U.S., India to Talk Strategic Items During 2+2 Dialogue: PompeoTop Stories

September 06, 2018 04:07
U.S., India to Talk Strategic Items During 2+2 Dialogue: Pompeo

(Image source from: Eastern Eye)

The Indian and the United States foreign and defense ministers will hold the first-ever '2+2 dialogue' in New Delhi Thursday.

The U.S. and India have "big and strategic" items to talk about during the first 2+2 Dialogue, according to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who asserted that the primary focus of the meeting was not about India's plans to buy a Russian missile defense system and oil from Iran.

Pompeo and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis are headed to India for the talks on Thursday with Sushma Swaraj, External Affairs Minister, and defense Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.

Related content: Mattis, Pompeo to Travel to India for 2+2 in September

"They are (missile system purchase from Russia and oil from Iran) part of the conversation. They are part of the relationship. They will certainly come up, but I do not think they will be the primary focus of what we are trying to accomplish here," Pompeo said.

India is expected to convey to the U.S. during the dialogue that it is will procure from Russia five S-400 Triumf air defense missile systems for nearly $4.5 billion.

"There are half-a-dozen things on the agenda that we are really intent on making progress on. Those decisions are important, they are important to the relationship for sure, but I do not see us resolving those or have the intention to resolve those during this set of meetings of the strategic dialogue. They are really about things that are big and strategic and will go on for 20, 40, 50 years. Those are the kinds of topics that secretary Mattis and I are hoping to address - not that those are not important, but they are not part of the structural relationship between the two countries," Pompeo said.

Earlier this month, the Pentagon ruled out an automatic waiver for India from the punitive U.S. sanctions over its weapons purchase from Russia, saying Washington had concerns over the Russian missile defense system deal. Randall G Schriver, assistant secretary of defense for Asian and Pacific Security Affairs, said: "I can't sit here and tell you today that a (CAATSA) waiver would necessarily be used (for India). It would be a topic discussed at the highest level of our government and they would make some determination".

By Sowmya Sangam

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