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If hugs and handshakes are markers to personal and bilateral relationships, then the first meeting between Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and US President Donald Trump seems to have been singularly successful.
The optics, as seen on TV, showed Trump proffering his hand of friendship to Modi – he called him a "true friend" more than once in the course of the day – after their meeting in the Oval Office, and then shaking his hand and hugging him at the end of their media appearance at the Rose Garden.
This was followed by more hugs and handshakes while seeing Modi off at the end of a four-hour interaction and working dinner, the first Trump has offered at the White House for a visiting leader since becoming President on 20 January.
One, Trump wants to largely continue the "strategic partnership" and "Major Defense Partner" relationship with India that was begun by his Republican predecessor George W Bush and continued by Democrat Barack Obama.
Two, with sharp business instincts, with economy and jobs his primary motivation, Trump thinks he can do business with India.
He may have been especially buoyed with the $2-bn order for drones and what he called "(An) Indian airlines recent order of 100 new American planes, one of the largest orders of its kind, which will support thousands and thousands of American jobs" and the purchase of Westinghouse nuclear reactors.
He wants India to import American natural gas and did not forget to add, like a true businessman, that the prices were being negotiated – "trying to get the price up a little bit"!
And, if India is ready to do business with US – something which China, Japan, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, among others, have learnt to use to their advantage – then the Trump administration is ready to accommodate Indian concerns and aspirations more than half way.
Trump has called the security partnership between the United States and India as "incredibly important" and said both nations will work together to destroy terrorist organisations and the radical ideology that drives them.
"We will destroy radical Islamic terrorism," Trump said forcefully, an affirmation that may not have been exactly music to Pakistani ears.
China had already sounded a veiled note of warning over the activity of "non-regional forces" and frowns upon the joint military activity of the kind that the US, Japan and India are going to undertake.
China also does not like the formulation Indo-Pacific – as opposed to neutral Asia-Pacific - and would not be happy with the joint statement that talks about the "importance of respecting freedom of navigation, overflight, and commerce throughout the region" while calling upon "all nations to resolve territorial and maritime disputes peacefully and in accordance with international law."
Trump concluded by saying:
This was seen as not just standard officialese but, embellished with such Trumpesque epithets like 'amazing', carry the imprimatur of the President himself.
From a visit that had begun with "low expectations", given the unpredictability factor of the current President, the Indians have more than one reason to smile. They prepared well, read astutely the signals from the White House, especially issues and emotions that move and motivate Trump, and set the right frame for the meeting by making big-ticket business moves with the US that Trump could brag as job generating.
The US responded in equal measure by making the pre-summit announcement of naming Syed Salahuddin, chief of Kashmiri militant group Hizbul Mujahideen, as a "global terrorist" and putting counter-terrorism cooperation, including in Kashmir, at the nub of their bilateral relationship.
This could not be good news to either Pakistan or the separatist elements in Kashmir.
Pakistan, especially, has been singled out for admonition with the joint statement calling on Pakistan "to ensure that its territory is not used to launch terrorist attacks on other countries" and also to "expeditiously bring to justice the perpetrators" of terror attacks on Mumbai, Pathankot and others, putting the onus on cessation of terrorism squarely on the shoulders of Pakistan.
(Tarun Basu is a veteran journalist and founder-Editor of IANS. He can be contacted at tarun.basu@spsindia.in. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
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