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Why did nobody mention India during Obama-Romney debate?

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Last night I tallied up the number of times various countries were mentioned in Monday's foreign-policy debate. And today, not surprisingly, many of the most-mentioned countries are adding their two cents to the discussion. In China, the Global Times notes that President Barack Obama "surprised China and his own people by labeling China an 'adversary" while Xinhua cautiously observes that the candidates offered a "speck of belated comfort" by also referring to Beijing as a partner. Israeli columnists are discussing Obama's anecdote about visiting Yad Vashem and Sderot as Pakistani news outlets highlight Romney's pledge to continue drone strikes and attach conditions to Pakistani aid.

But it's the countries that didn't get mentioned last night that are issuing some of the most interesting commentary today. Blogging for the French newspaper Liberation, for example, Lorraine Millot notes that Europe was in the running with Australia for the most forgotten continent last night but adds that the silence may not be so bad, since Europe is a perennial scapegoat on the campaign trail. Palestinian political leader Hanan Ashrawi has called the lack of discussion about the Israeli-Palestinian peace process a "sin of omission" and "clearly the elephant in the room."

Indian news outlets in particular have been wrestling with the meaning of their country's absence from the debate.

The Times of India, for its part, isn't surprised. "As expected, India did not come up even once during the 90-minute debate, not even obliquely or tangentially ... or in reference to China or Pakistan," the paper observes. But other outlets appear to be more taken aback. In an article for The Hindu entitled "Obama scores, but did the world lose?" Narayan Lakshman laments the narrow worldview that the candidates articulated on Monday night:


oth men appeared keen to limit the debate to their respective talking points, which not only resulted in the debate often being pulled back into arguments over domestic issues such as the economy, it also led to a vast swathe of nations, allies and foes of U.S. alike, being entirely ignored. India and sub-Saharan Africa, for example, did not feature in the debate at all, and the European Union and Latin America were only given passing mentions.

In a far more pessimistic take at Business Line, J. Srinivasan accuses India's leaders of inviting the slight by scuttling the country's relationship with the United States and global ambitions:


Some years back, with 9 per cent-plus growth, India was the toast of the world, and the US. Obama had called India the ‘risen nation'. Washington and New Delhi finally seemed getting closer, overcoming the peculiar legacy of an uneasy relationship between the two largest democracies. Suddenly, all that bonhomie seems over.

Principally, the blame may lie with India. The US has been backing India in its anti-terror efforts at all fora. But the quid pro quo has not come. Washington must be most disappointed with New Delhi's waffling on serious foreign investments. Actually, the loser is India as it now gets only some portfolio investment that is notoriously fickle to boot. And, when the government has made some glacial moves, they have been politically stymied. India is still to open its banking and insurance sectors. Then, the off-putting corruption revelations.

Really, can the US, or any other country, be blamed for ignoring India? For all the big talk of our political class, the sad truth is forget a chair, we don't get a stool at the world high table. We, the aam aadmi [common man], must also wake up to the reality that if our political class continues in its ways, we cannot catch up with China warts and all.

At First Post, Venky Vembu has a little more fun with the omission:


What's the point of our "stealing" so many middle-class American jobs through the outsourcing route if we can't even find one measly mention in the US presidential debate? What price our status as a "risen power" (to quote Obama, during his visit to India in November 2010) if we cannot colonise the mindspace of even one of the two men who are vying to be the next president of the US?

Even lowly Pakistan came in for mention, uncharitable though it was....

But while Vembu, like J. Srinivasan, argues that India's political, economic, and diplomatic problems may contribute to the country's irrelevance in the current U.S. foreign-policy debate, he adds that America's increasing isolationism is also to blame:


[America's] foreign policy horizons are shrinking, as an economically enfeebled America increasingly focuses inwards.

India and the US, it has been famously said, are "estranged democracies" that ought to have gotten along a lot better than the vicissitudes of geopolitics have allowed. History, of course, comes with its own baggage, but today, as both India and the US retreat into the recesses of their minds, the capacity for India to inject itself into American foreign polity thinking stands vastly diminished.

If it's any consolation, Obama did mention India once in the second debate. The context? Condemning Romney for supporting tax breaks that would create jobs in countries like India.

Indian press: Why did nobody mention India during Obama-Romney debate? | FP Passport
 
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India currently doesn't get much attention on America's strategic radar.

This is a blessing in disguise.
 
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Final US presidential debate: China and *******, not India, will be focus

WASHINGTON: When President Obama and Republican challenger meet in Boca Raton, Florida, on Monday night (Tuesday 6.30 a.m IST) for the third and final Presidential debate centering on foreign policy, don't expect India to leap on to the agenda very much — if at all.

The reason for that, in the words of a veteran American official who has worked on the region for years, is that in U.S foreign policy priorities, "squeaky wheels get the grease." In other words, there is no great crisis besetting the United States and India; there is bipartisan consensus among both Democrats and Republicans for good relations with India, and if anything, both sides claim credit for the uptick in ties. Things are running relatively smoothly between Washington DC and New Delhi compared to many other capitals.

In contrast, both sides scrap about who is responsible for the deterioration of US ties with Pakistan and who will get tougher on China and Iran. The two camps have also argued bitterly over the death of the U.S ambassador to Libya and three other American personnel in the Benghazi consulate attack, the deteriorating situation in Syria, the tricky relationship with Israel and Palestine, and Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons.

These will be the hot-button issues that are expected to dominate the debate with India likely to be very much on the back-burner, unless it gets sucked into a discussion on global trade, jobs, and the situation in *******, which is the second of six topics listed for 15-minute segments. "The Rise of China and Tomorrow's World," - another potential India reference point -- is the last segment listed for debate to be moderated by CBS News' Bob Schieffer in a format similar to the first, but sans the podium, and with both candidates seated from across him.

In a notional 50-question "superbowl" contest run by Foreign Policy magazine inviting questions for the candidates, not one thrown up by some dozen pundits related to India. The nearest one came from Georgetown University's Christine Fair, who asked, "How will your administration assess the Pakistani threat after 2014 and how will you manage it?" But the debate moderator Bob Schieffer may not even go there.

Various polls have shown that voters are more inclined to trust President Obama on foreign policy issues. But the Benghazi episode that resulted in the death of the U.S envoy, the first violent one in more than three decades in the line of duty, has given Romney camp a stick to beat the Democrats with, although the challenger could not land the knock-out punch in the second debate. In fact, Obama tripped him during the attack by pointing out that he had termed the incident a terrorist attack.

Both candidates are expected to be at the top of their game in the final debate with polls showing them in a virtual dead-heat with just two weeks to go for Election Day.

Final US presidential debate: China and Af-Pak, not India, will be focus - The Times of India
 
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And Intelligent Pakistanis think Americans are India's masters. With this debate unfolding, its a tight slap for them and to prove Indian foreign policy is as independent as a goose.
 
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From what I seen of the debates, Obama and Romney were more interested debating about enemies rather than allies.

So they were talking a lot about Osama Bin Laden, terrorists and China.
 
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Indian and American regional goals are different. They pretend to complement one another completely on the plate.

They do share common goals, but not all.
 
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None of the US allies were mentioned (UK, France were mentioned while comparing the military spending and thats it). So no big deal. In fact, I was expecting India to be quoted in a negative sense for outsourcing. It did not happen - so it is a good thing.
 
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USA cannot take any action on China so it has to act like a bluff master for public consumption..

India needs USA more than the vice versa so no point giving importance because US can wrestle its interest with India...

How about Pakistan and Afghanistan?? were they mentioned?
 
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Good thing that they did not mention India, it would have been about outsourcing and some more trade/visa restriction.
 
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USA cannot take any action on China so it has to act like a bluff master for public consumption..

India needs USA more than the vice versa so no point giving importance because US can wrestle its interest with India...

How about Pakistan and Afghanistan?? were they mentioned?

Here were the countries mentioned in the debate - Russia, China, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Libya, Egypt, Israel, Mali.
 
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