIRAN SHARMA, Nikkei staff writers November 28, 2023
https://asia.nikkei.com/Politics/In...as-alleged-plot-to-kill-U.S.-Sikh-dents-trust

WASHINGTON/NEW DELHI -- Since the Quad held its first leaders' summit in March 2021, the grouping of the U.S., Japan, India and Australia has had no major public hiccups. Until now.

The revelation that U.S. authorities thwarted an alleged conspiracy to assassinate a Sikh separatist on American soil -- and that the Indian government could have been involved in the plot -- has instantly underscored a fundamental question regarding the grouping: Is it a set of like-minded democracies who share common values, or is it a quartet bound by strategic interests, namely common skepticism toward China?

The answer may be just around the corner. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has invited U.S. President Joe Biden as "chief guest" to the Republic Day parade on Jan. 26. Plans are also being made to hold a Quad leaders' summit the following day on Jan. 27 in New Delhi, but the whole itinerary could be shelved if Biden's State of the Union address overlaps, sources said. If that hurdle is cleared, whether Biden, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese decide to fly to India could be a test of the Quad's glue.

While analysts in India claim that New Delhi's strategic importance is too big to undermine relations with the U.S. or among the Quad, U.S. counterparts see the alleged plot, first reported by the Financial Times, as "very serious" and potentially damaging.

"The facts about the assassination plot are still unclear but if the FT story is true, the U.S.-India relationship will certainly get more complicated," said Ashley Tellis, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Tellis, who served as the National Security Council (NSC) senior director for strategic planning and Southwest Asia under President George W. Bush, warned, "It would be a mistake for New Delhi to conclude that India's importance to the U.S. strategy for balancing against China gives India the latitude to unilaterally target U.S. citizens."

The alleged target of the assassination plot was Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a dual citizen of the U.S. and Canada. The incident comes two months after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said there were "credible" allegations linking Indian agents to the June murder of another Sikh separatist leader, Hardeep Singh Nijjar, in a Vancouver suburb.

Both Pannun and Nijjar had advocated creating a separate Sikh homeland in India known as Khalistan.

New Delhi has rejected involvement, saying that activity of this nature is not India's policy.

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Demonstrators protest outside India's consulate in Vancouver on Sept. 25, after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau raised the prospect of New Delhi's involvement in the murder of a Sikh separatist leader. © Reuters

Michael Green, CEO at the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney, suggested the allegations could complicate the case for the Quad. "Our 'common values' form one part of the glue for the Quad and it will be harder to make that argument than it was before."

When Green led Asia policy at the NSC under Bush, he spearheaded an effort to bring together the four countries to provide humanitarian and disaster assistance after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. That loose coordination became the origin of the Quad.

Green said that it will be important for Modi to keep India's foreign intelligence agency, the Research and Analysis Wing, in check. "If Modi can't get the RAW under control or doesn't want to, that would damage his personal relationship with Biden. And that would not be good for the Quad."

Hours after the publication of the FT report last Wednesday, Arindam Bagchi, spokesperson of India's Ministry of External Affairs, said in a statement that during recent discussions on India-U.S. security cooperation, "the U.S. side shared some inputs pertaining to [a] nexus between organized criminals, gun runners, terrorists and others."

India takes security inputs from the U.S. seriously since this "impinges on our own national security interests as well," he said. "The inputs are a cause of concern for both countries and they decided to take necessary follow-up action," he added.

Some Indian analysts have been more direct. Raj Kumar Sharma, a senior research fellow at NatStrat, an independent think tank working on India's national security and foreign policy, said that New Delhi would not accept "promotion of terrorism, separatism and hate crimes by [a] few elements to foment trouble in India," and that applies to all countries, including the U.S.

A strategic partnership with the U.S. is important for India, but so is the question of a combined and unified approach to terrorism and separatism, Sharma said. "They are not exclusive of each other."

He added that more consultations will be needed in the coming months but predicted that, by and large, this issue "may not radically change the nature of the India-U.S. relationship, which is mainly based on geopolitical considerations."

Prerna Gandhi, an associate fellow at the Vivekananda International Foundation, a security think tank, said that while parallels will be drawn to India's falling out with Canada following Trudeau's open accusation, "India-U.S. ties are more wide-ranging than ever before and contribute substantially to geostrategic priorities for both countries." She pointed to an inherent resilience that prevents any one matter from derailing the entire bilateral relationship.

Meanwhile, well-known commentator Brahma Chellaney tweeted strong words on Friday, claiming that "the U.S.-planted story in @FT about the alleged Indian targeting of a Sikh radical who has been making terrorist threats from U.S. soil with impunity is yet another example that ought to give pause to those in India who think that the Biden administration can be a reliable partner."

In a report published in October, Chellaney wrote that the Sikh diaspora living in the five Anglosphere countries of the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia and New Zealand -- otherwise known for the Five Eyes intelligence sharing partnership -- are the most active, "thanks to those nations tolerating the operations of extremist Sikh groups."

The presence of such elements has long been a source of tension between India and Western governments.

Chellaney wrote that America's siding with Canada over the Nijjar killing "shows that its relationship with any of its Five Eyes allies will always take precedence over its ties with India," reinforcing India's imperative for preserving its strategic autonomy.

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Indian Army combat vehicles are displayed during the Republic Day parade in New Delhi on Jan. 26, 2023. © Reuters

But while the U.S. did voice support for Canada, and reportedly shared intelligence with Ottawa, other experts suggest the Five Eyes' reactions were telling in a different way.

One Washington observer said that when Canada announced the assassination plot against Nijjar, they had expected vociferous backing from the Five Eyes partners, but this did not materialize. "This implies a simultaneous acceptance of the possibility that the Indian government was involved, as well as India's strategic importance in the region, and hence the reluctance by any country to antagonize it," he said.

India is well-aware of its own importance, he added.

Aparna Pande, a research fellow at the conservative Washington think tank the Hudson Institute, said India would like to host the 2024 Quad leaders' summit as close to its Republic Day as possible. "I am sure all four countries are discussing it and will depend on the schedules of all four leaders."

Biden's decision will be based on the importance of India to the U.S. in the context of his administration's national security strategy, she said. "As of now I don't see this incident impacting the relationship. However, we have to wait and watch."

USSC's Green added that the bilateral relationship is "too important to be badly dented by this just yet," not just for geopolitical reasons, but because the Indian diaspora in the U.S. and the broader business, academic connections have become stronger.

"The bottom line is that it is very serious, but if the two leaders handle it and make sure it doesn't happen again," it can be contained, Green said.

whaaa, pandering to authoritarians backfiring?
 
More God bullshit, it never ends with politicians.
The devil if real would pretend to be God dressed in fine clothes.
......................................

Modi’s latest campaign message to supporters: ‘God has sent me’
By Rhea Mogul, CNN Tue May 28, 2024
https://edition.cnn.com/2024/05/28/india/india-narendra-modi-chosen-by-god-intl-hnk/index.html

CNN —
India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi has a new message for supporters on the campaign trail: God has chosen him.

“I’m convinced that God has sent me for a purpose, and when that purpose is finished, my work will be done,” he told local news channel NDTV in an interview last week. “This is why I have dedicated myself to God.”

Modi continued: “God doesn’t reveal his cards. He just keeps making me do things.”

Since assuming power in 2014, Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have promoted a strident brand of Hindu nationalism in a country where about 80% of the population are followers of the polytheistic faith.

And while he has used such language in the past, his message of being a leader chosen by God has become much more apparent as attempts to win a third consecutive five-year term in power.

Throughout India’s mammoth weeks-long national election, which declares results on June 4, Modi has given multiple media interviews and speeches that echo the comments made to NDTV.

He has taken on the persona of an openly devout Hindu, said Subir Sinha, Director of the South Asia Institute at SOAS University of London. This, he added has “rallied his base who feel pride in such religiosity.”

India is a deeply religious country. But historically its post-Independence leaders have remained publicly secular, in part to avoid being seen to pander to any one side in a nation with a long history of inter-religious violence.

“(He is) the first prime minister, they say, to be unashamed about this faith,” Sinha said.

When he first contested elections a decade ago, Modi chose India’s spiritual capital Varanasi as his constituency, making the ancient city the perfect backdrop to meld his religious and political ambitions.

“Mother Ganga has called me to Varanasi,” Modi said at the time, referring to the holy Ganges River, considered to be the body of the Hindu deity Ganga by many followers of the faith.

Standing on its banks earlier this month, Modi made another reference to his perceived divinity.

“Until my mother was alive, I had believed that perhaps my birth was a biological one,” Modi told CNN affiliate CNN News-18. “But after her death, when I look at my life experiences, I’m convinced that God has sent me here.”

God has, Modi said, made him “nothing but an instrument.”

Modi’s grandest display of divinity was on display in January this year, when he consecrated the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya, a controversial Hindu temple that was built on the site of a destroyed mosque.

Billboards celebrating the temple’s opening featured an image of Hindu deity Ram alongside Modi’s face, with the leader of his BJP even dubbing the prime minister “The King of Gods.”

Modi fasted for 11 days in a purification ritual before the event and visited temples across the country, performing customs sacramental to India’s majority faith. He publicly called himself “an instrument” of Lord Ram, picked by the divine to “represent all the people of India.”

At the consecration, Modi presided over the “Pran Pratishtha” – the unveiling of the much-anticipated Ram idol – taking on a role typically reserved for priests.

During the election Modi has also sparked a row over hate speech when he accused Muslims – who have been part of India for centuries – of being “infiltrators,” and echoing a false conspiracy voiced by some Hindu nationalists that Muslims are displacing the country’s Hindu population by deliberately having large families.

It ignited widespread anger among Muslim leaders and opposition politicians and calls for election authorities to investigate. BJP party spokespeople subsequently said Modi was talking about undocumented migrants. The election commission has asked the BJP to respond to the allegations.
 
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Zelenskiy Blasts Modi’s Visit to Russia As a Blow to Peace
  • Modi to hold talks with Putin Tuesday on two-day Moscow visit
  • US says it’s raised concerns about India-Russia relations
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Modi met Russian President Vladimir Putin for a private dinner on Monday following his arrival in the Russian capital, India’s Ministry of External Affairs said.
Photographer: Gavriil Grigorov/AFP/Getty Images

By Sudhi Ranjan Sen and Dan Strumpf July 9, 2024
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-russia-as-a-blow-to-peace?srnd=homepage-asia

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy slammed a visit by India’s prime minister to Russia, calling it a blow to peace efforts that fell on the same day as a deadly Russian missile strike.
“It is a huge disappointment and a devastating blow to peace efforts to see the leader of the world’s largest democracy hug the world’s most bloody criminal in Moscow on such a day,” Zelenskiy said in a post on the social-media site X. The post included photos of a missile strike that hit a children’s hospital in Kyiv and killed dozens.

Zelenskiy’s comments came on the second day of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s two-day visit to Moscow, a trip that affirms longtime ties between the two countries but that has drawn concerns from the US, which has sought to isolate Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

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In this pool photograph distributed by the Russian state agency Sputnik, Vladimir Putin, right, with Narendra Modi take a walk during an informal meeting at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence, outside Moscow, on July 8.Photographer: Gavriil Grigorov/AFP/Pool/Getty Images

Modi met Russian President Vladimir Putin for a private dinner on Monday following his arrival in the Russian capital, India’s Ministry of External Affairs said. Russia’s first deputy Prime Minister Denis Manturov received Modi at Moscow’s airport.
US State Department Spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters Monday that Washington has already raised its concerns about India’s relationship with Russia.

“We welcome people engaging with Russia about the war in Ukraine if they made clear to Russia that Russia needs to respect Ukraine’s territorial integrity and sovereignty,” Miller said.
India has avoided censuring Russia for its war and abstained at United Nations votes on the issue, but has advocated diplomacy to resolve the conflict.

Modi posted photos of himself on X hugging Putin when they met Monday, saying he was looking forward to further talks “which will surely go a long way in further cementing the bonds of friendship between India and Russia.”

Isolated for its invasion of Ukraine, Moscow has laid out the red carpet for Modi. India is a major buyer of Russian oil and military hardware supplies. Maintaining the relationship is a balancing act for Modi, which is seeking investment and technology from the US. Washington is also seeking closer ties with India, which it sees as a regional counterweight to China.

Economic issues, energy supplies and manufacturing will dominate Modi’s visit, as the two countries look to bolster the relationship, Indian officials said. On Tuesday, Modi will visit an exhibition of the Russia’s state-owned nuclear energy industry in Moscow before engaging Putin in formal bilateral talks in the afternoon.

Russia and India are likely to agree on a long-term uranium supply pact for a nuclear power plant coming online in the southern state of Tamil Nadu and also sign an agreement allowing the military to use each other’s facilities for training, port calls and humanitarian assistance and disaster relief operations.
 
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