Contrarian
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2006
- Messages
- 11,571
- Reaction score
- 4
1. Russia sees India as a Market, a large market for arms. It sees Iran in the same light and also with the war in Iraq its trying to make inroads in the middle east market. Russia also sees China as a large arms market as well. I doubt whether the relationship between Russia and India will ever become a strategic alliance for a basic reason that India and China have diverging interests and China is a bigger arms market than India. China's foreign policy is also more stable like India, China is not thinking of shifting arms acquisitions to U.S. while India is. The fact that Russia is forced constantly to balance between China and India prevents a strategic relationship between Russia and India emerging in the short and medium term.
2. Its not simply about China wanting to unbalance India, there is more synergies than just that between Pakistan and China. For e.g. when China develops a technology, sharing it costs nothing extra to China but it benefits Pakistan immensily (which is further behind than China in technology) because Paksitan doesnt have to replicate same thing. China cant do this with India because simply even if they didnt have border problem India would remain an economic and political competitor in global arena. Russia, India and China talk about multipolairty but all of them in fact are trying to maximise their own influence and power.
3. When the F-16's were bought China wasnt around with its industrial and technological base. Why are more being bought? I think its a mistake but its a marginal decision. This is because since F-16's have already been bought, buying more will not further complicate logistics and training and its a familiar plane the same which cant be said if another western jet was bought. Personally i think Pakistan would have done better with more FC-1's, continuing to upgrade and maintain the exisiting F-16 stock, spending mroe on ground based air defence and armour and artillery. Unfortuantely i dont make the decisions.
4. Its not just about the border problem, its just that India is too big and powerful to be a strategic ally of China, the fact that there is a common border hurts even more. There is an element of hysterisis in international relations, for e.g. if the border war hadnt happened there would have been a greater probability that India and China would have had much better relations bordering on beign allies.
China and India's trade relations are warming up, but that says nothing. After all China and U.S. trade is massive yet the chance of war is undiminshed. If anything by making both sides more prosperous, it has made the eventual war that does happen much more catastrophic.
1. India and Russia have moved far beyond the market type relationship or the buyer seller relationship. We now co develop new technologies with Russia. Only in some areas, does that relationship hold where India still does not have the technical capabilities as of yet. I repeat, India JV's everything with Russia now, we are allies to them. China on the other hand still has that relationship with Russia, as Russia is not keen to JV cutting edge technologies with China. There is a level of mistrust on both sides for Russia and China.
2.Multipolarity can occur only when other countries can exert influence on the global arena and not only the US. This is what India, China and Russia are trying to do.Maximizing and expanding their power is the only way to make the world multipolar. That is exactly what multipolarity is. Multipolarity does not mean that every country on earth gets equal say.It means some countries gain enough influence to put up a counter to the existing US dominance in every affair all over the globe.
3.Whatever you deem good
4.Just because a country is big you cannot say that it cant form a strategic alliance with another big country.This is a flawed logic.