I have no doubt that we have both the mechanisms and the required political will to address these issues, said Indian Ambassador to the US Harsh Vardhan Shringla.
Trade
is one of the challenges in the relationship between India and the
US, a top Indian envoy said, exuding confidence that the two nations
will soon be able to reach conclusions that are mutually beneficial
and satisfactory.
"One
of the issues (challenges) is trade. As the US seeks to recalibrate
its trading relationships with not just India but with countries
across the globe, we are happy to engage in that effort, Indian
Ambassador to the US
Harsh Vardhan Shringla said at The Heritage Foundation think-tank
on Tuesday.
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi and President Donald Trump during their
meetings in Osaka, Japan, in June on the margins of the G-20 Summit
directed their officials to address issues related to trade, Shringla
noted.
Union
Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal and US Trade Representative Robert
Lighthizer are expected to meet soon in this regard, the ambassador
said without indicating the dates.
That
meeting would enable us to reach conclusions that are mutually
beneficial and satisfactory, he said.
Observing
that the two countries will have other issues like this as they go
along, Shringla said, I have no doubt that we have both the
mechanisms and the required political will to address these issues.
What
is important that India-US is a strategic partnership and the
momentum of that partnership has to be sustained, he asserted.
"It
has to be seen in a long-term perspective and one that has the
inerrant basis on which we can take this relationship forward,"
Shringla said.
He
asserted that this relationship should not be seen in a short-term
perspective.
"We
see it in a long-term perspective, not just four or five years hence,
but 50 years down the line. What is our strategic partnership? Where
would we end up? How do we cooperate?" the envoy said.
Obviously,
the basic ingredients, the inherent factors that contribute to the
relationship are there, which is essentially because both nations are
strong democracies, Shringla said.
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