What's new

China Is Starting to See India as a Major Threat

BanglaBhoot

RETIRED TTA
Joined
Apr 8, 2007
Messages
8,839
Reaction score
5
Country
France
Location
France
More and more, scholars in China see India replacing Japan as the second biggest threat to Beijing, following the U.S.

By Hemant Adlakha
January 11, 2018

As the new year gets underway, and Chinese foreign policy analysts join their counterparts around the world in assessing the events of 2017, the emerging international relations (IR) discourse in Beijing is quite a revelation — at least to the Japanese and Indian strategic affairs community.

While most Chinese believe Japan to be the second biggest threat to China’s “peaceful rise,” according to a few Chinese experts, the rising global profile of India, especially under the “right-wing” nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), has gone unacknowledged.

In February 2015, The Diplomat carried an article by a Chinese scholar titled “Why China Doesn’t See India as a Threat.” In April 2017, Sanjeev Nayyar, an independent columnist, wrote: “One thing China must understand is that the Indian government is not obsessed with being a threat to China but only wants a rightful place for India in the world.” And in the fall of 2017, China’s semi-official, hyper-nationalist Global Times dismissed with disdain any talk of India worrying China in an article titled “India-Japan intimacy poses no real threat to China.” The article was written in response to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s India visit in September.

The Global Times also – it now seems ignorantly – wrote off India’s successful test of its long-range ballistic missile Agni-IV a year ago, commenting: “China should realize that Beijing wouldn’t hold back India’s development of Agni-IV. However, Chinese people don’t think India’s development has posed any big threat to it.”

As the year 2017 was drawing to a close, however, Yin Guoming, a Chinese foreign affairs analyst, argued that India, and not Japan, is now the second biggest threat to China after the United States. Here’s an excerpt:

China-India standoff has compelled us to regard India as a serious rival. During the Dong Lang [or Doklam] confrontation, it became very clear to everyone – from ordinary Chinese to foreign policy experts – China must reckon India to be its second biggest rival. And that China needs to re-assess, re-examine, and reformulate its India strategy.

However, more significantly, the article pointed out that most people in China were not yet ready to recognize the Indian threat.

China’s strategic affairs community has been arguing for some time now that, viewed geopolitically, Sino-Indian relations are the second most important bilateral ties for Beijing following the Sino-U.S. relationship. Most Chinese came in for a rude shock in the summer of 2017, when the Indian army openly crossed into Doklam border region and for weeks refused to withdraw. Writing in an influential, widely read online patriotic portal based in China’s Hainan province and popular among rich, educated urban Chinese, Li Yang, a current affairs commentator wrote in July – midway through the Doklam confrontation – “The biggest mistake we have made in the past two decades has been to underestimate India and ignore India. During these years of India’s rapid progress, we did not trouble India, did not make India stumble or make India shed tears.”

Earlier, in May 2017, India announced – just a day in advance – that it would not be present at the inauguration of China’s first mega-diplomatic event of the year, the Belt and Road Forum, citing sovereignty concerns. The Chinese, though angered by India’s last minute boycott, chose to officially remain silent. A section of China’s foreign affairs commentators did indeed hint it was a mild setback to their diplomacy.

By comparison, the Doklam faceoff, which cropped up within a few weeks of Belt and Road Forum, was a “game changer.” It went well beyond the Chinese imagination. Interestingly, as the days passed, India’s refusal to withdraw its troops as well as its dismissive attitude toward engaging with the Chinese on the issue, simply left the Chinese puzzled and clueless as to the Indian game plan. Not surprisingly, Shen Dingli, an eminent and influential Chinese international relations scholar at Fudan University, counted the Doklam crisis as among China’s top five diplomatic failures under the so-called “Xi-style Diplomacy.”

Current trends in Chinese discourse on the potential India threat, if acknowledged and accepted at the official level by the central authorities in Beijing, would mean further intensification of China and India viewing each other as a hostile “enemy” in the future. The following arguments have been offered by some Chinese scholars as to why India, and not Japan, will pose a bigger threat and challenge for China in the coming years.

In the context of geopolitics, China believes it enjoys a greater advantage over Japan. Japan is a maritime nation and maritime trade and transportation forms Japan’s economic as well as survival lifeline. Geographically too, Japan’s location makes its energy supply route from the Middle East longer than China’s. Both logistically and economically, the South China Sea route is the shortest path. Once China establishes its full hegemony in the South China Sea (and also regains control over Taiwan, which has long been Beijing’s dream), China would naturally be able to easily place a stranglehold on Japan by dominating maritime trade routes – crucial for Japan’s existence.

In contrast, China’s own crucial maritime energy supply route passes through the Indian Ocean, which falls within the Indian military threat zone. During the Doklam confrontation, the Chinese took due notice of Indian analysts making statements that in the event of a India-China military clash, India would cut off China’s maritime access to the Indian Ocean.

Of course, it is true many Chinese dismiss the Indian threat as nothing but a joke. But that is more because India has not yet fully realized its potential, not because India is not capable of becoming a future threat to China.

Some analysts in China have also expressed their frustration over India’s “unchecked” rapid economic progress during the past two decades. These experts and scholars are rather candid in admitting China had failed to anticipate the “revolutionary” transformation Narendra Modi has brought about in the Indian national psyche. True, it is not a revelation to the Chinese that India has always viewed China is its “imaginary enemy.” Moreover, it is not hidden from the Chinese either that the Indian defeat during the 1962 boundary war has since remained the single most crucial factor in determining India’s national defense strategy. Yet, it is only now and under Modi, as India’s stature in global politics has risen, that China has suddenly realized that — unlike Japan — India is a nuclear weapon state. Finally, thanks to the Modi government’s uncharitable stance, it has dawned upon China’s strategic affairs community that Beijing’s Belt and Road strategy is bound to produce more and more structural contradictions between the two neighbors, already rapidly becoming hostile.

No wonder, if the media reports from Beijing are true, that the Peoples Republic of China for the first time keenly awaited the outcome of this year’s assembly elections in India. Following the Gujarat elections, the mandarins watching India in the Chinese foreign affairs ministry, it is believed, have predicted in their dossier that Modi will enjoy a second term as the prime minister in 2019.

Going by the current Chinese discourse, Beijing is certainly not going to just sit and watch and let India become a threat. The question that looms large, then, is what China is going to do about it.

https://thediplomat.com/2018/01/china-is-starting-to-see-india-as-a-major-threat/
 
.
“The biggest mistake we have made in the past two decades has been to underestimate India and ignore India. During these years of India’s rapid progress, we did not trouble India, did not make India stumble or make India shed tears.”

Great! With all of Modi's antics and chest thumping, he has gotten the "dragon's" full attention. The emperor does have no clothes.
 
.
They are not just a threat to China but the entirety of Asia. These idiots want to lick the US balls as much as possible to destroy China and Pak. They WANT to be subservient to the west. Asia needs to be proactive against them for sure.
 
.
They are not just a threat to China but the entirety of Asia. These idiots want to lick the US balls as much as possible to destroy China and Pak. They WANT to be subservient to the west. Asia needs to be proactive against them for sure.

Thats past 40 years of YOUR history . Even today your people are fighting and dying for american cause .
 
. . . .
And that is a disgrace. Not to mention we never had much choice unlike yourself who wants to bow down to the US as long as they get support you against China and Pak.
Do not put india and pakistan in same bracket. We would hate it to be sitting in your bracket. You can count us in your bracket when we ake money from americans for killing our citizens via drones.
Our relation with US, israel, russia, middle east or even china and any country will grow as long as it is in our interest. If its not in our interest then it goes into the column in which pakistan stands.
 
.
Do not put india and pakistan in same bracket. We would hate it to be sitting in your bracket.
Our relation with US, israel, russia, middle east or even china and any country will grow as long as it is in our interest. If its not in our interest then it goes into the column in which pakistan stands.
The only interest your country has right now is the destruction of Pak (although to be fair that's been the case since 1947) and your wet dream of collapsing China from the economic powerhouse it has become. You have offered the US your own a*s previously on the condition that they bomb Pak.
 
. .
They are not just a threat to China but the entirety of Asia. These idiots want to lick the US balls as much as possible to destroy China and Pak. They WANT to be subservient to the west. Asia needs to be proactive against them for sure.

1. China requested India to join CPEC... Could rename it...

2. China requested Iran to link Chabahar and Gwadar...

They are ordering you to do this and do that in YOUR OWN COUNTRY...
What is CPEC...
60billion $ Loan from China on HIGH rate of interest...
Chinese contractors... Chinese companies... Chinese Labour... free transit route for China... 21 years' tax exemptions for CHINESE FIRMS...

BHAI AUR KYA BAKI H... First ***** US balls against USSR... Now ***** Chinese balls...
 
.
1. China requested India to join CPEC... Could rename it...

2. China requested Iran to link Chabahar and Gwadar...

They are ordering you to do this and do that in YOUR OWN COUNTRY...
What is CPEC...
60billion $ Loan from China on HIGH rate of interest...
Chinese contractors... Chinese companies... Chinese Labour... free transit route for China... 21 years' tax exemptions for CHINESE FIRMS...

BHAI AUR KYA BAKI H... First ***** US balls against USSR... Now ***** Chinese balls...

You are right on some points and wrong on so many others.

CPEC will be beneficial to Pakistan even if it's just a glorified toll road( when in fact it is quite a bit more). This is where lot of Indian analyst get it wrong.
 
Last edited:
. .
The only interest your country has right now is the destruction of Pak (although to be fair that's been the case since 1947) and your wet dream of collapsing China from the economic powerhouse it has become. You have offered the US your own a*s previously on the condition that they bomb Pak.
India cannot destroy Pakistan if we have right leadership and the nation. Pakistan is so blessed with resources and strategic location that the Gangadeshi will stay jealous until they perish as a nation. They lack the history, the civilisation, the richness of cultures and the genetic mix up which we Pakistanis enjoy and that makes quite a difference between us. Our culture is more orientated towards the middle-east, central and western Asia: with influences from our own IVC, Arabia, Persia, Central Asia and Turkey. All we need is to sort out our basic problems and jump start our high speed train on a fast track with an honest and patriotic leader like Imran Khan. We have great relations with the rising power i.e. China and we have a potential to develop strong relations with another power Russia. India is basically standing on the wrong side of the history and it is aligning itself with the receding empire of debt. So don't worry, our problems are short term but our future is bright. The same can't be said about India.
 
Last edited:
. .
Back
Top Bottom