Rumors of Modi's visit to Washington are clearly planted gossips from White House and State Department. How should South and North Blocks respond? My take is that a clear message should go out that a visit is NOT on the cards. Modi's priorities are fulfilment of the aspirations of 125 crore Bharatiyas, first and foremost.
It is well-known that in foreign policy issues, USA lacks grace to admit their mistakes and offer apologies to a sovereign nation. PRC dealt with USA effectively, starting with Nixon's visit to Beijing.
The PRC way of dealing is the most effective way to make US officialdom realize their own mote in their eye when they accused PRC of human rights violations.
The mock concern for 'human rights' is a diplomatic weapon used without effect by Uncle Sam in the face of forceful rebuttal from, say, a Major General in China on the psychic problems faced by USA (A Chinese General used a blunt, undiplomatic phrase: 'erectile dysfunction'. That is the language Uncle Sam understands and makes Sam pipe down.
The US resolutions on Modi visa issue should be revoked on Capitol Hill White House should offer a public apology on behalf of American people and unambiguous statements should come from White House and Capitol Hill that USA will not interfere in any nation's internal affairs and will respect every nation's integrity and sovereignty.
This is the minimum and necessary condition before Modi or External Affairs Minister should even consider responding to any feelers about a strategic dialog session in Washington DC -- one on one between Obama and Modi or between Kerry and Sushma.
For India to operate from a position of strength, there should be a demand for revamping the Indo-US nuclear deal to provide for thorium-based reactors and USA should initiate specific steps for India's Security Council membership.
This should be parallelly pursued by MEA by inviting Indian diaspora representatives of 3 million Hindu Americans to 7 Race Course Road for a dialog on the prospects for US-India strategic cultural contacts and the role of Indian diaspora as ambassadors of dharma from Bharata Rāṣṭram.
My 5 paise worth of guidance to MEA: tell US State Dept. that a visit to USA will have to wait since there are priorities that have to be attended to within India of 1.25 billion people, which may not be of concern to Uncle Sam.
Kalyanaraman
Modi hopes to meet Obama in Washington in fall - source
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Prime Minister Narendra Modi hopes to accept an invitation from President Barack Obama to visit Washington this fall, an Indian government source said on Thursday, signalling a new start in ties for a leader once denied a U.S. visa.
The Times of India and the Hindustan Times reported earlier that Modi, who swept to power in a general election last month, had already accepted the invitation for talks in September.
But the source told Reuters the final details of the visit, proposed by Obama when he called to congratulate Modi on his general election victory on May 16, had not yet been set.
"We are working on dates with the USA," the source said.
"They went out of the way."
The U.S. embassy declined to comment ahead of a visit by U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Nisha Biswal to New Delhi on Friday for the first meetings with the new administration since it took office.
Biswal is expected to meet Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj and it is possible that Modi's trip could be announced at the end of her visit.
India and the United States are keen to boost security and economic ties, and the Obama administration has set a goal of quintupling annual bilateral trade to $500 billion.
The summit would mark a significant upgrade from what was earlier expected to be an encounter between Modi and Obama on the sidelines of the annual U.N. general assembly in New York.
VISA REFUSAL
Modi, 63, a former chief minister of Gujarat, was refused a U.S. visa over sectarian strife in the western Indian state in 2002 in which more than 1,000 people, mainly Muslims, were killed. He has denied any wrongdoing and an Indian Supreme Court inquiry found no case to answer.
The U.S. ambassador to India met Modi earlier this year, as opinion polls put his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on course for an election victory. U.S. officials had said a visa and an invitation to meet would probably be forthcoming if Modi won.
Modi wants to cautiously open up the Indian economy to foreign investment to boost growth and job creation.
His new government is expected to announce that it will allow foreign online retailers to sell their own products in India, a major business opportunity for players such as Amazon.
Lisa Curtis, a South Asia specialist at The Heritage Foundation, said a Modi visit would be an opportunity to put U.S.-India trade ties back on track. The two countries have sparred in recent months over trade policies and patent laws.
"President Obama made a good move by inviting Narendra Modi to visit Washington and he has reciprocated by accepting the invitation," Curtis told CNN-IBN TV news.
India is widely perceived in Washington as a serial trade offender, with U.S. firms unhappy about imports of everything from shrimp to steel pipes, which they say threaten jobs, as well as a lack of fair access to the Indian market.
New Delhi has urged the Obama administration not to fall prey to special interest groups and consider trade issues in the context of wider economic and strategic ties between the two nations.
(Reporting by Douglas Busvine and Sanjeev Miglani; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Sonya Hepinstall)