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OPINION: India is waging the wrong war and its bad for Europe

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India is waging the wrong war and that's bad for Europe
By JONATHAN HOLSLAG

BRUSSELS, 10. JUN, 07:11
China and India are locking horns: literally.

Border guards got involved in a scuffle in recent weeks and threw stones at each other. Fighter planes and helicopters were then dispatched to the border.


  • In the race for power between the two Asian giants, China is winning
When two nuclear powers fly into each other's heads, it is always serious, especially since they waged a brief border war in 1962.

But as India reigns over a protracted dispute over some stretches of a sparsely-populated border area, China is quietly winning the battle that really matters, the battle for prosperity and power. And that has major consequences for Europe.

This is immediately noticeable in the border region itself. In recent years, China has built, at lightning speed, modern infrastructure in Tibet. Last year alone, 2,000km of road, 150km of railway, and more than 100 bridges and tunnels were built.

Until a few years ago, places like Nyingchi, Shigatze, and Ngari were a meeting place for shepherds, yaks, and some traders.

Today they are large cities with an airport. Naturally, this civil infrastructure is also militarily relevant, in order to keep unrest among the Tibetans under control and to keep an eye on India.

President Xi Jinping summarised it as follows: "To govern the country, it is necessary to govern the borders, and to govern the borders one must first stabilise Tibet." China has succeeded in this.

However, things are more difficult on the Indian side. The 73 new roads that had to be built along the border have been delayed for 10 years.

The difference between the neat new cities in Tibet, with their rows of brand new apartments, artificial football pitches, and wide avenues on the one hand, and the Indian cities on the other hand is enormous.

That is not surprising. Although Tibet is one of the poorest areas in China, Indian people are on average three times poorer.

India is trying to bridge the gap. Prime minister Narendra Modi has accelerated building military power along the border. Just like during last year's Kashmir crisis, he showed his muscles.

But Indian troops are facing shortages. The 17th Mountain Corps, responsible for scaring China, has insufficient troops, artillery, helicopters and ammunition.

Plans to establish an additional corps were stowed away. While China has dozens of armed drones flying over Tibet, India has hardly any. China's official defence budget is already five times greater than India's today.

China is winning
China is also rapidly gaining influence in and around the entire Indian Ocean. Jawaharlal Nehru, the political father of modern-day India, once argued that whoever dominates the Indian Ocean determines first the future of maritime trade and then also the future of India itself.

Chinese shipping companies have become dominant players in the Indian Ocean. Chinese fishermen are active throughout the region. A handful of ports are controlled by China.

Several years ago, a Chinese investor bought a small island in the Maldives, Feydhoo, near the southern tip of India. Chinese dredgers made the island four times bigger, and the Chinese navy is permanently there.

In the race for power between the two Asian giants, China is winning.

Where economic production between China and India was more or less equal in 1990, the Chinese economy is now five times larger.

Although the world had high hopes for the economic reforms introduced by current prime minister Modi, the actual economic growth in India has been slower than the one in China during the past two years.

Last year, China still attracted three times more European investors.

That's the reason why, for the time being, India has benefited little from the trade war between Beijing and Washington. And this year again, European, Japanese and American investors are planning more projects in China.

It is doubtful that India will be able to respond to this change in the balance of power. Modi himself seems to realise that.

Europeans and Americans might be good at promising cooperation, but their companies are more easily deterred by corruption and instability in India than by Chinese authoritarianism.

While its soldiers flexed their muscles, India quietly accepted two major credit lines from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the BRICS Bank, two institutions that have China as their main lender.

Modi has also not yet restricted the operations of the Chinese telephone company Huawei, despite American pressure.

India's relative weakness has immense consequences for Europe.

If India would be able to welcome as many investments as China, the balance of power in Eurasia would be much more in equilibrium, and China's growing influence would not be the threat it is today.

But as long as European companies continue to choose the certainty of the Chinese dictatorship over the volatility of India's fragile democracy, that is not going to change soon.

AUTHOR BIO
Jonathan Holslag teaches international politics at the Free University of Brussels.

DISCLAIMER
The views expressed in this opinion piece are the author's, not those of EUobserver
 
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Two FACTS from this current humiliation for india are established now

India is fighting China with China's money. (Took loans from AIIB and BRICS) of which China is the biggest lender.

The West is openly expressing its dismay of its inept indian stooge. It only further strengthens the notion that india is indeed a lapdog of the west for countering China. No amount of denial can change the reality for indians.

Side note: the most surprising thing in the article was that indian soldiers are flexing muscles. That's alot of exaggeration from a writer for a vegetable.
 
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Two FACTS from this current humiliation for india are established now

India is fighting China with China's money. (Took loans from AIIB and BRICS) of which China is the biggest lender.

The West is openly expressing its dismay of its inept indian stooge. It only further strengthens the notion that india is indeed a lapdog of the west for countering China. No amount of denial can change the reality for indians.

Side note: the most surprising thing in the article was that indian soldiers are flexing muscles. That's alot of exaggeration from a writer for a vegetable.
If West wanted to counter China, they would be putting sanctions on China, get the manufacturing out of there.
 
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If West wanted to counter China, they would be putting sanctions on China, get the manufacturing out of there.
That'd be counterproductive imo. They want balance of power. Europe is too expensive and old to cater to manufacturing on a global scale. They need cheap but dependable labor and China provides that.

While its soldiers flexed their muscles, India quietly accepted two major credit lines from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the BRICS Bank, two institutions that have China as their main lender.


:coffee:

Carrot and stick, literally.
Both strategically placed to be inserted in one opening only.
 
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Two FACTS from this current humiliation for india are established now

India is fighting China with China's money. (Took loans from AIIB and BRICS) of which China is the biggest lender.

The West is openly expressing its dismay of its inept indian stooge. It only further strengthens the notion that india is indeed a lapdog of the west for countering China. No amount of denial can change the reality for indians.

Side note: the most surprising thing in the article was that indian soldiers are flexing muscles. That's alot of exaggeration from a writer for a vegetable.
Lapdog? I think it's like cannon fodder. and Modi fallen into the trap.
 
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The tone is such that he wishes that India was able to compete, the article is almost like a lament.

I am not sure what the fear is? but in many ways that fear should also be India, in fact from all angles India is a far more terrible country to support than China. At least China is a meritocracy, diligently picking the best people for the job including the leadership, far more democratic than the theocracy that rules India, and is now an idealogy akin to the facists of Europe, both in their master race and hegemonic desires. Europe your hatred is aimed at the wrong country.
 
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Everyone is a expert now.
The reality of India is that in the present boundary conflict, the central government requistioned 12000 labourers to complete the border roads.
But the state Government, ruled by a opposition party, stopped the labourers from leaving.
India has become overly federalized and it effects efficiency everywhere.
 
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The tone is such that he wishes that India was able to compete, almost like a lament. I am not sure what the fear that is not also a part of India, in fact from many angles India is a far more terrible country to support than china. At least China is a meritocracy, diligently picking the best people for the role including the leadership, far more democratic than the theocracy that rules India, and is now a idealogy akin to the facists of Europe, both in their master race and hegemony views.
It's all about interest. Just wrapped by slogans, rhetoric, fancy words like democracy, human rights, rule of law, freedom of press, blah, blah.

When real interest is on the table, money talks, bullshit walks.
 
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Lapdog? I think it's like cannon fodder. and Modi fallen into the trap.

Lets face it, India was never in the race or had the capability to even challenge China. It is far too obsessed with an enemy that is 1/7th of its size population wise. Tells you about the small mindedness of their leadership

Everyone is a expert now.
The reality of India is that in the present boundary conflict, the central government requistioned 12000 labourers to complete the border roads.
But the state Government, ruled by a opposition party, stopped the labourers from leaving.
India has become overly federalized and it effects efficiency everywhere.

Yeah, when an actual expert shows you the mirror this is what you say. You can spin it anyway you wish, the writing is there on the wall.
 
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Lets face it, India was never in the race or had the capability to even challenge China. It is far too obsessed with an enemy that is 1/7th of its size population wise. Tells you about the small mindedness of their leadership



Yeah, when an actual expert shows you the mirror this is what you say. You can spin it anyway you wish, the writing is there on the wall.
What did i spin ? I agreed with the author that India lacks efficiency and gave a example.
 
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What did i spin ? I agreed with the author that India lacks efficiency and gave a example.
You said everyone is an expert now, undermining the author's credentials. Not that i give 2 hoots about him. He seems to be more lamentable than Indians themselves over the situation
 
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You said everyone is an expert now, undermining the author's credentials. Not that i give 2 hoots about him. He seems to be more lamentable than Indians themselves over the situation
Lets face it , a European professor with book knowledge, probably never been to China or India, is imparting wisdom to the countries without knowing the ground realities.
Even trolls on this site would have more indepth knowledge than him. His analysis was mostly shallow. Just a regurgitation of well known bullet points.
 
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