Narendra Modi is 'America's Other India Problem', says Time magazine:-
Washington: After the "nasty spat" between India and US over an Indian
diplomat, the emergence of Narendra Modi, Bharatiya Janata Party's prime
ministerial candidate, may cause even more tension between them,
according to Time magazine.

Indian diplomat Devyani Khobragade,
whom US authorities charged with
visa fraud involving her maid, has returned to India after being granted
diplomatic immunity, the influential magazine noted in its upcoming
January 27 issue.
"But don't expect the relationship to rebound quickly," Michael Crowley
wrote suggesting: "In fact, the atmosphere could soon become even more
tense - over a far more prominent Indian also embroiled in a visa
controversy."
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"Yet he is persona non grata in the US," he noted "because of his alleged role in a horrific episode of sectarian violence in February 2002."
"Modi's critics say he condoned or even encouraged the violence - accusations he stoutly denies and for which no Indian court has found him responsible," Time noted.
In 2005, the State Department revoked Modi's visa under an American law that bars a foreign official who "was responsible for or directly carried out ... particularly severe violations of religious freedom," Crowley recalled
"When Modi had no national profile, the restriction was inconsequential. But can Washington blacklist the leader of India?" he asked.
"Realists, and US business leaders wishing to capitalise on Modi's openness to foreign investment, say his character should only be a footnote to Washington's wider relations with New Delhi," Crowley wrote.
"Should Modi win, the Obama Administration will be pressured by many at home and abroad to condemn his past and prevent him from visiting the US. But (President Barack) Obama has tended to subordinate principle to the national interest," he suggested.
"But Washington's ties with New Delhi are too important to be confined through that prism if Modi becomes PM," it said, suggesting "Both countries need to step forward and not allow Modi's past to push them back."
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