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New-found bonhomie will see Krishna head to China
After a public lovefest in Copenhagen, China is now laying it on. Chinese foreign minister Yang Jiechi called S M Krishna on Tuesday evening to invite him to China. Krishna will visit Beijing in the first week of April, 2010.
Declaring a "new beginning" in bilateral relations, Yang repeated his Premier Wen Jiabao's sentiments that China and India should continue to unify their stand in multilateral forums.
"The ministers noted that India and China would be marking the 60th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries in 2010. The Chinese foreign minister reiterated his invitation to the external affairs minister to visit China in the first half of next year. EAM accepted the invitation. Mutually convenient dates will be fixed through diplomatic channels," an MEA statement said.
In Copenhagen, a nervous China received unstinting support from India while it battled pressure from developed countries on climate change. In fact, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown publicly blamed China for "wrecking" the summit. The same pressure will be applied yet again in 2010, said officials. The India-China unity helped in coalescing support from other developing countries.
This, in many ways, blindsided the west, which had been trying its best to cut through this bilateral unity. They were either involved in cutting a deal between the US and China, while the rest believed that the recent tensions between the two countries would have put cracks in the group in Copenhagen.
But realists within the government were quick to catch on to the fact that while China had tried to scuttle the nuclear deal for India in 2008, only a year later, there was India standing together with China. The question no one wants to answer here is, if the situations had been reversed in Copenhagen, and India was under fire, would China have stepped up to support India?
New-found bonhomie will see Krishna head to China - India - The Times of India
After a public lovefest in Copenhagen, China is now laying it on. Chinese foreign minister Yang Jiechi called S M Krishna on Tuesday evening to invite him to China. Krishna will visit Beijing in the first week of April, 2010.
Declaring a "new beginning" in bilateral relations, Yang repeated his Premier Wen Jiabao's sentiments that China and India should continue to unify their stand in multilateral forums.
"The ministers noted that India and China would be marking the 60th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries in 2010. The Chinese foreign minister reiterated his invitation to the external affairs minister to visit China in the first half of next year. EAM accepted the invitation. Mutually convenient dates will be fixed through diplomatic channels," an MEA statement said.
In Copenhagen, a nervous China received unstinting support from India while it battled pressure from developed countries on climate change. In fact, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown publicly blamed China for "wrecking" the summit. The same pressure will be applied yet again in 2010, said officials. The India-China unity helped in coalescing support from other developing countries.
This, in many ways, blindsided the west, which had been trying its best to cut through this bilateral unity. They were either involved in cutting a deal between the US and China, while the rest believed that the recent tensions between the two countries would have put cracks in the group in Copenhagen.
But realists within the government were quick to catch on to the fact that while China had tried to scuttle the nuclear deal for India in 2008, only a year later, there was India standing together with China. The question no one wants to answer here is, if the situations had been reversed in Copenhagen, and India was under fire, would China have stepped up to support India?
New-found bonhomie will see Krishna head to China - India - The Times of India