US defence secy nominee wants to enhance military collaboration with India

Esper said the Trump administration would continue to bolster the overall defense relationship through senior-level engagement such as the 2+2 ministerial dialogue

defence
Press Trust of India Washington
2 min read Last Updated : Jul 17 2019 | 8:53 AM IST

Defence Secretary nominee Mark T Esper has told lawmakers that he wants to solidify the enduring strategic partnership with India.

"If confirmed, my overall guiding objective for our relationship with India would be to solidify an enduring strategic partnership underpinned by strong defence cooperation with an Indian military able to collaborate effectively with the United States to address shared interests," Esper told members of the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday.

In a written response to questions, Esper said the Trump administration would continue to bolster the overall defense relationship through senior-level engagement such as the 2+2 ministerial dialogue.

Within the context of Major Defence Partnership, Esper said he would continue to prioritise increasing information-sharing capabilities with the Indian armed forces, and expanding the scope and complexity of military-to-military exercises, including incorporating joint aspects into service-level exercises.

Esper said he would also continue to encourage enhanced Maritime Domain Awareness cooperation, and promote co-development opportunities and industrial cooperation.

According to Esper, the US force's posture in the Indo-Pacific region should evolve to ensure that combat credible forces are capable of degrading, delaying, or denying competitors' military objectives until reinforcements arrive.

"This approach is intended to present potential challengers with a dilemma, by ensuring that they cannot quickly, cheaply, or easily achieve their goals through military force," Esper said.

"Competitors are therefore incentivised to advance their interests through other, more peaceful means, subject to internationally recognised rules or widely accepted State practice," he added.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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Topics :Donald TrumpUS India relations

First Published: Jul 17 2019 | 6:20 AM IST

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