China
constitutes by far our most difficult diplomatic challenge as its rise impacts
us directly in view of its territorial claims on us, the unsettled Tibetan
situation, the potential impact of China’s upstream river projects, its “more
precious than gold” relationship with “iron brother” Pakistan, its strategic
penetration in other neighbouring countries as well as in the Indian Ocean. The
imbalance in our bilateral trade ties is also becoming unsustainable.
Chinese
power is challenging us in Central Asia, the Gulf and Africa, aided by its much
larger financial reservoir which it uses for gaining access to energy and
mineral resources for its future growth under State direction that India cannot
equal. The India-China equation is getting progressively tilted in China’s
favour globally. Politically, this draws countries of interest to us into the Chinese
orbit; economically, it affects the direction of international trade and
investment flows in Asia to our disadvantage.
Yet,
we reach out to China as if it is a partner-in-waiting and project congruence
of interests bilaterally and multilaterally even where they are in conflict.
There is a palpable disconnect between how we see China in private and how we
treat it in public.
We
justified our nuclear tests in 1998 because of the China threat. Subsequently,
we gave China satisfaction by declaring that we did not view it either as a
threat or an adversary. We have established a strategic partnership with China
even when it has long countered us strategically. We say glibly that China is
not a competitor and that the world is big enough to accommodate the rise of
both countries. On the heels of the Ladakh incident, we have affirmed that our
relationship is a model of co-existence between big neighbouring countries. We
say we support our respective friendships with common neighbours, contrary to
reality. We are open to maritime cooperation with China in the Indian Ocean
when its increasing presence there causes us concern. Even on the nuclear
issue, where China has been the source of our biggest strategic challenge, we
talk about civilian nuclear cooperation with it. We are consciously letting
China off the hook on every issue of concern to us and attributing a benign air
to its policies.
Perhaps
we judge that any perception of mounting India-China differences reduces our
capacity to bargain with other power centres. We probably want to give less
room to those who would prefer China and India to be pitted against each other
as such a conflict in Asia’s heart would suit their interests. We might be
reasoning that those seeking to incorporate us into their anti- China strategy
cannot themselves ignore the reality of China, and that with the already
achieved integration of its huge economy with the global one, any scope for
confrontation is limited. Moreover, our role in the Association of South East
Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the East Asia Summit, our participation in the
emerging Asian security architecture, our BRICS dialogue and collaboration with
China on the World Trade Organization and climate change issues, would be
strained by India-China wrangles.
Such
thinking has merit up to a point, but between exaggerating levels of
understanding with China to ward off external exploitation of our underlying
differences and constantly ceding ground politically to it bilaterally on
contentious issues and helping it to present an accommodative face to an
anxious international community by being receptive to its tactical
grandstanding in India during Li Keqiang’s visit, we have room to craft a more
balanced policy.
Just
when wariness of China is growing, we make a show of bonhomie with it. When
Myanmar wants to dilute its dependence on China and the United States of
America and Japan courts it, we advocate an economic corridor between China,
Myanmar, Bangladesh and India that would promote Chinese influence in this
region. We are ready to allow our North East to move economically into China’s
orbit, as if that would help us to better integrate it with the rest of India
and Arunachal Pradesh can be insulated from Chinese inroads there. If China was
visibly moderating its policies in our periphery and on our territorial
differences, our postures would make better sense. But then, The Global Times
has just reminded us that “India must accept and adapt to the enviable
friendship between China and Pakistan. China cannot scale down this partnership
merely because of India’s feelings!”
Under
its Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, Japan is reaching out to India as never before
with the shared threat from a muscle-flexing China in mind. China has tried to
queer this pitch with the prime minister, Li Keqiang, landing in India before
our Prime Minister travelled to Japan in late May and wooing us with rhetoric
and smiles, an exercise in which we willingly participated. This contrived show
of friendship and harmony lacked diplomatic finesse, as signalling to the
Japanese that our relations with them and China followed matching tracks
weakens our playing hand with both. Buoyed by the success of Li Keqiang’s
visit, Chinese commentators have lectured Japanese politicians — described as
“petty burglars” — on the manner in which India and China managed to “properly”
solve their border stand-off quickly. Such contemptuous rhetoric towards Japan
should caution us not to take China’s engaging tone towards us too seriously.
If
China wants full freedom to calibrate the level of its relations with our
neighbours, it cannot question India’s freedom to boost its ties with Japan. It
is significant that the Sri Lankan President’s visit to China (May 27-30)
overlapped with that of Manmohan Singh’s to Japan (May 27-29), with the Chinese
Prime Minister announcing during the visit that China-Sri Lanka ties had
reached the stage of “strategic cooperation”. Given its own policies to balance
us strategically in our own region, China cannot object to the stated intention
of India and Japan to strengthen their strategic partnership, including defence
ties, with more frequent bilateral naval exercises.
Nothing
in our Prime Minister’s visit to Japan was prejudicial to China’s legitimate
interests. The formulation in the joint statement on South and East China Seas
— a subject of acute sensitivity for China — was a standard one supporting
freedom of navigation and unimpeded commerce in accordance with international
law. The reaffirmation of the importance of the East Asia Summit forum for
building an open, inclusive and transparent architecture of regional
cooperation in the Asia-Pacific was standard fare too.
The
Prime Minister’s reference to India and Japan as natural and indispensable
partners for mutual prosperity and a peaceful and stable future for the Asia
Pacific and Indian Ocean regions was unexceptionable. The Global Times
nevertheless warned in an article titled, “India gets close to Japan at its own
peril” that “overheated strategic cooperation with the Abe administration can
only bring trouble to India and threaten its relationships with the relevant
East Asian countries”— implying China too. Such finger-wagging predictably
ignored the India-China joint statement that unrealistically mentioned that
“the two sides are committed to taking a positive view of and support each
other’s friendship with other countries”. Such bullying attitudes encouraged by
our appeasement of China need to be decried as we forge a durable strategic and
global relationship with Japan and others, to circumscribe China’s challenge.
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