WASHINGTON — US Second Lady Usha Vance has said that this was a time of
opportunity in the bilateral relationship with India and spoke effusively of
her recent visit to India along with her husband, Vice-President J.D. Vance,
and their three children for whom, she added, it was a "mindblowing"
experience.
The Second Lady, who participated in a rare public
interview at an event hosted by the US-India Strategic Partnership Forum on
Monday, spoke feelingly about the bond her three children forged with Prime
Minister Narendra Modi as a grandfather figure.
"This is a time of great opportunity. And I think if
my husband were here, he'd say the same thing," she said when asked by the
interviewer for her personal take on the bilateral relationship.
"Obviously, the US and India, their relationship has
ebbed and flowed at times. There are times when one country's needs and one
country's goals are different from the other. But right now, I think in the
next four years and in the future, the fact that there is this established
Indian-American population here and so many people in India who know the
country and know the people who are here doing great things, having great
opportunities."
She added: "When we were visiting recently, I was
just struck by the number of people who came up to me to say how much they
loved our country, how they visited family, how they visited just for pleasure,
that they were hoping for a close relationship. Looking forward, and I think
these personal ties actually really have something to do with it."
The Vances were in India in April for the first
vice-presidential visit in 13 years, coming after Vice-President Joe Biden's in
2013, when he was a part of the then President Barack Obama's administration.
The succeeding two Vice-Presidents -- Mike Pence and
Kamala Harris, who is also of Indian descent, never got around to make the
trip.
"It really was the trip of a lifetime for us, my
children had never been to India. What would the pandemic and J.D. century mean
to politics and all that, and so they'd grown up just knowing so much about
this country, the stories, the food, the relationships with grandparents and
friends, but they had never actually seen it. So it was just sort of
mindblowing from their perspective. And then for me and J.D., I think it just
could not have been any more special," Usha Vance said.
"We had the opportunity to see some of the greatest
sights in north India. We're looking forward to our next trip and trying to get
to the parts of the country where my family is from as well. And it just was
sort of one hit after another, right? The most incredible food, the peacocks
that we got to see everywhere we went, getting to see the Taj Mahal in the
morning and appreciate it as the sun was just sort of coming up, and the cool
skies and blue skies over in the background. And of course, as you mentioned,
meeting the Prime Minister was really very special."
The Vances had met the Prime Minister Modi by this time.
Their first meeting was in Paris on the sidelines of an
AI summit in February.
"They were sort of sleep deprived in Paris, and they
saw an Indian man with a white beard and white hair, and they just put him the
grandfather category immediately. So they are very into him. They just love
him. And he really cemented his status by giving our five-year-old a birthday
present that day. So when we were able to visit his home, they just sort of ran
up. They were hugging him. He was just incredibly kind and generous to
them."