Why India got a pass with new nuke deal
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With that, what about the mixed feelings towards Bush within India? There were large protests ahead of Bush’s arrival and on Thursday. Big business and the government are clearly eager to strengthen ties with the U.S., but others appear to see the U.S. as a global bully.
There are protests wherever Bush goes. Here in India, there are people on the left of the political spectrum who are against globalization and Bush. There is a Muslim community that is anti-Bush. There have been protests that have been largely peaceful, and that are very similar to the kind of protests that are seen wherever he goes.
Interestingly, India, in a recent survey, has a very favorable view of the U.S. and Bush. In a survey, 70 percent of Indians who were questioned said that they had a good impression of the U.S., and more than 50 percent thought that Bush was a good leader, which is considerably higher than it is even in the U.S.
So, despite some of the protests and negative response to his visit, he’s viewed in favorable terms here generally.
Bush’s next stop is Pakistan, where there was a suicide attack in Karachi on Thursday that killed four people, including a U.S. diplomat. Bush is headed to Islamabad and has vowed to continue with his trip there, but how badly does that latest attack bode for his trip?
Well, the president said that he will not be stopped by terrorists and that the attack will not impact his visit. But, certainly, security concerns have been significant in all of the planning leading up to this trip — and he’s never been to Pakistan before. It is a very volatile place and clearly the people responsible for the attack wanted to draw the connection between what they did and his impending arrival.
The setting and the atmosphere around the trip will certainly have the heavy weight of all of that. But, as expected, Bush could not bend to all of that — to do so would be against everything he talks about. So, its not a surprise that he would say that he’s going to continue on.
I’m sure that the security will be enormously tight. There is not a lengthy stay in Pakistan. But he wants to meet with President Musharaff to talk about issues that relate to terrorism, and he said that is an important meeting to have and he needs to go to Pakistan to do it.
The other part of it is geopolitics in this part of the world. Because of the contentious relationship between India and Pakistan, it is almost impossible to be in this part of the world and visit one country but not visit the other country as well. So there is a little bit of a regional political gesture as well.
You mention that it will be a “quick trip” to Pakistan for Bush. Now, the whole trip is pretty quick, and Bush is skipping out on one of the major Indian sites, the Taj Mahal. How is that being received there?
Unlike some presidents who really become tourists when they go to some parts of the world and get out and see quite a bit, Bush has never been known to do that.
He often says it’s because of the security — that it is an imposition on the cities he visits. This time he said that it was the scheduling department that didn’t put the Taj Mahal on the trip. But he’s the president — if he wants to go to the Taj Mahal, they’ll figure out a way to make it happen.
In this case, that is a sentiment people certainly feel because the Taj Mahal is the most famous site. It has enormous significance and he’s just not including it.
At a luncheon today, Prime Minister Singh gave a toast and after all of the goodwill that has been exchanged between these two, he sort of teased the president and said he should have taken Mrs. Bush to the Taj Mahal.
Addressing Bush’s wife, Laura, Singh said, “I am truly sorry the president is not taking you to Taj Mahal this time. I hope he will be more chivalrous next time you are here.”
Bush responded, saying that he was glad Singh brought that up: “I’ve been hearing about it from Laura ever since I told her that we weren’t going.”
So he tried to make light of it. But people here have wondered why, if he’s come this far, why isn’t he going to see their famous site.
They have been doing some substantive work in New Delhi on that nuclear agreement and, of course, Bush had that secret stop in Afghanistan, so perhaps that factored into their planning.
That said, people are wondering why he didn’t go, and it is something that has been taken notice of here. It is seen by some as somewhat of a snub.
So the president, of course, has been trying to be very gracious and thanking them for their hospitality. But, still, many wish that he had visited that site.
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