Bangladesh is a key ally of the United States in South Asia. On issues including regional and global security, counter-terrorism, and climate change, the two countries enjoy substantial collaboration. Bangladesh has played an important role in the Obama administration’s major international development projects, including food security, healthcare, and the environment. In 2012, the two countries inked a strategic conversation agreement. In 2015, Marcia Bernicat, the US Ambassador to Bangladesh, praised relations as “vibrant, multifaceted, and important.” The United States’ strategy with Bangladesh places a premium on political stability, human rights, and democracy. Bangladesh is also seen by the United States as a moderate Muslim friend among Islamic countries. One of Bangladesh’s most important strategic military partners is the United States. Defence cooperation between the United States and Bangladesh is growing day by day. Regular joint exercises are performed, particularly in the Bay of Bengal. The United States Pacific Command engages the Bangladesh Armed Forces regularly. The US also assisted in the formation of the Bangladesh Navy’s elite SWADS marine unit, which is fashioned after American and South Korean special forces. Bangladesh is the greatest donor to UN peacekeeping operations in the world. Bangladeshi peacekeeping missions have benefited greatly from the sponsorship of the United States. Strong and expanding economic ties between the two nations are the bedrock of the US-Bangladesh relationship. Bangladesh has suddenly developed into one of the world’s fastest-growing economies during the previous five decades. Bangladesh is on track to become the world’s 24th largest economy in 10 years, with an expected growth rate of 7.2 per cent in 2022. Bangladesh’s growth and resiliency are built on the development and foreign direct investment, and the United States remains a dedicated partner. Bangladesh is located in the heart of the Indo-Pacific, a region that the Biden-Harris administration has prioritized for economic connectivity, bilateral relations are also focused on shared democratic values, free enterprise, resilient supply chains, and prosperity and health of both countries’ people. We see major areas of engagement that may be strengthened to deepen defence and security cooperation as both celebrate 50 years of US-Bangladesh relations on April 4, 2022. Bangladesh delivered over 6 million pieces of personal protective equipment to the United States during the first catastrophic wave of Covid-19. This was notably true during the pandemic when Bangladesh delivered over 6 million pieces of personal protective equipment to the United States during the first catastrophic wave of Covid-19. However, 2021 was a challenging year for relations between the United States and Bangladesh. Washington had imposed sanctions on Bangladesh’s Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) and several current and former officers for a long history of human rights violations, including extrajudicial killings on December 10, 2021. The Biden administration did not extend an invitation to Bangladesh to the virtual Summit for Democracy that same month. The US recently published a report on the state of human rights in 198 nations in 2021. Bangladesh has been accused of human rights abuses by the country’s state department. According to the research, there has been widespread impunity for security force abuses and corruption in Bangladesh. But Bangladesh criticized the report. Amidst these, the signing of a draft defence cooperation agreement during Nuland’s visit to Dhaka exemplifies that effort. However, Washington may continue to regard Dhaka as a security partner in the region. The US now wants to build a strategic relationship with Bangladesh. President of the United States, Joe Biden, has voiced his belief earlier that the Dhaka-Washington relationship will thrive for the next 50 years and beyond. In a letter to Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, he noted that “Our defence cooperation is stronger than ever,” adding that the Bangladesh Coast Guard and Navy are essential allies in ensuring a free and open Indo-Pacific area, as well as contributing to the regional fight to combat human and illicit drug trafficking. According to the US government websites, Bangladesh has received $66.9 million in Foreign Military Financing (FMF) and $7.29 million in International Military Education and Training (IMET) aid from the United States since 2015. FMF funding includes $10 million in bilateral programs and $56.9 million in regional FMF for the Bay of Bengal Initiative. Through FMF support, the Department of State’s Bay of Bengal Initiative aims to improve civilian and military actors’ capacity to detect illicit activity within their borders and in the region, build networks and habits of cooperation to allow countries to share information, develop their capacity to respond quickly to illicit activity, and support our partners in enabling a rules-based order in the Indian Ocean Region. In support of the Indo-Pacific Strategy, US security aid to Bangladesh has improved maritime security, freedom of navigation, and humanitarian assistance/disaster response capabilities. These funds have been used to purchase patrol boats for the Bangladesh Army, additional patrol vessels for the Navy, international peacekeeping and border security missions; electronic and mechanical upgrades to the Bangladesh Navy’s fast patrol boats and former US Coast Guard cutters; technical and professional training for Bangladesh military and Coast Guard personnel; and joint military exercises. This assistance has helped Bangladesh significantly in its efforts to improve its marine domain knowledge and control. On April 18, Bangladesh Army Chief General SM Shafiuddin Ahmed visited the United States at the invitation of US Army Chief of Staff General James C McConville, according to an ISPR release. This visit could help strengthen bilateral defence ties. Bilateral defence ties may boost bilateral relations. Ths US needs Bangladesh in the region and vice versa. This visit conveyed the message that despite having some bilateral problems, both countries are very interested to strengthen further bilateral ties. This may help solve bilateral problems. Bangladesh and USA must engage as trusted partners to deal with some common problems. According to the media reports, SM Shafiuddin Ahmed paid a courtesy call to General Daniel R Hokanson, the head of the National Guard Bureau and a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Vice Chief of Staff of the Army General James M Martin, Marine Corps Assistant Commandant General Eric M Smith, and Director General of Southeast Asia Laurie Abel of the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy from April 20 to 22. During the meetings, issues of common interest to the two forces were discussed, including UN peacekeeping missions and post-disaster humanitarian aid. According to the press release, the chief of army staff was also inducted into the Near East South Asia (NESA) Center’s Hall of Fame as a past graduate of the NESA program at the National Defense University. UN officials showed an interest in sending more Bangladeshi peacekeepers to the UN. The Bangladesh army leader requested that the Bangladeshi contingents of the UN peacekeeping force replace their old weapons and equipment with new weaponry and equipment sourced from Bangladesh. The army chief met with Gilles Michaud, under-secretary-general of the United Nations Department of Security and Safety; Major General Maureen O’Brien, acting military adviser; Mohammed Khaled Khiari, assistant secretary-general (ASG), Department of Political and Peace Building Affairs; Christian Saunders, ASG, Department of Operational Support; and Police Adviser Luis Ribeiro Carrilho during his visit to the United Nations Headquarters in New York on April 25 and 26. According to a news release from Bangladesh’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations, the conversations were quite successful and highlighted many facets of Bangladeshi peacekeepers’ vital commitment to UN operations. During the meetings, the army chief emphasized Bangladesh’s constitutional commitment to world peace and raised issues of Bangladesh’s interest in UN peacekeeping operations, such as the recruitment of more Bangladeshi peacekeepers, including women, the appointment of high-ranking military officials in various peacekeeping operations, participation in peacekeeping missions co-pledging with other countries, the deployment of armed personnel carriers from Bangladesh, and the recruitment of armed personnel carriers from Bangladesh. The United States intends to help Bangladesh modernize and institutionalize its armed forces by supplying defence equipment and training. The United States emphasized the signing of two defence accords – GSOMIA and ACSA – that serve as foundations for defence trade and cooperation. However, the majority of the US military assistance to Bangladesh is in the form of training for defence professionals and joint exercises between two forces. The United States Pacific Command engages the Bangladesh Armed Forces regularly. US Defense Secretary Mark Esper paid a visit to Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and discussed military cooperation between the two countries, among other things. Bangladesh army chief paid his US visit this month after the successful completion of the “Security Partnership Dialogue” in April 2022 in Dhaka. This visit is very significant for Bangladesh and the US in the region. The US and Bangladesh have strengthened their defence ties further through this visit. The writer is a freelance columnist.