India does not trust US to lead: Nikki Haley
Indian-American Republican presidential candidate said India played "smart" by staying close to Russia from where it gets a lot of their military equipment.
PTI
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Haley is the only Republican candidate in the race for the party's nomination against Donald Trump. PHOTO: AP
Washington, 8 Feb
Indian-American Republican presidential candidate Nikki
Haley has said that India wants to be a partner with the US but considers it
"weak" and is playing "smart" by staying close to Russia
from where it gets a lot of their military equipment. "I have dealt with
India too. I have got to say, I have dealt with India too. I have talked with
(Prime Minister Narendra) Modi. India wants to be a partner with us. They don't
want to be a partner with Russia," Haley, 52, said.
Haley, the only Republican candidate in the race for the
party's nomination against Donald Trump, said that New Delhi has played smart
in the current global situation and stayed close to Russia. "The problem
is, India doesn't trust us to win. They don't trust us to lead. They see right
now that we're weak. India has always played it smart. They have played it
smart, and they have stayed close with Russia because that's where they get a
lot of their military equipment," Haley, a former US ambassador to the UN,
said in response to a question.
India has longstanding and wide-ranging cooperation with
Russia in the field of defence.
In October 2018, India signed a USD 5 billion deal with
Russia to buy five units of the S-400 air defence missile systems,
notwithstanding a warning by the US that going ahead with the contract may
invite US sanctions under the provisions of Countering America's Adversaries
Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA). "When we start to lead again, when we
start to get the weakness out and stop putting our head in the sand, that's
when our friends, India, Australia, New Zealand, all of them will -- and
Israel, Japan, South Korea -- all of them want to do that. Japan gave
themselves a billion-dollar stimulus to become less dependent on China,” Haley,
a former governor of South Carolina, said.
"India gave themselves a billion-dollar stimulus to
become less dependent on China," she told Fox Business News, adding that
the US needs to start building up its alliances.
Haley also said China is not doing well economically and is
preparing for a war with the US. "Financially, they're not doing well. You
see their government has become more controlling. They have been preparing for
war with us for years. That's their mistake,” she said.
Haley was born Nimarata Nikki Randhawa in South Carolina to
immigrant Sikh parents from Amritsar, Punjab.
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