Modi and McCain talk of desire to "revitalise" India-US ties

Modi and McCain talk of desire to "revitalise" India-US ties

NEW DELHI  - Newly elected Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi pushed for improving US ties during a meeting with Senator John McCain in New Delhi on Thursday, as the two countries seek to patch up their differences and boost their economic relationship.

The treatment of an Indian diplomat arrested in New York in December triggered a serious spat between the two countries and was widely blamed for the resignation of the US ambassador to India.

The Obama administration has been seeking to revive ties since Mr Modi's election in May, seeing India as a key strategic counter-balance in Asia to an increasingly assertive China.

Mr Modi "conveyed his desire to further deepen and expand the strategic partnership," a statement from the Indian government said.

It said that he hoped for a "forward looking, result-oriented visit" to the United States in September when he is due to attend the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

Mr McCain, who told the Senate last week that Washington should seek to help India's economic and military development, spoke of high expectations about a new momentum in India's economic growth under the new government. There was no mention in the statement of defence deals.

Both governments have signalled they are keen to ramp up bilateral trade, which stands at about US$100 billion (S$ 120 billion) annually and is considered to be below potential due to disputes over protectionism and intellectual property rights.

Mr McCain's visit comes at an awkward time - just days after reports that the US National Security Agency was authorised to spy on Mr Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party in 2010, when the party was in the opposition.

On Wednesday, India's foreign ministry summoned a senior US envoy in Delhi and said it had sought an assurance that the surveillance would not happen in the future.

The Indian government statement of their remarks released after the McCain-Modi meeting did not mention the snooping row.

Mr Modi was denied a visa in 2005 for travel to the United States following religious riots in 2002 while he was a state chief minister. Even so, he has responded positively to the US advances and shown no resentment publicly.

In addition to discussing the situation in Iraq and Afghanistan, Mr Modi emphasised that the fight against terror should be a global priority, the statement said.

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