Council on Foreign Relations' senior fellow for India, Pakistan and South Asia Alyssa Ayres said that Modi is demonstrating willingness to break some of the older "truisms about wanting to have equal ties with all great powers".
"Modi doesn't have any of the hang-ups that previous predecessors might have had about what will it mean if he appears too close, or appears to be leaning too far in the direction of the United States. He just simply doesn't care.
She added that unlike the previous UPA regime, the new Indian government is looking at economic growth as the single most important vehicle through which India can eradicate poverty.
"Modi has spoken about not wanting to merely alleviate poverty, but rather to eradicate poverty. So that's kind of driving what you see happening - government policies focused on creating a new manufacturing sector.
"India feels much more confident about its role as a rising power - what it can do on the world stage, how its economy can continue to grow, the kinds of innovations India has been heralded for making, particularly in what's called frugal innovation. All of that is part of this sort of new India that we see growing.
"The president is going to have a good opportunity to see lots of new and different things since he was last there," Ayres said.
Marshall Bouton, Senior Fellow for India at the Asia Society Policy Institute, said that Obama's unprecedented visit as Republic Day chief guest is a "powerful symbol of the new energy he and Prime Minister Modi have brought to India-US relations".
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