What's new

Chinese naval ships at Gwadar port call for a rethink of India's regional policy

sady

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Mar 26, 2015
Messages
945
Reaction score
6
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
http://www.dawn.com/news/1298977/ch...-call-for-a-rethink-of-indias-regional-policy


The transformation of Gwadar port as a base for Chinese Navy ships was long expected, but when media reports actually appeared on Friday to that effect, it was startling news for India.

Read more: 'Pak-China naval collaboration gains more importance due to CPEC'

The reports quoted Pakistani officials saying that China proposes to deploy its naval ships in coordination with the Pakistan Navy to safeguard Gwadar port, which is the gateway to the $46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

India would have had some intelligence tip-off, which probably explains the mysterious episode on November 14 of an Indian submarine lurking in the vicinity of Pakistani territorial waters. It was brusquely shooed away by the Pakistan Navy.

Read more: Navy says prevented Indian submarine from entering Pakistani waters

Of course, the corridor was operationalised a fortnight ago with Chinese ships docking at Gwadar to carry the first containers brought by a Chinese trade convoy from Xinjiang for despatch to the world market.

Viewed from many perspectives, the month of November becomes a defining moment in the geopolitics of our region.

But the strangest bit of news would be that earlier this month, Gwadar also received Russia’s Federal Security Services chief Alexander Bogdanov.

It was a hush-hush inspection tour aimed at assessing the efficacy of Russian ships using the port during their long voyages, to assert Moscow’s return to the global stage.

Equally, this is the first visit by a Russian spy chief to Pakistan in over two decades and it took place just as America elected a new president, Donald Trump.

Maybe the timing is coincidental, but more likely, it is not. The Russian diplomacy invariably moves in lockstep.

Bogdanov’s visit was scheduled just a few weeks before the planned trilateral strategic dialogue between Russia, China and Pakistan, ostensibly regarding the Afghan situation, in Moscow next month.

Bogdanov reportedly sought a formal Russian-Pakistani collaborative tie-up over the CPEC.

Moscow wouldn’t have made such a move without coordinating with China first.

At a meeting in Moscow with his Chinese counterpart, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu was quoted as saying that China-Russia military cooperation is “at an all-time high and it will contribute to peace and stability on the Eurasian continent and beyond.”

China’s regional play
Meanwhile, Chinese regional diplomacy, too, is moving in tandem.

The Chinese Defence Minister Chang Wangquan (who is also vice-chairman of China’s Military Commission, which is headed by President Xi Jinping) paid a three-day visit to Iran last week.

Chang’s visit held considerable geopolitical significance for the region and he described his meetings as signifying a turning point in the China-Iran strategic partnership.

It is useful to recall that during Xi’s visit to Iran in January, the two countries had signed a 25-year strategic cooperation agreement that included a call for much closer defence and intelligence ties.

The Iranian Navy has not hidden its desire to become a major blue water power (one capable of sustained operations across open oceans) in the Indian Ocean, and China can help meet that goal by offering intelligence and training in the short term, and modern vessels and weapons systems down the road.

Several existing Chinese systems would suit Iran’s need for a flexible navy capable of operating in both littoral (on shore) and blue waters – such as destroyers, corvettes, frigates, the much-vaunted Type-022 stealth fast-attack missile catamarans (described as carrier killers) and submarines.

These cost-effective warships could enable Iran to perform more effective patrol missions at longer ranges for longer periods of time.

Simply put, there is much background to Iran’s desire to become part of the CPEC, which was reportedly conveyed to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif by Iranian President Hassan Rouhani at their meeting in New York in September on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly session.

Connecting all these dots, in geopolitical terms, what we are witnessing is a historic shift in regional alignments, which is bringing together China, Pakistan, Russia and Iran on the template of the CPEC.

From the Indian perspective, these developments hold profound implications, especially against the backdrop of the unravelling of the United States’ pivot strategy in the Asia-Pacific.

Some hard conclusions need to be made. Difficult decisions lie ahead for the Indian establishment.

India’s challenge
Quite obviously, India has been tilting at the CPEC windmills in vain, fancying its capacity to block the flagship of China’s One Belt One Road appearing in its north-western neighbourhood.

As an open, inclusive and international cooperative initiative, the corridor merits a rethink on India's part.

The point is, China still regards India to be one of the key countries along the Belt and Road, although the Silk Road initiatives have already stimulated regional connectivity in the South Asian region, involving Nepal, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in one way or another.

Two, the rebuff at the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) summit in Goa in October apart, the growing regional convergence over the CPEC once again highlights the futility of India's diplomatic efforts to isolate Pakistan as a 'state sponsor of terrorism'.

New thinking is needed to bring pressure on Pakistan to jettison what India calls its sponsorship of terrorist groups.

The foreign policy establishment should explore how membership of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation a six-nation Eurasian bloc led by China and Russia to promote political, economic and cultural cooperation in the region can be optimally utilised to (re)engage Pakistan.

If China could effectively utilise this organisation to clear the huge backlog of Soviet-era regional animosities, India too can create similar synergy between its regional diplomacy and the bilateral ties with Pakistan.

Three, the manifest China-Pakistan-Russia-Iran regional convergence highlights the geopolitical realities of the emergent world order.

Put differently, India's fracas with China over membership to the Nuclear Suppliers Group and efforts to declare Jaish-i-Mohammad chief Masood Azhar a terrorist have been, in reality, the symptom of a deeper malaise insofar as Indian strategists are still entrapped in their “unipolar predicament”.

Thus, the muscular diplomacy of the Narendra Modi government erred in its overestimation of India’s South China Sea leverage. India lacked traditional influence in that region and it is not even a claimant to the territorial disputes there.

Today, therefore, India's Look East policy is in shambles and a US retrenchment in Asia threatens to make it archaic.

When Singapore snubs our overture to create new waves in the South China Sea, a nadir has been reached.

However, India seems to opt for a repackaging of the Look East policy. It is getting embroiled in China-Japan tensions. Such naivety can turn out to be dangerous.

The recent developments concerning Gwadar underscore the crucial importance of addressing the distrust between India and China on the one hand and India and Pakistan on the other.

Or else, serious contradictions are bound to arise in India’s relations with a host of other Asian countries as well – our time-tested friend Russia included.

This article originally appeared on Scroll.in and has been reproduced with permission.
 
.
China would like India and Pakistan to have a peaceful relationship with equally respectful to each other, so China can do business with both!
Pakistan is weaker than India, but it has whole lot of back from Islam world.

China would like India and Pakistan to have a peaceful relationship with equally respectful to each other, so China can do business with both!
Pakistan is weaker than India, but it has whole lot of back from Islam world.
a good start for India and Pakistan is to rebuild the IPI gas pipeline so the interests of both linked firmly to each other. Indian should bravely lead the effort!
 
.
China would like India and Pakistan to have a peaceful relationship with equally respectful to each other, so China can do business with both!
Pakistan is weaker than India, but it has whole lot of back from Islam world.


a good start for India and Pakistan is to rebuild the IPI gas pipeline so the interests of both linked firmly to each other. Indian should bravely lead the effort!

Welcome 2 forum.....:)

Right now, Indians are being ruled by extreme Hindu nationalistic party, BJP...The current prime minister of India, Modi, hailed from RSS (hindu nationalist party) and Indians under this government do not have any interest in peace and harmony...Just look what they did with Kashmiris....

We will like and appreciate if India also joins CPEC but if they don't....We won't give a single **** and will move ahead along with our allies like China etc.
 
.
The OP article is written by Mr. Bhadrakumar--an ex Indian diplomat who sounds like a vestige of a bygone era in India. He's often ridiculed for his idealist/leftist/naive outlook by the more nationalist Indians. Mr. Bhadrakumar believes in Asian countries--especially Pakistan and India--joining together instead of fighting against each other. But I don't think his voice resonates much inside India these days.
 
.
The OP article is written by Mr. Bhadrakumar--an ex Indian diplomat who sounds like a vestige of a bygone era in India. He's often ridiculed for his idealist/leftist/naive outlook by the more nationalist Indians. Mr. Bhadrakumar believes in Asian countries--especially Pakistan and India--joining together instead of fighting against each other. But I don't think his voice resonates much inside India these days.


Lol......that would never happen. There's more chance of Pakistan, Iran and Turkey forming a nation or federation together than the above happening. THE creation of Pakistan CAN NEVER EVER be undone. No matter what some day dreamers think.
 
.
Welcome 2 forum.....:)

Right now, Indians are being ruled by extreme Hindu nationalistic party, BJP...The current prime minister of India, Modi, hailed from RSS (hindu nationalist party) and Indians under this government do not have any interest in peace and harmony...Just look what they did with Kashmiris....

We will like and appreciate if India also joins CPEC but if they don't....We won't give a single **** and will move ahead along with our allies like China etc.
Nationalism/patriotism, whatever it being called, It is like body temperature, 37.5 degree is good for everyone, either too high or too low is bad. if BJP loves their country, improving trade/spending less money on firearm is good for their people, elevate their life standards. India has to live with Pakistan, even they may not need China, which is separated by Himalayas. Too much rhetoric / no long-term vision makes Modi different from Deng Xiaopin, who talked much less, but when he talked, people listen.
 
. . . . .
So is there no Pakistan since 1971 or are there not two Muslim heavy independent regions in the subcontinent?
I count three "Muslim heavy independent regions in the subcontinent": Pakistan, Bangladesh, and India. (India has nearly as many Muslims as Pakistan does.)
 
.
I count three "Muslim heavy independent regions in the subcontinent": Pakistan, Bangladesh, and India. (India has nearly as many Muslims as Pakistan does.)

And did "Pakistan" envisage two Muslim heavy independent regions or did it envisage no Muslims in central, south subcontinent? Although, the state of those Muslims in India is the sole testimony required for "Pakistan" but then that is not the point being discussed. Don't try to wiggle, defend your assertion.
 
.
Chinese navy ships & well as subs should arrive asap, this will enhance the security of Gawadar & check US movement in India as well.
 
.
Pakistan was already "undone" in 1971 so your bravado simply makes you look stupid.


Not particularly. We're still here. Unless I've missed something, there is still officially a nation called Pakistan, that is a homeland to the Pakistani race. All that happened in 1971 was that a race who was as alien to the Pakistanis as are Sub-Saharan Africans gained their own homeland. Calling an African German does not make him a Germanic White Western European Aryan. Netither could bengalis ever be Pakistanis no matter what you called them. By your definition, Germany no longer exists because it lost a lot of territory between the 2 World Wars.

The only bravado here comes from those who are experts at killing innocent unarmed Palestinian men, women, children and babies :azn:
 
Last edited:
.
Not particularly. We're still here. Unless I've missed something, there is still officially a nation called Pakistan -
Not arguing that, just your choice of words.

The only bravado here comes from those who are experts at killing innocent unarmed Palestinian men, women, children and babies :azn:
Why not post this on Syria- and Lebanon-related topic threads rather than here?
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom