Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Frozen Smiles, limp handshakes

The India-China Relationship
It was good to hear the Chinese ambassador in New Delhi speak of an irreversible China-India friendship. There have been manifest signs of improved ties with burgeoning trade, comprising our raw materials for shoddy Chinese manufactured goods, exchange of high-level visits, quadrilaterals in the form of Brazil, Russia, India and China and a trilateral mechanism with Russia and cooperation on climate change policies. The Chinese foreign minister is now in Bengaluru and Zhou Yongkang, standing committee member of the politburo, will visit India in November. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh met his Chinese counterpart in Thailand last Saturday. Quite obviously, the smiles were frozen and the handshakes limp as the Chinese spoke of functional cooperation, which is quite different from President Hu Jintao’s formulation of a vision statement. This is one reality of apparent normality.
There is, however, another reality which cannot be ignored. There has been a gradual and a disturbing shift in the Chinese attitude towards India in the past few years and the voices that one has been hearing from Beijing in recent months have been less than comforting.
From an initial pretence of disdain about India’s economic rise, the mood has switched to some irritation with India’s new relationship with the United States, which the Chinese today probably evaluate as being more strategic than just relating to a civil nuclear deal. In recent months since August 2009, there have been increased intrusions into India, accompanied by a marked sharpness in tenor. The decibel of references to Arunachal Pradesh is higher — protests about the Dalai Lama’s planned visit to Tawang and belated protests about our Prime Minister’s visit to Arunachal Pradesh even in the official People’s Daily that reflects the Communist Party of China’s official position accurately. This message was delivered while Pakistan’s Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani and Nepal Communist Party boss Prachanda were in Beijing. There have been other worrying signs, notably the practice of issuing paper visas to residents of Jammu and Kashmir, thereby conveying that the state was disputed territory. All this underscores the reality that improved trade relations between neighbours do not necessarily mean improved political relations as long as there are undemarcated borders. Questions of demarcation have now been converted into territorial disputes, with the Chinese now repeatedly referring to Arunachal as “Southern Tibet”.
There are international and domestic issues that may be worrying the Chinese. The Tibet disturbances of March 2008 and those in Xinjiang in July this year alarmed Beijing. The decline of Pakistan and the present situation in Afghanistan are both challenges and opportunities for the Chinese. Pakistan’s instability means that an important plank of Chinese policy in the region, to contain India and secure access to the Arabian Sea, has become unsteady and may have an uncertain future. Apart from that, a weakened but Islamised central authority in Islamabad could have repercussions among the restive Uighurs of Xinjiang. The troubles in Xinjiang were serious enough for President Hu Jintao to leave the Group of Eight summit and head home. It is possible that the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is now handling the situation both in Tibet and Xinjiang and the hard line from the Chinese foreign office on Arunachal Pradesh and the Dalai Lama’s visit to Tawang may be a result of this change.America’s predicament in Afghanistan provides China an opportunity to raise its profile in Afghanistan/Iran and Central Asia. With a $3.5 billion investment in the Anyak copper project in Logar province, one of the world’s largest copper deposits, China is today the largest investor in Afghanistan. China has also offered to build a railway line and a power plant which would treble its investment.
As India and China seek to progress there will be greater competition for resources, markets and influence. Cooperation will remain an ideal and both would want to avoid confrontation, or worse, conflict. In terms of military spending, India does not have the capability or even the intention to match China weapon for weapon, force for force. It is extrapolated that by 2050 China will be spending $775 billion on defence — three times India’s defence budget despite our huge land and sea boundaries. The high drama in the Indian press that the Chinese were anxious about Indian plans to develop Agni 5 is just that. No Chinese general is too bothered about this considering that the PLA has already covered India and most of the world with its missiles. What irks them really are the graphics that accompany such reportage, showing Beijing as having been brought within range of Indian missiles.
Quite often, many ask if India will ever catch up with China. The figures of military spending, the size of the economies, the rate of growth, the amount of money spent by each country on infrastructure, electricity production, agricultural produce, research and development and reserves held, confirm that the gap is enormous. Mohan Guruswamy and Zorawar Daulet Singh in their latest book Chasing the Dragon: Will India Catch Up with China? make this quite clear. Even though Goldman Sachs predicts that China, the US and India will be the three largest global economies by 2050, it would be more realistic for India to aspire to be a global player whose voice will be heard rather than attaining the status of a superpower. The question we need to ask is can China afford to catch up with India’s raucous democracy and still survive?China has endeavoured to restrict India’s influence to its borders. Only recently, it reminded our neighbours that India had hegemonistic tendencies while extending its “peaceful” relationship with them, while claiming “harmonious rise” in a wary neighbourhood. The prime example of this is the manner in which China has godfathered Pakistan’s India-specific nuclear and missile capabilities.
China is our powerful neighbour and India and China are not in the same league. Pakistan refused to accept this reality in its relations with India and today finds itself adrift despite valiant US efforts to shore up its ally. It is best to accept the India-China reality and fashion our responses accordingly.
There is nothing to be gained either by becoming a hysterical tabloid nation when it comes to a bigger neighbour or a helpless flailing state when we have to deal with a smaller neighbour. We simply have to evolve a method of peaceful cohabitation; there is nothing to be gained by jingoism and everything to be lost by seeming to be weak and succumbing to pressure. It is quite likely that the Chinese leadership will glower at us from across the Himalayas; should that happen we should not blink — and it should not be that His Holiness suddenly develops a diplomatic illness! That would be most unfortunate because that would, in effect, give the Chinese a veto on our relations with His Holiness and decide who visits Tawang.
Thus, we need to be able to protect our interests more effectively, at and inside our borders, in our neighbourhood, the seas that surround us and in Asia. Therefore, massive infrastructure development is required in the Northeast which is people-friendly and not simply meant to cater to our strategic requirements. There has to be two-way socio-cultural assimilation of the region with the rest of India. Instead of buying loss-making companies abroad, we should be adopting regions for development. It is in our interest to develop friendlier relationships with countries on China’s periphery and strengthening relationships with the US and Japan is part of this policy. The armed forces — all three wings — need upgrading, with long-range strike aircrafts as well.
Diplomacy would need to be more nimble-footed and proactive rather than reactive. We have to look at 2050 and work accordingly. Short-term “band aid” solutions will not do. Until then it would be good to follow Sun Tzu’s advice: “The side that knows when to fight and when not will take the victory. There are roadways not to be travelled, walled cities not to be assaulted”.
Source : Asian Age , 28th October 2009

6 comments:

Kumar said...

Sir

With China and Pakistan, the policy should be "verify and then trust" not "trust but verify". The Chinese cannot be trusted. The hand that they extend may be for shaking or for stabbing. So, while India can engage the Chinese diplomatically, it should never let its guard down. Also, India must speed up development of infrastructure facilities in the border areas of North-East and increase vigil along the LAC. While all three wings of the armed forces need upgrading, India must upgrade the submarine arm with rapid acquisition of attack subs and those capable of carrying SLBMs. This is India's best bet against both the nuclear neighbours.

Regards
Kumar

Abdul Salim Gadhan Khan said...

At the Heart article, once again, Sir, Give Chinese half an inch they will claim your home.

Raymond Turney said...

This article makes a good point.

It is not an issue of whether or not the Chinese are trustworthy. It is reasonable to expect them to live up to their agreements, especially as they are not in the habit of agreeing to things that don't benefit China. It is not reasonable to expect the Chinese to be friends. Relations between states are seldom close enough to resemble friendship, and China and India will be competing for control of resources overseas.

India should improve its military forces. After all, the Chinese are modernizing their army and when your neighbor modernizes his army, it is a good idea to modernize yours. Not that India should expect war, but the combination of a strong line on AP and an army much weaker than China's might have undesirable consequences.

Also, Indians might want to give some thought to the possibility that China's hard line is partially inspired by the slow but steady expansion of the Naxalites. After all, the Chinese may think that the Naxalites will do a lot to weaken India. In their position, I would. Ten years from now, India may have the kind of problems with the Naxalites that the Pakistanis are now having with the Pashtun Taliban. So why should the Chinese give anything away now when the odds are good they will be in a much better position fairly soon?

So don't panic, or start thinking the Chinese are your enemies. But they're not your friends either, and India has big problems which it would be smart to address.

Ray,

Kumar said...

In response to Raymond-

Chinese are certainly not trustworthy. For instance, the border in the middle sector was settled. But there have been intrusions. The Chinese recognised Sikkim to be an integral part of India. Now the voices from beijing are quite different on that count as well. Moreover, there have been many intrusions in the Finger Point area north of Gyangyong in Sikkim. Chinese acts like issuing visas on paper to residents of Kashmir, vehemently objecting to the Indian Prime Minister's visit to Arunachal, warning the Dalai Lama against visiting Tawang, etc are nothing short of 'inimical'. There is a lot of mistrust and mutual suspicion making it difficult for normalisation of bilateral relations.

Kumar

Raymond Turney said...

Hi,

In response to Kumar-

I am not sure we disagree significantly. It's just that having grown up in the US when anti-Communism was the rage, I tend to think of two geopolitical rivals yelling at each other as fairly normal. Relations between China and India are definitely worse than they were five years ago.

I expect it will get worse, not better, since the Chinese may start providing significant to the Naxalites using Nepal as a proxy.

That said, maybe it is time to build a railroad to resupply AP, station troops, not in AP but on the Indian side of the narrows strip connecting AP with the rest of India, solve the problems connected with India's weapon acquisition programs, etc. I'm a big believer in Teddy Roosevelt's advice {often ignored, not least by him} about talking softly and carrying a big stick. Sending troops to AP and building military infrastructure may provoke the Chinese, but it also helps to deter them. Singh's visit to AP to support a political campaign also provokes the Chinese and it doesn't do anything to deter them.

I also think India might improve the situation by putting a little more distance between itself and the US. I don't think the US will back India against China in a crisis. Since that is the case, India should avoid giving China the impression that it backs the US against China.

Ray,

Ray,

Kumar said...

Hi Raymond

No question of disagreement with your views. In fact I welcome your point of view.

I am not too sure whether the Chinese will play any role in the naxal issue. Naxalites are home-grown and enjoy one or the other kind of political patronage. The extremists of course have connections with insurgents groups operating in the North-East. Bangladesh is known to provide support and a safe haven for these groups. So the worry is not China but Bangladesh if we have to stretch the foreign involvement in this problem.(http://www.silobreaker.com/naxals-sourcing-arms-from-bangladesh-chidambaram-5_2262690328181997570)

No doubt India albeit late has embarked on development of infrastructure facilities in the North-East. Troop deployment (or re-deployment) and stepping up vigil is the least India can do to protect its territorial integrity and deter Chinese from any military adventure. My view is that the border dispute is only a part of the larger problem which dogs Sino-Indian relations.

I am not too sure whether distancing from the US will help Sino-Indian relations, irrespective of the fact whether the US backs India or not. The bilateral relations, in the cirumstances, are not likely to improve in the foreseeable future.

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