Clinton sees progress on Asia tour
‘We talk about everything. Nothing is off the table’:
INDIA: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday wraps
up a tour of Asia dominated by thorny disputes, as she sees signs of
progress in working through problems with emerging powers China and
India.
Clinton's week-long trip was dominated by a crisis in China over
dissident Chen Guangcheng, who took refuge in the US embassy in Beijing,
and ended in India where usually friendly US ties have been tested by
disagreement on Iran.
Clinton, who meets Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna on Tuesday
before returning to Washington, has been pressing India to buy less from
Iran as a way to pressure the Islamic regime over its contested nuclear
programme.
India has bristled at threatened US sanctions against countries that
keep buying oil from Iran, in one of the most open feuds between the
world's two largest democracies since they began to move closer in the
late 1990s.
But Indian companies have been quietly reducing their purchases, with
US officials voicing hope that pressure on the marketplace will work
even if the government publicly must reject what it sees as foreign
diktats.
Clinton dismissed talk that ties had soured. She pointed to shared
values, repeating the US mantra that its relationship with India will be
one of the “defining partnerships of the 21st century.” “Two great
countries cannot possibly agree on everything,” Clinton told students in
the eastern Indian metropolis of Kolkata on Monday.
“But we will discuss and air every single issue. And I think that's
the way you should develop a relationship.
So I'm very confident about the relationship going forward,” she
said. Clinton was in New Delhi to prepare for the US-India Strategic
Dialogue, held each year since 2010, which will take place next month in
Washington. In Beijing, Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner
took part in the Strategic and Economic Dialogue with China.
While such formal meetings may make non-diplomats' eyes glaze over,
US officials are convinced that such dialogues have allowed progress by
giving a way for other nations to address the full range of issues with
Washington.
AFP |