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How China gained from Partition of India in 1947

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http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/how-china-gained-from-partition-india-pakistan-british-raj-4807566/

How China gained from Partition

Geopolitical legacies of the division remain the biggest drag on India’s global aspirations

Written by C. Raja Mohan | Updated: August 22, 2017 7:40 am


The occasional reflections on the tragedies of Partition rarely include the consideration of its geopolitical consequences. The sundering of the political space in the Subcontinent gets a lot less attention in the narratives of independent India’s international relations than the sentimental accounts of Delhi’s non-alignment and moralpolitik.

Even today, it is not easy for the Indian elites to recognise that the geopolitical legacies of Partition remain the biggest drag on India’s larger global aspirations. None of it more important than the fact that China has turned out to be the biggest long-term beneficiary from the division of the Subcontinent.

Nothing illustrates the different geopolitical evolution of India and China since the mid 20th century than the simple question of territorial consolidation. Consider the following: India was divided in 1947 and China was united in 1949. The Subcontinent’s great partition locked the successor states — India and Pakistan — in a perennial conflict. China overcame an era of fragmentation to come together as a strong nation.

If the British Raj emerged as a powerful state by generating a measure of political and administrative coherence to the Subcontinent, its dissolution accompanied by division resulted in the strategic diminution of its successor states, India and Pakistan.

The combination of British power and the massive resources of an undivided Subcontinent created what came to be known as the “India Centre” that dominated the geopolitics of Asia and the Indian Ocean. Indian capital and labour, its armies and administrative systems were central to political stability, economic globalisation and the spread of modernising ideologies in the eastern hemisphere.

Before Partition, India’s energies — economic and military — radiated outwards. After Partition, the Subcontinent’s energies turned inward in defence of the new political borders. If the Anglos are widely seen as the main villains behind Partition — the British for their divide and rule tactics and the American integration of Pakistan into the Cold War politics — it is hard to see how the West benefited from Partition.

The Anglo-American initiatives to replace the India Centre with such new regional security structures as SEATO and CENTO flopped. For there was no real possibility of effective regional security without the participation of India. The efforts by Washington and London to mediate between India and Pakistan in order to generate a more coherent bastion against international communism, for example in the wake of the 1962 war between India and China, did not succeed either.

To make matters even more interesting, the communist giants, Russia and China fell apart at the turn of the 1960s and opened the door for the American strategic partnership with China that would contribute enormously to Beijing’s rise as a great power. China was not only good at exploiting the great power conflicts to its own benefit, its leaders also clearly saw the strategic implications of Partition. They also saw the opportunities to probe independent India’s limitations in sustaining primacy in the Subcontinent and the Indian Ocean that it had inherited from the Raj.

In the early decades after Partition, China seemed relatively marginal to South Asian geopolitics. India’s energies were focused on opposing the Anglo-American co-option of Pakistan into the Cold War alliance system and the supply of Western arms to the Pakistan military. India bet that it could manage the inherent contradictions with China through a conscious befriending of Beijing. But the outcomes abound in paradoxes.

Given the anti-Communist orientation of CENTO and SEATO, you would have thought China would view Pakistan with suspicion and embrace an India that chose to remain non-aligned and refused to support the Cold War alliances. China, however, found it hard to reciprocate India’s love — wrapped in the slogans of Panchsheel and Asian solidarity against Western imperialism. Instead Beijing built an all-weather partnership with Rawalpindi that would grow from strength to strength and remain the one constant feature of the Subcontinent’s international politics.

If India could not stop seeing China through an ideological prism even after 1962, Beijing consistently viewed Rawalpindi through a geopolitical lens. For one, the Chinese leaders saw no real contradictions with Pakistan, despite its pro-Western orientation. Beijing also rightly assessed that ideological slogans are not adequate to overcome major disputes over territorial sovereignty with Delhi.

Even more important, China understood that strong support to Pakistan was a critical element in limiting any future challenges from India. Hence the bilateral deal with Pakistan on Kashmir in the early 1960s, nuclear cooperation in the 1970s and 1980s following India’s first nuclear test in 1974, the transfer of missile technology in the 1990s, and the effective integration of Pakistan’s structures into China’s own military planning on defence production, interoperability and power projection over the last two decades.

For China, Partition is a gift that continues to give. Meanwhile, its growing economic resources, military capabilities and political influence have dramatically improved Beijing’s ability to exploit India’s difficulties with its smaller neighbours as well. Whether it is trade and investment, creation of infrastructure or the supply of armaments, it is China the looms large over the Subcontinent. After years trying to limit Western influences in its neighbourhood, India now finds halting China’s penetration of the Subcontinent will need a lot more political will and strategic purpose.
 
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Before Partition, India’s energies — economic and military — radiated outwards.

Before Partition though, India did not exist.

All that power that was emanating out of the subcontinent came from the British Raj, and as an extension of the British Empire, it was a great power indeed.

During the 1962 war, Mao remarked at how shocked he was that the Indian Army collapsed so quickly, since the legacy of the British Raj was that of a mighty fighting force, one of the greatest in Asia. But it turns out that great legacy was one of the British Empire, not of the Republic of India.
 
Myanmar was partitioned from the British Raj.

Pakistan became a unified country from the British Raj.

India became a unified country from the British Raj.

Bangladesh was partitioned from Pakistan.
 
If China helps the liberation of occupied Tamil Nadu, it would open a southern flank to H-India
 
there was no partition. we were always different could try from India. we just gained independence from British raj.
 
How did the author completely ignored the fact China wasn't ruled by colonial powers, 8 colonial power did invaded China but failed to completely conquer China, China forced to lease some islands to British and Portuguese and Japanese occupied fraction of territory eastern part of China, China never stop fighting insurgency war against Japanese occupation force til Japanese surrender in WW2. India have no power to reject British partition of the British India empire still under British rule after WW2. India as that time wasn't a nation under the possesion of queen of England.
 
All that power that was emanating out of the subcontinent came from the British Raj, and as an extension of the British Empire, it was a great power indeed.
You know these Indian's they have deluded, really have that what was before was their India. This [below] was their flag. They can't understand the simple concept that the pre 1947 entity was a British product.

Flag_Map_of_British_Raj_%28India%29.png
 
How did the author completely ignored the fact China wasn't ruled by colonial powers, 8 colonial power did invaded China but failed to completely conquer China, China forced to lease some islands to British and Portuguese and Japanese occupied fraction of territory eastern part of China, China never stop fighting insurgency war against Japanese occupation force til Japanese surrender in WW2. India have no power to reject British partition of the British India empire still under British rule after WW2. India as that time wasn't a nation under the possesion of queen of England.
China were fragmented by various warlords partially control some of China territory but always view themselves as Chinese and the citizen of China. Pakistani, Bangladesh never considered themselves to be Indian before or after the partition, how on earth India can rule the whole subcontinent when India was never a nationhood before British left and granted the subcontinent it independent.
 
Before Partition though, India did not exist.

All that power that was emanating out of the subcontinent came from the British Raj, and as an extension of the British Empire, it was a great power indeed.

During the 1962 war, Mao remarked at how shocked he was that the Indian Army collapsed so quickly, since the legacy of the British Raj was that of a mighty fighting force, one of the greatest in Asia. But it turns out that great legacy was one of the British Empire, not of the Republic of India.

Mao was ignorant and hence his surprise.

Pretty much the ENTIRE British Army soldiers consisted of Indians. Most of the British were officers. A few blacks from their african colonies made up the rest.

Indians were not allowed to become senior officers in the British Indian army. The highest a few of them got was "Subedar Major". And they had authority ONLY on Indian soldiers.

Indians had NO Experience in planning for a war, preparing for a war and conducting a war. The British did all of that. The Indians (back then) only know how to lead his men in war.

After Independence, these junior officers were suddenly made "Generals". They had No Clue on how to plan for a real war.


But thanks to the Chinese lessons, Indian officers of today are a different breed. The Generals of today have risen from the Ranks and have reached that position on MERIT. They have TONS of experience and institutions that back them.

Our consistent victories post 62 is a testimony to this reality. Never lost a war after that.

So all the best in living in the past.
 
Our consistent victories post 62 is a testimony to this reality. Never lost a war after that.
Only as long as you had 7 to 1 advantage. Against a much smaller adversery like Pakistan. Against China. Nah. You are going to get made into b*tches like 1962. Simply because when you face China the odds are 1 man against 1 man.
 
Only as long as you had 7 to 1 advantage. Against a much smaller adversery like Pakistan. Against China. Nah. You are going to get made into b*tches like 1962. Simply because when you face China the odds are 1 man against 1 man.

How big was Pakistan+Bangladesh compared to India ? :coffee: We had 1:3 advantage, but considering the US aid you received during that time, we only had a 1:2 advantage in pure Military capacity.

You had out Flanked us and had the military advantage. You could have cut the North East away if you had the capability.

LOL at your fantasy. China has to maintain base at the Low oxygen and bitter cold Himalayas and Tibet if they want to "attack" India. Its going to be worse that the time when Napoleon attacked Russia in the winter :lol:
 
The problem with India was partition was not executed properly. We should have sent all Muslims to Pakistan.

Believe me India would have been much more peaceful and developed.
 
Ridiculous.

Its astonishing how much Indians blame partition for their ills.
We have Muslim Hindu riots, partition
We don't have uniform law. Partition
We have appeasement politics. Partition.
We have issues with Bangladesh. Partition.
We have issues with pakistan. Partition.
We have issues with China. Partition.
We are not united. Partition.
We can't reach middle east. Partition.
We can't reach central Asia. Partition.
Minorities are insecure. Partition.


Jeez.
 
Weird India. It's the British who rules the continent. It's the partition of British, not India.
Now, the colonizer is gone, what blocks India from reuioning the south Asia?
The facts is, Indian's ability can't support theirs ambition.
 
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