What's new

ASIAN CENTURY: HOW INDIA CAN HANDLE A DOMINANT CHINA

c-dome1

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Jan 28, 2017
Messages
645
Reaction score
-5
Country
Israel
Location
Israel
ASIAN CENTURY: HOW INDIA CAN HANDLE A DOMINANT CHINA
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 02, 2017 BY INDIANDEFENSE NEWS

Modi_Jinping_1.jpg

by Ninad D Sheth
Summary


India has to take the 'China challenge' in Asia as a strategic opportunity.
This will call for often challenging and bold choices, with the attended risks.
Increasing the Defense Budget is the first thing India needs to do.

India must develop institutional capability and invest political capital in establishing the use of military force as a viable part of her foreign policy
Chinese hegemony in Asia is a reality. However, India need not fret over it too much, for China’s long-term success is far from guaranteed. India has to take the 'China challenge' in Asia as a strategic opportunity.
This will call for often challenging and bold choices, with the attended risks - including upsetting China. But if India follows a strategic long-term approach, interwoven with calibrated short-term policy measures and flanked by bilateral and multilateral partnerships - China could find it harder to execute its unstated policy of marginalizing India.
Walk the Talk – Increase the Defense Budget
This is the first thing India needs to do. The Indian spending on defense is entirely out of tune with the geopolitical challenges and responsibilities as a rising power. At $39 billion in 2016, India spent only 1.8% of its GDP on defense. China spent an estimated $123 billion in the same year just about 2.5% percent, of its much larger GDP.
A lot of the Indian defense spending historical by pay, pensions and maintenance of her large standing Army. Last year that left only $10 billion for capital spending on purchasing new weapons. When you consider that each Rafale fighter jet costs $230 million (lifetime costs) - it gives you an idea of how little an Import dependent country like India can buy.
Without bringing the defense budget to 3 percent of the GDP over the next five years and trimming the manpower-heavy army in numbers - India will not be able to exert the kind of military heft it needs to counter China in Asia. Above else, military power projection costs big money.
Employ Military Power As An Option In Foreign Policy
For far too long military force has not been a viable option in India’s foreign policy. Indeed, India’s foreign office has little interaction with or input from her armed forces.
In Pakistan, the Army is the institution of foreign policy making. Armed intervention, such as the covert use of proxies against India is a dynamic and established element of her foreign policy strategy. In China too, military force is applied consistently by the communist party in pursuance of foreign policy objectives deriving from its revolutionary roots.
India must develop institutional capability and invest political capital in establishing the use of military force as a viable part of her foreign policy, to seriously convert its military capability into strategic intent that addresses her security priorities. This calls for a reorientation of her strategic culture that has so far stressed on non-military diplomacy as the primary - and often the only means in foreign affairs.
Develop Joint Operational Capabilities Within And Outside
Increasingly, India faces the specter of a two-front war with China and Pakistan at the same time. The two countries are developing joint operations. India needs to develop the same within its air force navy and army. The proposed creation of a tri-service chief with the rank of a four-star general is a move in the right direction.
Joint operations are not easy – they require a much more intense working together of military assets, an establishment of a flexible command structure and operational apparatus that stresses amalgamation across service arms. India must take this forward in earnest as the most immediate military priority.
On the outside, India’s recently signed Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) formalizes the already busy interaction between the US and Indian navies. This builds trust and capacity on the high seas. Both countries can use each other’s facilities for logistics and refueling of ships.
Interestingly there is no time limit on the time vessels can take in the harbor and if need be Indian ships can be in with the fifth fleet in Bahrain for a period, and the US Navy can berth in Vizag and so forth.
For India, the outreach needs to be with all the regional maritime democracies. All of them share a common concern of a belligerent PLA Navy. It is important to forge alliances with the navies of Japan, Australia and Singapore.
India must not worry about the Chinese reaction in case Vietnam accepts Brahmos missiles or when Japan and India exercise jointly in South China sea. Few know that Singapore offered India a Naval base in the 1950’s which Nehru refused – it is time to address historical shortcomings if India wants to protect its and its allies interests in Asia.
Continue Confidence Building With China
In pursuit of power and in forging ways of its application India must not lose sight of the fact that for all the tension and occasional stand off the India-China border has been peaceful since the 1967 Nathu la incident. It is important to keep talking to China.
India should consider confidence building measures and increase contacts between the people and armed forces of the two countries. China is a pragmatic power. If India builds its military strength and demonstrates a willingness to stand up for its national interest, there is no reason why it cannot simultaneously engage the People's Republic in areas of mutual interest.
In the absence of mutual trust, the two civilizational powers risk losing the Asian century. And both powers may come to regret it.
The author is a Delhi-based security analyst for defense, foreign policy stories.He was also a visiting fellow at the Institute of Chinese studies, Delhi
http://www.indiandefensenews.in/2017/02/asian-century-how-india-can-handle.html
 
. .
Live and let us live should be the policy of two countries.

Sure we may be rivals, but the world is big enough for these to countries.
 
.
"At $39 billion in 2016, India spent only 1.8% of its GDP on defense. China spent an estimated $123 billion in the same year just about 2.5% percent, of its much larger GDP. "

China's total military spending is just 3.1 times (123/39=3.1) that of India's. But China's GDP is nearly 5 times the India's. How can China's % is so much higher? 2.8% vs 1.8%, really??? You want convince people at least try not to make things up:undecided:
 
.
"At $39 billion in 2016, India spent only 1.8% of its GDP on defense. China spent an estimated $123 billion in the same year just about 2.5% percent, of its much larger GDP. "

China's total military spending is just 3.1 times (123/39=3.1) that of India's. But China's GDP is nearly 5 times the India's. How can China's % is so much higher? 2.8% vs 1.8%, really??? You want convince people at least try not to make things up:undecided:

Have you ever heard of Vedic Maths?
 
.
"At $39 billion in 2016, India spent only 1.8% of its GDP on defense. China spent an estimated $123 billion in the same year just about 2.5% percent, of its much larger GDP. "

China's total military spending is just 3.1 times (123/39=3.1) that of India's. But China's GDP is nearly 5 times the India's. How can China's % is so much higher? 2.8% vs 1.8%, really??? You want convince people at least try not to make things up:undecided:
Good catch! ;)
 
.
Dominant China .... How,Where and When??

Forget about mighty India let they dominate belligerent minion neighbors Taiwan and Vietnam first. :rofl:
 
. .
"At $39 billion in 2016, India spent only 1.8% of its GDP on defense. China spent an estimated $123 billion in the same year just about 2.5% percent, of its much larger GDP. "

China's total military spending is just 3.1 times (123/39=3.1) that of India's. But China's GDP is nearly 5 times the India's. How can China's % is so much higher? 2.8% vs 1.8%, really??? You want convince people at least try not to make things up:undecided:
I read somewhere that some of China's military expenditures are listed under other (read civilian) heads. For instance border infrastructure is rumored to be included in China's civilian spending.
 
. .
China's military expenditure.

2016:
Official
$147billion (2016 military budget) / $11,400 billion (GDP) = 1.29%

High estimate
$215 billion/$11,400 billion = 1.89%

2015:
887 billion yuan /68,910 billion Yuan = 1.29%
 
Last edited:
.
India is the only hope for whole of Asia, that can bring status quo to Asia.

Because China is growing very quickly and being aggressive to many nations in Asia.

Its in Asia interest for there to be status quo here.
 
.
Coming decades will answer the question.. India and China both are work in progress.. Let's wait and watch how complete products look like in future..
 
.
Are you asking the author? He's the one calling us dominant. So, what are you afraid of then? Mighty Indian?

IS author PDF mod/member??

Anyway, Small lesson for high IQ Chinese..... any one rising questions in PDF doesn't mean asking the author/magazines. :lol:
 
.
china has not reached the level where it can dominate the whole of Asia.its definetly one of the the major forces in asia but doninating,china has long way to go and i am more hopeful of democracy coming to china that chian dominating asia for the simple reason to dominate one has to stepout and CCP cannt afford that.its that simple :-)
 
.
Back
Top Bottom