
Biden government ‘continues to discuss’ drone deal with the U.S. Congress, says American Embassy in India
The Hindu
The Biden administration “continues to discuss” the deal for high altitude drones that was announced during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Washington in 2023, the U.S. Embassy here said
The Biden administration “continues to discuss” the deal for high altitude drones that was announced during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Washington in 2023, the U.S. Embassy here said, reacting to a report that U.S. lawmakers had placed a hold on the deal, linking it to the Pannun case. According to the report in online news portal The Wire, members of the U.S. Congress have held up the U.S. government’s request for approval ahead of its notification of the deal, which was earlier expected to be a formality, due to their concerns over India’s investigation into the alleged assassination plot against U.S.-Canadian Khalistani separatist leader Gurpatwant Singh Pannun in May 2023.
“We continue to discuss with U.S. Congress the potential sale consistent with standard processes and policies guiding such arm sales decisions,” a U.S. Embassy spokesperson said on Wednesday, when asked to comment. The response indicates that the Congressional clearance is still a work-in-progress and could come through, but significantly, it didn’t contain a denial of the report that one or more U.S. lawmakers had placed a hold on the sale.
“As part of the standard process, the State Department routinely engages foreign affairs committees prior to formal notification to address questions from committee staff,” a U.S. Embassy spokesperson added.
The report appeared days after a visit to Delhi by senior U.S. State Department officials, including Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Donald Lu, and the delegation is understood to have raised the need for New Delhi to show progress in the “high-level” enquiry committee set up by the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) on November 18.
The Pannun case, investigated in the U.S. by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) had led to a charge-sheet against an Indian national, Nikhil Gupta, who allegedly hired a hitman to target Khalistani separatists in the U.S. and Canada at the behest of a senior Indian security official. Mr. Gupta was last believed to be in the Czech Republic, awaiting his extradition to the US.
In December 2023, a number of U.S. lawmakers spoke out at a Senate committee hearing on ‘Transnational Repression: Authoritarians Targeting Dissenters Abroad’, criticising the Modi government over the case, placing India along with Russia, China, and Iran on the issue. Foreign Relations Committee chair Ben Cardin in particular reacted to what he called “disturbing allegations against an Indian Government official for involvement in planning to assassinate a U.S. citizen in New York who was critical of the Indian government”, and invoked plans for a new “International Freedom Protection Act”, to address the growing use of “transnational oppression by autocratic and illiberal states”.
Another Senator, Chris Van Hollen, had suggested invoking a provision in the Arms Export Control Act to “prohibit arms transfers to any countries that are, engaged in a consistent pattern of acts of intimidation, or harassment directed against individuals in the United States.” Due to secrecy around the process, it isn’t thus far known which U.S. lawmaker(s) raised the objections over the deal for 31 MQ-9B high altitude long endurance Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV), estimated to cost India over $ 3 billion.