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Spoke in the Sino-Indian wheel | idrw.org
WITH the Asia-Pacific region becoming the playground of escalating US-China competition, India is in the enviable position of being wooed by several countries.
The United States feels India would be a linchpin in Americas new defense strategy that involves re-balancing its forces toward the Asia-Pacific region; Australia has announced that, along with Indonesia and India, it will form the first troika to confer on the Indian Ocean, ostensibly to check China; and, Japan is steadily encouraging Indias participation in East Asia, again with China in mind.
While the United States is encouraging Australia and Japan to engage India, China too has risen to the occasion. It has stressed that Sino-Indian ties would be the most important bilateral relationship in the 21st century. After sniggering at Indias 5,000-kilometer Agni-V missile test, it has pointed out that India has an independent foreign policy, which cannot be manipulated by Washington.
While New Delhi views its ties with Washington as crucial to cementing its rising power status, it has also conveyed to Washington that it needs to recalibrate its policy. It has emphasized the need to strengthen the multilateral security architecture in the Asia-Pacific and that it must move at a pace comfortable to all countries concerned. In doing so, New Delhi has maturely indicated that it prefers cooperative ties with both Beijing and Washington.
Though Sino-Indian ties have steadily improved, there is enough to keep them on tenterhooks, especially in the security domain. Some Chinese experts feel that the Indian defense strategy now treats China, not Pakistan, as the priority target. This is also a perception that the new Indian External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid has alluded to. Commenting on what was a bigger challenge for India a territorial dispute with China or a trust deficit with Pakistan he said the former was more of a major concern than the latter, given the Chinese power to impact India in various spheres. Coinciding with the Chinese view is an Indian assessment: Hardly a week passes without Delhi taking stock of Chinas creeping encirclement of India.
Despite the bilateral tension and US efforts to create a wedge in Sino-Indian ties, there is plenty to cheer about. From about $1 billion in 1995, annual Sino-Indian trade touched $75 billion in 2011, and is tipped to cross $100 billion by 2015.
Such has been their inclination to cooperate that Prime Ministers Dr. Manmohan Singh and Wen Jiabao held face-to-face meetings at least 13 times between 2004 and 2012.
Since 2003, there has also been steady progress in security cooperation. Starting with joint naval exercises, an agreement in 2004 facilitated exchanging military exercise observers; the following year, the two countries agreed to convert bilateral engagements into a long-term and strategic relationship, pledging to resolve border disputes and boost economic cooperation. Since 2007, the two armies have also been working to counter terrorism, separatism and extremism.
Thus, it is important to stop viewing Sino-Indian developments in mere China-versus-India terms and take an optimistic China-plus-India approach that offers a win-win situation. As the global economic balance shifts toward Asia, China and India must engage in cooperative as well as competitive, and not confrontational, engagement.
The challenge is to ensure that the Asian security architecture, led by China and India, among others, gives rise to new institutions that foster stability, security, cooperation, and growth, instead of being mired in suspicion and insecurity that others will exploit.
The first sign of this Asian solidarity was evident in the November announcement of an Asian free-trade bloc, which is a reaction to US attempts to form a Trans-Pacific Partnership that excludes China. Billed as the worlds biggest regional free-trade deal, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership involves 10 ASEAN countries and six others China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.
Furthermore, in a shift from bilateral to trilateral partnerships, the first India-Japan-South Korea dialogue was held in New Delhi a few months ago. While Chinas aggressive stance in the South China Sea and the disputed islands were part of the discussion, it is heartening that China, Japan and South Korea have also decided to start their own trilateral dialogue on economic issues, which could thaw political tension.
Moving ahead, rather than fall prey to the Washington-promoted India-Japan-US strategic triangle, an India-Japan-China strategic triangle should be nurtured. It may be prudent to even work toward a China-India-US dialogue. As Chinese and Indian naval power expands, their interaction with the United States could be a defining feature in the Asia-Pacific region in the decades ahead. The Gulf countries must also encourage this for their own long-term interests.
WITH the Asia-Pacific region becoming the playground of escalating US-China competition, India is in the enviable position of being wooed by several countries.
The United States feels India would be a linchpin in Americas new defense strategy that involves re-balancing its forces toward the Asia-Pacific region; Australia has announced that, along with Indonesia and India, it will form the first troika to confer on the Indian Ocean, ostensibly to check China; and, Japan is steadily encouraging Indias participation in East Asia, again with China in mind.
While the United States is encouraging Australia and Japan to engage India, China too has risen to the occasion. It has stressed that Sino-Indian ties would be the most important bilateral relationship in the 21st century. After sniggering at Indias 5,000-kilometer Agni-V missile test, it has pointed out that India has an independent foreign policy, which cannot be manipulated by Washington.
While New Delhi views its ties with Washington as crucial to cementing its rising power status, it has also conveyed to Washington that it needs to recalibrate its policy. It has emphasized the need to strengthen the multilateral security architecture in the Asia-Pacific and that it must move at a pace comfortable to all countries concerned. In doing so, New Delhi has maturely indicated that it prefers cooperative ties with both Beijing and Washington.
Though Sino-Indian ties have steadily improved, there is enough to keep them on tenterhooks, especially in the security domain. Some Chinese experts feel that the Indian defense strategy now treats China, not Pakistan, as the priority target. This is also a perception that the new Indian External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid has alluded to. Commenting on what was a bigger challenge for India a territorial dispute with China or a trust deficit with Pakistan he said the former was more of a major concern than the latter, given the Chinese power to impact India in various spheres. Coinciding with the Chinese view is an Indian assessment: Hardly a week passes without Delhi taking stock of Chinas creeping encirclement of India.
Despite the bilateral tension and US efforts to create a wedge in Sino-Indian ties, there is plenty to cheer about. From about $1 billion in 1995, annual Sino-Indian trade touched $75 billion in 2011, and is tipped to cross $100 billion by 2015.
Such has been their inclination to cooperate that Prime Ministers Dr. Manmohan Singh and Wen Jiabao held face-to-face meetings at least 13 times between 2004 and 2012.
Since 2003, there has also been steady progress in security cooperation. Starting with joint naval exercises, an agreement in 2004 facilitated exchanging military exercise observers; the following year, the two countries agreed to convert bilateral engagements into a long-term and strategic relationship, pledging to resolve border disputes and boost economic cooperation. Since 2007, the two armies have also been working to counter terrorism, separatism and extremism.
Thus, it is important to stop viewing Sino-Indian developments in mere China-versus-India terms and take an optimistic China-plus-India approach that offers a win-win situation. As the global economic balance shifts toward Asia, China and India must engage in cooperative as well as competitive, and not confrontational, engagement.
The challenge is to ensure that the Asian security architecture, led by China and India, among others, gives rise to new institutions that foster stability, security, cooperation, and growth, instead of being mired in suspicion and insecurity that others will exploit.
The first sign of this Asian solidarity was evident in the November announcement of an Asian free-trade bloc, which is a reaction to US attempts to form a Trans-Pacific Partnership that excludes China. Billed as the worlds biggest regional free-trade deal, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership involves 10 ASEAN countries and six others China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.
Furthermore, in a shift from bilateral to trilateral partnerships, the first India-Japan-South Korea dialogue was held in New Delhi a few months ago. While Chinas aggressive stance in the South China Sea and the disputed islands were part of the discussion, it is heartening that China, Japan and South Korea have also decided to start their own trilateral dialogue on economic issues, which could thaw political tension.
Moving ahead, rather than fall prey to the Washington-promoted India-Japan-US strategic triangle, an India-Japan-China strategic triangle should be nurtured. It may be prudent to even work toward a China-India-US dialogue. As Chinese and Indian naval power expands, their interaction with the United States could be a defining feature in the Asia-Pacific region in the decades ahead. The Gulf countries must also encourage this for their own long-term interests.