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Clinton to India: It’s time to lead

Chennai - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told India on Wednesday “it’s time to lead”, urging New Delhi to take a stronger role across Asia where China is flexing its muscles, and to bolster support for struggling neighbours Afghanistan and Pakistan.     

Clinton, delivering a speech in the southern port city of Chennai, said New Delhi should exercise political influence to match its economic clout - both of which Washington sees as potential counterweights to Beijing.     

“This is not a time when any of us can afford to look inward at the expense of looking outward. This is a time to seize the opportunities of the 21st century and it is a time to lead.”       

US officials billed Clinton’s speech as a major address to outline Washington’s vision for the US-India collaboration in the coming century, a partnership it hopes will both stabilise Asia and hedge China’s growing dominance.     

“We are betting that India’s pluralistic democracy will produce results for your citizens and inspire others to follow a similar path of openness and tolerance,” she said.     

“We think that America and India share a fundamentally similar vision for the future of this region.”     
US President Barack Obama, on a visit to India last November, publicly backed New Delhi’s bid for a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council and US officials say they now want the world’s largest democracy to become a more visible partner in facing global challenges.     

Clinton urged India to start in its immediate neighborhood by using its influence with Myanmar’s rulers to release political prisoners and engage with pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, promote political progress in Sri Lanka and Nepal and improve ties with impoverished neighbour Bangladesh.   
     
Look East, Act East     

Clinton listed areas where India and the United States cooperate, including clean-energy technologies, cyber-security and addressing concerns over Iran’s nuclear programme.       

She said India could do more to build a leadership role in the broader Asia-Pacific region, pushing New Delhi to translate its “Look East” policy into a stronger stance on everything from maritime security to human rights - areas where Washington has at times had frictions with China.     

“We encourage you not just to look east, but continue to engage and act east as well,” she said.     

US officials are careful not to describe deepening US ties with India as focused on countering China, and Clinton emphasized that New Delhi and Washington could still have “a strong, constructive” relationship with Beijing.     

But, she added, “this will not always be easy”, and said India, China and the United States would have to coordinate their efforts as they all seek to build Asia’s future.     

Clinton’s speech came one day before she travels to a meeting of Asia’s biggest security forum in Bali, where tensions over sea rights could set her at odds with Beijing.     

The Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) Regional Forum will likely focus on disputed atolls and islands in the oil-rich South China Sea, where some participants will be seeking even stronger US support in the face of what they see as Chinese expansionism in the region.      

India has shared past US concerns about China, with which it fought a border war in 1962 and competes for both influence and natural resources. But New Delhi remains wary of being seen siding with one power over another, and has its own issues with Washington despite warming ties.     

Clinton said India should do more to support both political and economic progress in Afghanistan, where the Obama administration has begun drawing down troops, raising fears in New Delhi of a hasty exit.

India is Afghanistan’s biggest regional aid donor, having pledged $2bn to help build roads and power lines in an attempt to secure influence in a country it considers crucial to its security and vulnerable to its arch-foe Pakistan.    

“Drawing down our troops is not the same as leaving or disengaging,” Clinton said.

She added, however, that India should join efforts to help both Kabul and Pakistan build strong economies by pushing such things as tarrif agreements to help them take advantage of its galloping economy.

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