Washington: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken will travel next week to India, an important partner in US efforts to counter China and in vaccine diplomacy that is hobbled by its own COVID-19 crisis.
It will be Blinken's first visit to the world's largest democracy as President Joe Biden's secretary of state and he will meet on Wednesday with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.
Blinken will also visit Kuwait at the end of his July 26-29 trip.
Washington sees India as helping in US efforts to stand up to China's increasingly assertive behaviour in Asia and beyond. Blinken's trip will follow a visit by Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman to China and coincide with one to Southeast Asia by Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin.
On Blinken's agenda will be "Indo-Pacific engagement, shared regional security interests, shared democratic values, and addressing the climate crisis" as well as the response to the coronavirus pandemic, the State Department said.
Blinken is also likely to discuss plans for an in-person summit of the so-called Quad. The grouping of India, Japan, Australia and the United States is seen as a counter to China's rising influence.
The meeting - which diplomats and others said could coincide with the late-September UN General Assembly, pandemic travel permitting - is expected to focus on ways to develop regional infrastructure in the face of China's Belt and Road Initiative.
The United States hosted a virtual Quad summit in March at which the countries agreed Indian drugmaker Biological E Ltd would produce at least a billion coronavirus vaccine doses by the end of 2022, mainly for Southeast Asian and Pacific countries, which have seen COVID-19 surges and where Washington has been competing in vaccine diplomacy with China.
However, India, the world's largest vaccine producer, was subsequently hit by a catastrophic wave of infections and halted vaccine exports.
Washington sent raw materials for vaccines, medical equipment and protective gear to India and India expects to receive 3-4 million doses of US-made vaccines by August.
"(India) is such a critical country in the fight against COVID-19," Blinken told MSNBC on Friday, adding that it would eventually become a vital source of vaccines to the world.
"They’re focused understandably on their own internal challenges now, but when that production engine gets fully going and can distribute again to the rest of the world, that’s going to make a big difference."
Blinken would also raise India's human rights record during the trip, said Dean Thompson, the State Department's acting assistant secretary for South and Central Asian affairs.
Asked on a call with reporters how high on the agenda human rights would be, given a citizenship law introduced by Modi's Hindu nationalist party that critics say discriminates against Muslims, Thompson said the United States "will raise it."
"We will continue that conversation, because we firmly believe that we have more values in common on those fronts than we don't," he said.
Rick Rossow, an India expert at Washington's Center for Strategic and International Studies, said he expected Afghanistan's future after the US troop pullout and Indian concerns about that to be on the agenda in New Delhi.
"Vaccine cooperation has proven much trickier than diplomats would like," he added. "The US and India have both found the political need to prioritize domestic availability of vaccines over any international agreement. But today the US has a glut of doses; India needs doses; and other nations across the region hope to tap into this channel."