By most measures, the recent state visit by Prime Minister Narendra Modi marked a high point in the U.S.-India relationship. President Joe Biden the partnership 鈥渁mong the most consequential in the world鈥� and 鈥渟tronger, closer, and more dynamic than any time in history.鈥� And it is getting stronger: The United States India鈥檚 largest trading partner this past year, and the visit yielded a bevy of new , including one to jointly manufacture fighter jet engines.
But doubts about India linger in the United States. A group of progressive House Democrats boycotted Modi鈥檚 address to a joint session of Congress. 鈥淲e must never sacrifice human rights at the altar of political expediency,鈥� they argued in a . Others fear that India cannot live up to the expectations of being a 鈥渃onsequential鈥� partner because it lags too far behind China and鈥攁s evinced by its relatively muted response to Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine鈥攄oes not see autocracy as a global threat. Eminent India hand writes, for example, that 鈥淲ashington鈥檚 current expectations of India are misplaced.鈥�
Their concerns should be taken seriously, but if carried too far they could uproot a still-blossoming relationship that has not yet borne its full fruit. The views of the ruling right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on human rights and dignity鈥攑articularly on freedom of speech鈥�-sometimes clash with those of Westerners, and the geopolitical situation can look very different from New Delhi than it does from New York. But the shared interests and values between the world鈥檚 two largest democracies can offer a sturdy foundation for the relationship.
In fairness to the India skeptics, American history shows that India has disappointed before. When American and French forces celebrated their victory at Yorktown in the Revolutionary War, they 鈥渢he great and heroic Hyder Ali,鈥� their south Indian comrade-in-arms who sought to 鈥渞educe the power of Britain in the East Indies.鈥� India proved too disunited to fend off Britain though, and Lord Cornwallis redeemed his surrender at Yorktown by defeating Hyder Ali鈥檚 son. Much later, after India finally gained independence in 1947, an American diplomat Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru 鈥渙utstandingly the most vital and influential person for the accomplishment of U.S. objectives in Asia.鈥� That was before India鈥檚 鈥渘onalignment鈥� foreign policy tilted toward the Soviet Union.
For the Hindu right, this was one of Nehru鈥檚 many mistakes. Three decades ago, journalist Girilal Jain that 鈥渁 more confident Hindu psyche would never have spurned the US offer of cooperation鈥� that President Dwight Eisenhower extended, and he argued that China鈥檚 victory in the 1962 Sino-Indian War 鈥渒nocked down two myths鈥� at the center of Nehru鈥檚 nonalignment: that communist states were not aggressive and that peaceful coexistence would secure India鈥檚 future without a costly military buildup. The BJP and its predecessors have often been warier of China and warmer toward America than have their Nehruvian opponents.
India and the United States share important interests today. Preventing any one country from dominating Asia is vital for America鈥檚 well-being. Similarly, to Indian Minister of External Affairs Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, 鈥淐reating a stable balance in Asia is India鈥檚 foremost priority.鈥� Jaishankar has condemned Beijing鈥檚 exploitative trade policies and its flagship infrastructure project, which he says 鈥渙penly violates India鈥檚 sovereignty.鈥� India recognizes that Southeast Asia is crucial to the overall balance in Asia, as its cruise missile sales to the Philippines and recent of an international ruling dismissing Chinese claims in the South China Sea reveal, and it is working to keep the region out from under Beijing鈥檚 thumb.
India鈥檚 pursuit of balance in Asia largely explains its treatment of Russia. New Delhi had long relied on Russian power to counter China, and from its perspective, the Taliban鈥檚 victory in Afghanistan and Moscow鈥檚 鈥渘o limits鈥� partnership with Beijing are twinned catastrophes. Indian foreign policy experts quietly concede that the Russia partnership is part of India鈥檚 past, not its future, but since their military will still use legacy Russian equipment for years to come, they are not eager to alienate Moscow.
Tellis that 鈥淣ew Delhi will never involve itself in any U.S. confrontation with Beijing that does not directly threaten its own security鈥� because of China鈥檚 greater power and the threat it poses along their disputed border. But Indian forces already confront their Chinese counterparts daily, and India sits astride the major trade routes that connect China to Middle Eastern energy and European markets. China will devote more resources to control those routes, so Americans can either let India be encircled by China鈥檚 鈥渟tring of pearls鈥� or help India stand firm and complicate Beijing鈥檚 calculations.
These matters are of secondary importance to some Americans. As they see it, the Indian government鈥檚 heavy-handed treatment of critical journalists and intellectuals, the crackdowns on foreign-funded NGOs, and outbursts of ethnic and religious violence (more than in a conflict in Manipur that started in May) all point in an ominous direction. They fear that these events, many of which they interpret through an Indian elite that generally sympathizes with Nehru鈥檚 Congress Party, are destroying India鈥檚 democracy. To them, any assistance to India on this dark path is an act of malice.
They may scratch their heads when Modi the U.S. Congress that 鈥渄emocracy is one of our sacred and shared values鈥� and that 鈥淚ndia is the Mother of Democracy,鈥� but the Hindu right nods along. The BJP鈥檚 forerunner opposed the 鈥渘ational emergency鈥� that Nehru鈥檚 daughter Indira Gandhi to rule by decree after losing her seat in parliament. And as former BJP National General Secretary Ram Madhav pointed out in The Hindutva Paradigm, his book about the Hindu right鈥檚 ideology, Hinduism has a bottom-up tradition of arriving at truth through discussion and debate that naturally complements democracy.
Balancing majoritarian rule with minority rights is a challenge for every democracy, and India鈥檚 choices will not be America鈥檚, regardless of who governs it. The Hindu right believes that India still needs to shed the legacy of domination by waves of Muslim invaders鈥攖his is the 鈥渢housand years of foreign rule in one form or another鈥� that Modi in his address to Congress鈥攁nd revitalize itself.
National self-confidence movements can take very dark turns, but they also can foster the solidarity needed for great accomplishments. Mohan Bhagwat, the head of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, the most influential organization on the Hindu right, seems aware of this dilemma and is quietly the movement from its worst excesses and in a more positive . Even some of Modi鈥檚 Indian critics have acknowledged to me that he has forced Indian politicians to focus on delivering economic growth and development rather than on the special-interest horse trading that has hitherto marked Indian politics.
Nationalist projects like India鈥檚 often go awry, but American critics could create a self-fulfilling prophecy. For example, if India fears that the U.S. will turn hostile over human rights or cut off its access to American arms, it is more likely to maintain its defense partnership with Russia and even keep its options open with China. And a country that in 2019 610 million ballots nearly as quickly as California its much smaller 2020 totals will justifiably bristle at criticism about its democracy.
There are not many countries signing up to confront China. India is large, growing, friendly, and democratic. What more should Americans demand?