Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

US&India: A Transformed Relationship

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

The United States and India: A Transformed Relationship

 

Ambassador Richard N. Haass

Confederation of Indian Industry

(as prepared for delivery)

 

Hyderabad, India

January 7, 2003

"The United States and India are countries cut from similar cloth,

cast from comparable molds."

 

I am pleased to be here today in Hyderabad, a city world-renowned

for its contributions to information technology. I am particularly

happy to be speaking to the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII),

an organization that has done so much to advance the interests of

India around the world and so much to promote relations between

India and the United States. Tarun Das and all those associated with

CII deserve our collective thanks.

 

I have come a long way to be with you today, so it only seems

appropriate that I spend some time discussing a few of the major

issues that concern us all. I would like to give you a sense of how

we in America view the world; I would also like to give you a sense

of how the Bush Administration views the U.S.-Indian relationship

and India's role in the region and beyond. And as you might expect,

I will have a few things to say about economic matters given that so

many of you earn your living doing business -- as opposed to those

of us whose business it is to do diplomacy.

 

In all honesty I cannot report that any of the major challenges that

have required so much time and resources of late can be placed in

the "done" category. There is, however, no question that a great

deal has been achieved.

 

Let me begin with terrorism. A broad and deep international

coalition is waging war against terrorists and the states that

support them. UN Security Council Resolution 1373 established clear

norms, placing binding obligations on countries to combat terrorist

financing, recruitment, transit, safe haven, and other forms of

support to terrorists. Such collective efforts are paying off. Over

160 countries have joined in freezing assets; more than 2000

suspected terrorists have been arrested in some 90 countries.

 

Afghans and the international community can take great pride in the

real progress made in Afghanistan. A year after its liberation, it

is no longer a terrorist safe-haven. An Afghan transitional

government, one committed to helping its people, is up and running.

Some two million refugees have voted with their feet and returned

home; economic reconstruction is under way, as is the building of a

national police and army. None of this is to say that there is still

not a great deal of work to be done before Afghanistan is a stable,

prosperous country. But the achievements of the last year are

nothing short of dramatic.

 

In the Middle East, President Bush has articulated the goal of

establishing a viable, democratic Palestinian state living side by

side with Israel in peace and security by mid-2005. Our focus today

is on helping Israelis and Palestinians realize this vision. The

United States, together with the EU, the UN, Russia, and several

Arab governments, is working to prepare the Palestinians for the

responsibilities of statehood and developing a specific roadmap to

assist Israelis and Palestinians transition from where they are now

to where they need to be.

 

In a very different realm of international relations, new WTO

negotiations were launched in Doha in November 2001. This round has

the potential to bolster the economies of the developing world as

well as the developed one. The passage of Trade Promotion Authority

by the U.S. Congress greatly strengthens the President's hand in

rallying American support for more open trade.

 

Any stock-taking also must acknowledge the tremendous strides

America has made in solidifying its relationships with other major

powers and important regional actors. The United States has

modernized its ties with Europe and Japan, two longstanding allies.

Increasingly, these relationships will focus on promoting conditions

of stability in other parts of the world, not just in areas close to

home. We have also fundamentally altered our relationship with some

former adversaries, Russia being the most obvious and consequential

case in point. There are few better manifestations of our new

relationship with Russia than the historic Treaty of Moscow, which

dramatically reduces the nuclear inventories of both countries.

Significant change also characterizes U.S. relations with China, a

country that has become a partner in the war on terrorism and to

whom we now turn for assistance in dealing with the threats posed by

both Iraq and North Korea.

 

Efforts to fundamentally alter so many of our relationships are in

large part rooted in necessity and reflect the changing world around

us. Increasingly, we live in a world shaped by the forces of

globalization. Globalization has changed our lives in so many ways

for the better. It has dramatically diminished the distances between

people and has made traditional boundaries less relevant as goods,

people, services, and ideas flow more rapidly around the world. In

so doing, globalization has bolstered trade and investment, which

are sources of better jobs, greater choice for consumers, and lower

prices.

 

But as we saw in the tragic events of September 11, globalization

also has a dark side: terrorism, the spread of weapons of mass

destruction, crime, trafficking in men, women and children, the flow

of drugs, the ravages of HIV/AIDS and other infectious diseases.

 

The contours of our rapidly globalizing world have implications for

all people and countries, not least of all the United States. It is

a simple reality that U.S. power is unrivaled and will remain so for

the foreseeable future. Yet, this power does not give the United

States control over global affairs. The threats and challenges

facing us and our allies are varied and numerous. To deal with them

in the best possible manner, we will require the help of capable,

like-minded countries. Our need for partners is particularly urgent

in addressing transnational issues, the very issues that are most

emblematic of this era.

 

U.S.-India Relations The U.S.-India relationship should be, and can

be, a cornerstone of this global network of partnerships. The

transformation of our bilateral relationship over the past few years

is a dramatic success story. It is a story that this administration

takes seriously. And it is a story in which this administration has

invested a great deal.

 

President Bush took office determined to move the U.S.-India

relationship beyond the new patterns of cooperation that were

initiated at the end of the Clinton Administration. When he welcomed

Prime Minister Vajpayee to the White House in November 2001,

President Bush said, "My administration is committed to developing a

fundamentally different relationship with India, one based upon

trust, one based upon mutual values." The President saw that our

relations were still weighted down by Cold War baggage, still

defined largely by disagreements, still limited by infrequent

interaction. Neither side gave the relationship the high priority it

deserved; efforts to improve it lacked the urgency that was needed

to bring U.S.-India relations to new heights. President Bush saw

India as a country that was poised to become one of the leading

nations of the 21st century. A nation of over one billion people,

the largest democracy on earth, multi-ethnic, multi-religious, a

critical presence in Asia. In short, he saw a nation of enormous

achievement and even greater promise.

 

The horrible events of September 11th further galvanized the efforts

that were already underway to transform the U.S.-India relationship.

India's reaction to September 11 was prompt and wholehearted. India

was one of the first countries to offer assistance to the United

States. Its people and government expressed genuine sympathy for our

loss, even as they mourned the loss of their own in the towers of

the World Trade Center. September 11 did not alter the trajectory of

U.S.-Indian relations. But it quickened the pace of change by

underscoring the commonalities between our democracies and cementing

our mutual commitment to work more closely together.

 

Today, we can point to a U.S.-India relationship that is greatly

changed. We have come a long way, to a point where cooperation - not

carping - is the dominant characteristic of our relationship. This

transformation is not limited to the interaction between President

Bush and Prime Minister Vajpayee; nor is it marked simply by better

relations between senior members of our two governments. What we

have witnessed is nothing short of a basic restructuring of how our

two great nations interact.

 

Prime Minister Vajpayee has spoken of India and the United States

as "natural allies." He is right. The United States and India have

begun to realize the benefits of a partnership rooted in freedom,

prosperity and security. Today, we can point to progress on a range

of issues:

 

Ø We see India and America collaborating on security and stability

in Asia and beyond. India was an early supporter of President Bush's

strategic framework and his call for an enhanced role for missile

defense. India has been a stalwart member of the coalition waging

the global war against terrorism. We have consulted with one another

on terrorist financing and shared intelligence on terrorist groups.

We institutionalized this cooperation with the opening of a FBI

office in New Delhi. India's support for U.S. counterterrorism

efforts involved the provision of naval escorts to ships moving

through the Straits of Malacca. This act was significant, in part

because it was the first time that the American and Indian navies

undertook a joint mission outside of India's territorial waters. But

it also serves as an example of Indian efforts to counter the

effects of terrorism on our global trading system.

 

Ø The United States and India, in the words of Secretary of State

Powell this past July, "have opened [a] new strategic dialogue to

transform our relationship." These discussions, buttressed by

multiple trips made by high level visitors in each direction, have

addressed issues ranging from how best to help Nepal meet the

challenges posed by its Maoist insurgency to preventing onward

proliferation of chemical, biological, and nuclear materials and

technologies.

 

Ø India and America have also stood side by side in Afghanistan.

India and the United States worked together with other governments

to ensure that the Bonn Conference was a success, laying the

groundwork for a broad-based, democratic government. Since that

time, India has supported the Karzai government, sharing with the

United States the goal of a moderate, peaceful Afghanistan. This

commitment is evident in India's actions, including its provision of

various kinds of training, buses, commercial aircraft, and food to

Afghans. India's Indira Gandhi Hospital has been a continuing source

of healing in Kabul as well as a prominent symbol of the historic

ties between Indians and Afghans.

 

Ø Our two countries have engaged in extensive military-to-military

cooperation, marked by multiple port visits, joint exercises, and

high-level exchanges. Our Defense Policy Group has been revived and

is more active than ever. And we take it as a mark of friendship and

trust that India and the United States have recently concluded a

joint agreement not to extradite one another's nationals if they are

sought by international tribunals, such as the ICC, whose authority

and role we both challenge.

 

Ø We also see India and America, the world's two largest

democracies, working together to combat one of the greatest

transnational threats of our times: HIV/AIDS. India has recognized

the challenge that HIV and AIDS presents to its people and their

pursuit of prosperous lives. The United States, which has grappled

with its own HIV/AIDS problems, is assisting India in its efforts to

combat this disease. The U.S. Agency for International Development,

Harvard's Center for International Development, and our National

Institutes of Health all have programs in India to stem the spread

of HIV/AIDS through better communication, education, and provision

of health services.

 

 

Despite this impressive list of areas of joint cooperation, there is

more we can work on together.

 

Security cooperation tops the list. A key component of our growing

security collaboration must be geared toward stopping the spread of

weapons of mass destruction. The United States and India share a

common interest in bringing about a world where materials and

technologies for the production of chemical, biological, and nuclear

weapons are difficult to acquire. India has shown its willingness to

identify proliferators; we do, however, look for even more

aggressive Indian action on this front, and are prepared to work

together and share experiences to help India achieve our common goal

of stopping onward proliferation.

 

The extent to which India and the United States can be partners on

important problems in other regions will also determine whether our

security cooperation realizes its potential. On North Korea, we are

off to a good start. We welcome India's role in the adoption of the

International Atomic Energy Agency's November 29th resolution that

insists that North Korea end its nuclear weapons program and open

its facilities to IAEA inspections. We appreciate that India is part

of the international consensus demanding that North Korea do away

with its new uranium enrichment facility and meet its international

obligations under the IAEA. But the challenge posed by North Korea's

nuclear policies is far from over, and India's efforts will remain

important alongside those of Russia, China, South Korea, and Japan.

 

The United States also anticipates significant cooperation with

India on Iraq. We are pleased that India has called for Iraq's full

compliance with UN resolutions, including UN Security Council

Resolution 1441. We will seek to expand our cooperation with India

and other members of the international community as the situation in

Iraq warrants. If force proves necessary, we would hope that the

United States could turn to the Indian government for assistance in

meeting not only immediate needs, but also in addressing the

humanitarian, political and economic challenges that will follow.

 

We can also deepen our cooperation on important scientific,

technical, and global issues. I am confident that the new U.S.-India

Biotech Alliance launched between the CII and the U.S.-India

Business Council during Undersecretary of State Alan Larson's

November visit will be a fruitful forum for sharing information,

facilitating trade, and promoting joint research. Both India and the

United States can benefit from the smart use of biotechnology. We

also look forward to revitalizing our energy dialogue through talks

about reducing greenhouse gases, curbing pollution, enhancing energy

security, and achieving a more efficient distribution of power. And

the United States and India have begun a promising dialogue on

combating trafficking in men, women, and children. The United States

is heartened by India's recent work with the SAARC aimed at reducing

the numbers of those who are brought to India through trafficking,

and its recognition of the need to prosecute those engaged in this

activity.

 

Yet, beyond making progress on particular issues in the political,

military, and security realms, India and the United States should

strive to regularize and deepen consultations across the board. I

look forward to a time when India and the United States confer with

one another on all matters of regional and global importance. Such

coordination is not aimed at any third country, but instead is a

natural reflection of the fact that India and the United States

share an interest in bringing about a world in which terror is rare,

proliferation is curbed, and energy supplies are secure. As two like-

minded countries, we will both benefit from sharing our analyses of

problems, our formulations of solutions, and, in many cases, the

coordination of our actions.

 

Let me now turn to the economic realm. The United States and India

can and should do much better. With all the positives in our

relationship, the weakness of our economic links is glaring. Ten

years ago, I would not have predicted that our military and

political relations would be as vigorous as they are. I am happy to

be proven wrong about that. Yet, at the same time, I would have

never imagined that our economic relations would still be as limited

as they are today. I am anything but happy to have been proven wrong

about this.

 

As you in this room know better than most, U.S.-India economic links

continue to be under-developed -- or, as Ambassador Blackwill has

put it, as flat as a chapatti. This is so despite the enormous

potential for commerce between our two large and dynamic economies.

U.S. trade to India remains paltry. Although some fifteen percent of

India's total trade is with the United States, less than one percent

of U.S. trade involves India. Two-way trade between India and the

United States is less than that between America and Ireland, a

country with fewer than 4 million people! American investment, too,

is at extremely low levels. Prime Minister Vajpayee has recognized

the importance of U.S. investment in India. During his September

2000 visit to Washington, he called for $10 billion of investment

annually from the United States. Unfortunately, levels remain closer

to one-tenth of that sum.

 

Given India's vast resources and the creativity of its people, India

should be a magnet for investment. And, on occasion, it is. In

Karnataka, Heinz grows and processes its own tomatoes and markets

ketchup throughout India; Ford and GM manufacture cars in Indian

plants; right here in Hyderabad, Microsoft is but one of many

American firms in the realm of information technology that has

established a significant foothold.

 

But too often India loses out to China, other parts of Asia, Europe,

Latin America, and Africa for U.S. investment. India enjoys

extraordinary advantages -- a common language, common values, common

democratic ideals; it claims a huge educated workforce and possesses

an even larger market with an outstanding IT sector; and India has

the benefit of an administration in Washington that is fully

committed to the transformation of the U.S.-India relationship. But

despite these significant leads over other countries and regions,

U.S.-Indian economic links are simply coming up short.

 

Why? Here I would point to an entrenched Indian bureaucracy,

outdated regulations, sticky legal wickets, parochial political

prejudices, and a worsening fiscal deficit that crowds out spending

for a decaying infrastructure, for education, and for health.

Together, they work to keep India as a whole on the sidelines of

global competition that could vastly benefit the Indian consumer,

release Indian entrepreneurial creativity, and let India play the

international economic role its one billion people have a right to

expect.

 

Both the United States and India share the responsibility of

bringing the new bilateral, U.S.-India relationship to even greater

heights. But in the economic realm, and to be as frank as only

friends can be, the burden of action rests largely on Indian

shoulders. India will need to take steps to remove the concerns that

drive capital away to other less burdensome investment climates.

Secretary of State Colin Powell frequently says that capital is a

coward - it flows to where it gets the best return and steers clear

of places where the environment is not hospitable to profit. Capital

seeks out opportunity, stability and transparency.

 

The elimination or reduction of tariff barriers, streamlining

taxation and licensing requirements, and the resolution of

intellectual property disputes by India would go far in removing the

obstacles to trade and investment. India stands to gain a great deal

from the Doha round of WTO talks and should work to meet the tight

deadlines needed to move the negotiations forward. Our five-track

economic dialogue with India can help spur the needed reforms and

prepare the ground for a much more robust commercial relationship.

But India must take the lead and do its part to transform this

critical part of our relationship.

 

Indo-Pakistani relations

 

Let me now talk about another area that continues to color the U.S.

partnership with India: that of Indo-Pakistani relations. Neither

the United States nor India want our bilateral relationship to be

conducted through the prism of India's relationship with Pakistan.

The United States -- as much as India -- wants to devote the time we

spend talking about the threat of conflict in South Asia to other,

more positive issues. America - as much as India - is eager to see a

thriving, peaceful and democratic India take its place in the world.

But it is simply a fact of life that India will not realize its

immense potential on the global stage until its relationship with

Pakistan is normalized. If India were to have a better relationship

with Pakistan, it would be free to emerge as the major world actor

that it ought to be. The festering conflict with Pakistan distracts

India from its larger ambitions, helps create the environment that

scares off capital, and absorbs valuable resources.

 

The ability of both Pakistanis and Indians to reap the benefits of

the 21st century will depend to a large degree on their willingness

to build a more normal relationship with one another. The current

situation is distinctly abnormal - even by the standards of

adversaries. Today, the Indo-Pakistani relationship is less

developed than that between the United States and the Soviet Union

at the height of the Cold War. Even in the worst of times, trade

flowed between the two countries, Washington and Moscow hosted

ambassadors from the other country, and cultural exchanges went

ahead. Throughout the Cold War, the United States and the Soviet

Union -- who were not neighbors like India and Pakistan, but two

countries on opposite sides of the globe -- recognized that

maintaining considerable interaction was in their mutual interest.

 

In the absence of the most basic contacts and the most minimal lines

of communication, tension between India and Pakistan constantly

risks sparking a broader conflict with potentially cataclysmic

consequences - for India, for Pakistan, for the region, and, if I

might say, for the United States. But, even if such a conflict never

materializes, the omni-present specter of it has huge tangible

costs. It limits the ability of both India and Pakistan to seize

opportunities to better the lives of their peoples. The time,

energy, and resources New Delhi and Islamabad now devote to

countering one another could instead be focused on tackling

respective domestic challenges as well as the problems of Asian

stability writ large.

 

Given the wide repercussions of Indo-Pakistani tensions, it is no

wonder that the international community has repeatedly called on the

Indian and Pakistani governments to normalize their relationship. It

is a responsibility they have to their own peoples, to their

neighbors, and all of humanity.

 

The world is not asking India and Pakistan to do anything that other

states have not done. Numerous countries have moved beyond their own

contentious histories in order to secure a better future. Look at

Germany and France, Japan and Korea, Brazil and Argentina. And now

the United States and Russia.

 

A more normal relationship between India and Pakistan is not

impossible to envision. Normalcy does not mean an absence of

disagreement. Rather, normalcy means a resilient relationship that

would allow India and Pakistan to weather inevitable shocks and

setbacks without the risk of violent conflict or a nuclear crisis.

 

Normalcy means that differences are resolved through diplomacy, not

force. In this time of heightened tension, we are in an unusual

situation where neither country has a High Commissioner in the

capital of the other. But even in less tense times, diplomatic

presence and exchange was minimal. An expansion of diplomatic links

could facilitate people-to-people contacts and lay the groundwork

for greater bilateral cooperation on a range of common interests.

 

Normalcy also means a relationship wherein Indians and Pakistanis

from all walks of life can easily travel to the other country for

family visits, tourism, sports or business. It should not take more

time to fly from New Delhi to Islamabad than it does to fly from

Delhi to London.

 

Normalcy means that the cricket matches between India and Pakistan

that once captivated millions in South Asia and around the world

would be only one of many kinds of people-to-people interaction.

 

Normalcy means market-driven commerce. Today, legal trade and

investment between the two countries is virtually non-existent.

Developing natural commercial links could bring greater prosperity

to both countries and, in the process, build constituencies for

normalization and increase the stake that each country has in the

peaceful resolution of disputes. In this regard, it is time to take

practical steps to bring about a South Asian Free Trade Area.

 

Most of all, normalcy means that Kashmir would be addressed

peacefully. In fact, much has already changed in Kashmir, even since

my last visit to South Asia this past autumn. The United States

welcomes the new state government in Jammu and Kashmir and commends

its bold initiatives to reduce tensions and bring about a climate of

reconciliation in a region that has too long been mired in strife.

And we are pleased by the commitment of the central government to

hold a serious dialogue with the J&K state government and others in

Kashmir. These discussions are essential if the quest to improve the

lives and livelihoods of the Kashmiri people is to succeed.

 

Now is clearly a moment of opportunity in Kashmir - one that New

Delhi, the Mufti government, and the people of the region can

collectively translate into tangible political and economic

benefits. Such efforts will not in themselves "solve" the complex

issues of Indo-Pakistani differences, terrorist violence, human

rights, and governance that converge in Kashmir. But they are

important steps in the right direction. They will bring Kashmir

closer to a solution that will be peaceful and honorable for all

sides, one that will allow Kashmiris to live their daily lives in

safety, with dignity and opportunity.

 

Sadly, this opportunity continues to be narrowed by terrible acts of

violence in Kashmir. I am saddened by the recent assassination of

Abdul Aziz Mir, one of the governing coalition's Assembly members. I

am also deeply disturbed by the horrific murders of three young

Kashmiri women on 19 December and by the deaths of others in

subsequent weeks. Let me be clear: violence serves the interests of

no one. As Mehbooba Mufti, vice-president of the People's Democratic

Party, said in a recent party statement, "It is a historic fact that

the gun yields nothing, but adds miseries to the people and users."

I cannot predict what a solution to the Kashmir problem might look

like or when it will come. But there are a few things about which I

am certain. First, the status of the Line of Control will not be

changed unilaterally. Second, the LOC will also not be changed by

violence. To the contrary, in the absence of a jointly agreed Indo-

Pakistani alternative, everyone should act to ensure the continued

sanctity of the Line of Control.

 

For its part, the United States will continue to urge President

Musharraf to do everything in his power to permanently end

infiltration into Kashmir. Pakistanis must realize that this

infiltration is killing their hopes for a settlement to Kashmir.

 

I have been to Pakistan many times, most recently this past October.

I believe I have an appreciation for the depth of feeling Pakistanis

have for Kashmir. Nevertheless, I would discourage Pakistanis from

allowing their focus on resolving the Kashmir dispute to block

progress on other issues that involve India and that hold out the

promise of an improved bilateral relationship. I have worked on

regional conflicts for almost three decades - be it Cyprus, Northern

Ireland, or the Middle East. And if there is one lesson I have

learned, it is that the inability to resolve big issues should not

stop progress on the little ones. The path to large breakthroughs is

often paved with agreements on small issues.

 

The United States stands shoulder to shoulder with India in its

battle against terrorists, be they those who struck at New York and

Washington in September 2001 or those who targeted the Indian

Parliament a few months later. Indeed, given all that India has

suffered at the hands of terrorists, I can understand Indian

government statements that India will not have a dialogue with

Pakistan until terrorism emanating from Pakistani territory ends.

However, I am concerned that such a position does not provide the

basis for a sound, long-term policy for India to deal with its

neighbor. Indeed, I would argue that India, like Pakistan, has an

interest in removing conditions to dialogue. India is too great a

country, too important a regional and potentially global player, to

allow a relationship with a neighbor to keep it from realizing its

potential on the world stage. Resuming a range of contacts with

Pakistan at this time would not mean rewarding terrorism. Indians

should not view efforts to improve relations with Pakistan as a

favor to its neighbor. Rather, New Delhi should seek to diminish

tensions with Islamabad as a way of securing a better future for

itself.

 

India should also recognize that there are important developments

unfolding in Pakistan that can contribute to a more stable, secure

region. I would hope that New Delhi would respond to these changes

by taking small steps -- beyond the welcome reduction in military

deployments on the international border. India could acknowledge

encouraging events where they exist, including Pakistan's assistance

in the war against Al Qaida and the Taliban, President Musharraf's

vision of a reformed Pakistan, and the emergence of civilian

leaders. India should look for opportunities to reach out to and

reinforce the new civilian government in Islamabad. Supporting

positive developments in Pakistan does not mean condoning or

overlooking the many serious matters that Pakistan still must

address. But it does mean saying and doing things that help

encourage favorable trends within Pakistan and make possible more

normal ties with it.

 

The Strategic Future

 

I have always been an optimist when it comes to the U.S.-Indian

relationship and am more so now than at any other time. The United

States and India are countries cut from similar cloth, cast from

comparable molds. Nearly two million Americans can trace their roots

to India. We are natural partners. After decades of mutual

alienation, we are embracing what we have in common and transforming

how we interact. The results so far have been satisfying,

underscoring the tremendous potential of our bilateral relationship.

 

Yet we must be careful not to confuse potential with inevitability.

Realizing the benefits of a transformed relationship will take hard

work. As far as we have come, as much progress as we have made over

the past few years, we have even further to go. In order for the

United States and India to attain the strategic partnership that is

in our grasp, we will need to deepen our economic relationship; we

will need to develop new habits of consultation and collaboration in

our diplomatic relationship; and we will need to make our military

relationship more robust. As the President's National Security

Strategy stated, "The Administration sees India's potential to

become one of the great democratic powers of the twenty first

century and has worked hard to transform our relationship." We will

continue these efforts. And we invite India to match them, in the

process remaking our relationship for the benefit of this region and

the world.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...