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LEMOA ENDANGERS INDIA’S SECURITY

India and the US has given a concrete shape and face to their newly evolved companionship by signing the Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) that will allow the two countries to provide logistics support to each other’s fighter planes, warships and personnel. Indian defence minister Manohar Parrikar who is in USA has accomplished the task of signing the LEMOA as promised to the US defence secretary Ashton Carter during his visit to Delhi in April. 

LEMOA is a tweaked version of the Logistics Support Agreement (LSA), which facilitates the provision of logistical support, supplies and services between the US military and the armed forces of partner countries on a reimbursable basis, and provides a framework that governs the exchange of logistics. The signing of the Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) was the top agenda of Parrikar in the US capital. While the US is keen to have the LEMOA signed, India is pushing for forward movement on high technology trade. But unfortunately the US leadership has so far been non-committal about it. They do not intend to give India any positive assurance at this stage. 

Significantly, with the induction into the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) earlier this year, India is eligible for higher technology purchases. The Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) is the centerpiece of three foundational agreements that the US sees as the basis of long-term military cooperation - the expression “alliance’’ being anathema to India.

While India would be pushing for the drone, the United States will push its case for the manufacture of American fighter jet planed in India under the ‘Make in India’ initiative. Obviously USA is going to get far more than India will get. It would not be exaggeration to say that USA has been using the supply of drone as a mechanism of arm-twisting to get access to manufacture fighter jet. Only a couple of months back, the Lockheed Martin, a premier defence technologies company from the United States, announced the start of manufacturing F-16 fighter jets in India, in support of ‘Make in India’ initiative. This would be one of the largest projects under the ‘Make in India’ initiative. Surprisingly, manufacturing of F-16 aircraft in India will also be conditional to Indian government’s contractual commitment to purchase the aircraft for its armed forces. 

Ironically, Parrikar had indicated that India was not looking for assembly at all, instead it was more interested for a company to join with an Indian partner and to start manufacturing here by Transfer of Technology (ToT) in most of the items. Many defence experts and air force personnel were surprised and disappointed at the move as it would be ensuring that F-16, a 40-year-old design and fourth generation fighter, would remain in the IAF for another 30-40 years.

The manner in which Parrikar has been single-minded in handling the defence deals, it makes it explicit that he is determined to open up the Indian defence establishment before the US officials. The newfound friendship between Modi and Obama will soon witness India formally joining the group of close friends and allies of the USA. India under Modi rule has already distanced itself from NAM. It has been shifting away from Russia towards USA in defence sector.

The USA on its part will offer India a gift for the 2019 Lok Sabha elections. During his visit to Boeing facility in Philadelphia where the US aerospace giant manufactures its CH-47F Chinook heavy-lift helicopters, Parrikar would be offered the Boeing which will be inducted into the Indian Air Force in 2019. The Chinooks will fill a crucial gap in the Indian Air Force’s heavy-lift capabilities as it currently operates a solitary Soviet-origin Mi-26 chopper to deliver payloads to high altitudes. The chopper can be used for secondary missions such as aircraft recovery, disaster relief, medical evacuation and search and rescue.  The  US Secretary of State John Kerry and Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker are visiting New Delhi for the second Strategic and Commercial (S&C) dialogue. The US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter will follow them. Senior officials from 12 different US agencies will be part of the S&C dialogue that will be co-chaired by the U.S Secretaries and their Indian counterparts. The US officials and leaders are quite ebullient of their possible achievement. However their only disappointment is their inability to end the Obama tenure without any progress on neither a Bilateral Investment Treaty and a common vision or approach to key issues at the World Trade Organization.

Nevertheless one of the key takeaways from Parikar’s visit would be signing of the ‘Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement’ (LEMOA). The move will allow USA to use India’s bases as well as assets for replenishment of supplies and refuelling. This will be the sixth meeting between the two defence ministers. In the past, the US has shied away from offering its armed predator drones to India. Prime Minister Modi is also expected to meet President Obama at the G20 summit in Hangzhou, China on September 4-5, for what will possibly be their last meeting as heads of government. All these exchanges will coincide with holding of the NAM summit in Venezuela on September 17-18.  Unfortunately Modi will not participate at the meet. Parrikar’s visit to the US Capital was advanced to conclude unfinished business before the makeover in Washington. Modi and his colleagues are not sure of the attitude and approach of the next President towards India which is why they strive that the crucial agreements must be signed while Obama is in office. The long-awaited bilateral military logistics cooperation is just one item that is expected to be ticked off in a US-India defense agenda. Undoubtedly in the present situation US is now India’s number one defense partner in terms of hardware supplies and operational exercises.

It is really intriguing how could the government go ahead with this agreement being aware of the fact that it is “disastrous” and will hit the independence of India’s foreign policy. With this agreement, India will become a “full-fledged” military ally of Washington and would amount to “compromising” country’s strategic autonomy. 

PARRIKAR Promises
Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar faced close range ‘firing’ from opposition parties for signing the LEMOA with the USon August 29. The pact was inked by Parrikar with his US counterpart, Ashton Carter at Pentagon during his ongoing visit. But the Opposition parties have already fired at LEMOA, terming it as a fundamental departure from India’s time tested policy of ‘strategic military neutrality’.

CARTER confirms
According to Carter, LEMOA is a very substantial enabler of the two countries to work together. “It makes it possible and easier for us to operate together when we choose to. It doesn’t by itself – those agreements – those are the things that the two governments would have to agree on a case by case basis. This is an agreement that makes it all go so much more smoothly and efficiently,” he explained.

MODI mediates
LEMOA is one of the four ‘foundational’ agreements that the US signs with its defence partners. In a similar diplomatic initiative, the first NDA government under Atal Bihari Vajpayee, had signed the General Security Of Military Information Agreement in 2002. The US stand on India’s role in the Asia-Pacific region comes ahead of Prime Minister Modi’s expected 
visit to Vietnam. 
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