India recoils at reported NSA spying on its Hindu nationalist party
Loading...
A daily roundup of terrorism and security issues
Revelations of US authorization to spy on India鈥檚 Prime Minister Narendra Modi's political party are straining already delicate diplomatic ties, just as the Obama administration seeks to ramp up Indian trade deals.
India summoned a senior US diplomat over a recently released National Security Agency spying report, and today a press conference by visiting US Senator John McCain (R.鈥揂riz.) outside India鈥檚 foreign ministry was cancelled.
The latest leaks from Edward Snowden on the NSA spying program were published in the Washington Post on Monday. The report said that in 2010 the NSA was authorized to intercept ; only Australia, Britain, Canada, and New Zealand were excluded.听
Also on the leaked list was Mr. Modi鈥檚 Hindu nationalist party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), one for observation.
The BJP party was in opposition in 2010, but won power in a landslide in May.听
"We expect a , and if these (reports) are true, an assurance that this will not happen in the future," a senior Indian official told Reuters.
Relations between the US and India were tested in December when听US law enforcement arrested an Indian diplomat in New York over her nanny鈥檚 working conditions. In response, special privileges were revoked for US diplomats in India and the US ambassador to New Delhi resigned. There鈥檚 currently no ambassador in the country.
The Obama administration has sought to strengthen ties with the Indian government since Modi's election, particularly through bilateral trade and defense, reports Reuters.
'Self-reliance in defense'
When Modi took office earlier this year, he vowed to revitalize India's arms industry. Mr. McCain, whose home state is host to operations of defense contractors Boeing and Raytheon, told the Senate last week that Washington should try to help India's economic and military development.
"This is an area where US defense capabilities, technologies, and cooperation 鈥 especially between our defense industries 鈥 can benefit India enormously," McCain said.
According to 海角大神, a number of high-ranking foreign visitors, including McCain, have scheduled trips to India to discuss trade and arms deals.
Indian defense officials have long sought 鈥 and failed 鈥 to promote self-sufficiency in weapons production. Modi, who promises 鈥渕inimal government, maximum governance,鈥 has vowed to privatize industries, cut bureaucratic loopholes, and attract more foreign investment.听
听
But Modi's drive for foreign investment in arms manufacturing faces severe hurdles: India's entrenched corruption and red tape; the reluctance of foreign companies to share their newest technology; and the strategic risk of aggravating neighbors Pakistan and China. Still, that doesn't stop India from aspiring to great power status.鈥淎s India enters the 21st century, it has to ensure self-reliance in defense,鈥 says Debi Mohanty, a strategic affairs expert at the New Delhi-based think tank Observer Research Foundation. 鈥淚ndia cannot afford to entirely depend on foreign supplies. If it wants to be a global power it has to build its own military manufacturing capacity.鈥
听听
Modi hasn鈥檛 publicly commented on the snooping allegations, however, the Indian over other accounts of alleged spying in the past. According to Agence France-Presse, India has complained to the US on two other occasions 鈥 July and November 2013 鈥 including in response to reports that its UN mission in New York City and its Washington embassy were monitored.
听
India鈥檚 foreign ministry said this week that if the most recent snooping reports were accurate, it was "extremely disconcerting." The ministry also noted it was "unacceptable" for Indian privacy laws to be undermined in this way.