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Chapter VIII.  Develop Agendas for Cooperative Action with the Other Main Centers of Global Power

 Section C.  The Way Ahead - 6.  South and Central Asia

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        South and Central Asia is a region of great strategic importance where American interests

        and values are engaged as never before.  India is a great democracy, and our shared

        values are the foundation of our good relations.  We are eager to see Pakistan move along

        a stable, secure, and democratic path.  Our goal is for the entire region of South and

        Central Asia to be democratic, prosperous, and at peace.

         

        We have made great strides in transforming America's relationship with India, a major

        power that shares our commitment to freedom, democracy, and rule of law.  In July 2005,

        we signed a bold agreement ­ a roadmap to realize the meaningful cooperation that had

        eluded our two nations for decades.  India now is poised to shoulder global obligations in

        cooperation with the United States in a way befitting a major power.

         

        Progress with India has been achieved even as the United States has improved its

        strategic relationship with Pakistan.  For decades, outsiders acted as if good relations with

        India and Pakistan were mutually exclusive.  This Administration has shown that

        improved relations with each are possible and can help India and Pakistan make strides

        toward a lasting peace between themselves.  America's relationship with Pakistan will

        not be a mirror image of our relationship with India.  Together, our relations with the

        nations of South Asia can serve as a foundation for deeper engagement throughout

 

                                                                                           National Security Strategy  39


 

             Central Asia.  Increasingly, Afghanistan will assume its historical role as a land-bridge

             between South and Central Asia, connecting these two vital regions.

             

             Central Asia is an enduring priority for our foreign policy.  The five countries of Central

             Asia are distinct from one another and our relations with each, while important, will

             differ.  In the region as a whole, the elements of our larger strategy meet, and we must

             pursue those elements simultaneously:  promoting effective democracies and the

             expansion of free-market reforms, diversifying global sources of energy, and enhancing

             security and winning the War on Terror.

             



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