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The Indian rivalry with China: its strategic humiliation

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The Indian rivalry with China: its strategic humiliation
July 27, 2020

M Alam Brohi


Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru was a liberal leader of world stature at par with Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founding father of Pakistan. While M.A. Jinnah was a hardcore realist, Pandit Nehru was an idealist. He harboured a grand idea about the independent India being the leader of the South East Asia. He knew that the Sub-continent lying on the mouth of vital regions of Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East and Africa enjoyed enormous economic and strategic importance, and the Ocean surrounding it had vitally served trade and commerce between the East and the West giving predominance to the British Empire as the major world power. The matter of the fact is that the emergence of Pakistan had frustrated Nehru’s ambition to see India substituting the British Empire as the greater power. The successors of Nehru continued to entertain this delusional ambition.

Back in the mid 1940s, Nehru wrote in his “Discovery of India” that the “Pacific is likely to take the place of the Atlantic in the future as the nerve centre of the world. Though not directly a Pacific state, India will inevitably exercise an important influence there. India will also develop as the centre of economic and political activity in the Indian Ocean area, in South East Asia and right up to the Middle East. Her strategic position gives her an economic and strategic importance in a part of the world which is going to develop rapidly in the future. If there is a grouping of the countries bordering on the Indian Ocean on either side of India including Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), India, Burma (Myanmar), Malaya (Malaysia), Siam, Java (Indonesia),the present day minority problems will disappear, or at any rate, will have to be considered in an entirely different context”.

The reflections of Pandit Nehru amply demonstrated that he wanted to replace the British Empire in this region with India as the political and economic leader of the groupings of small states. “The small national state is doomed. It may survive as a culturally autonomous area but not as an independent political unit”, he further wrote. In one of his interviews with the Washington Post as quoted by the Daily Dawn in its issue of 21 December 1963, he gave vent to his thoughts about the Sub-continent saying that “Confederation remains our ultimate goal, though if we say it openly, they are alarmed that we want to swallow them up”.

This is how Nehru thought of India as the leading power or the hegemon of the region before the departure of the British Imperialists and even after the Partition. The political and strategic policies towards the small states of the region India adopted under the leadership of Nehru and his successors were driven by this long cherished ambition of becoming the hegemon power. While cloaking its designs by the mantle of Non Aligned Movement, democracy, freedom of people and sweet talk of good neighborliness, it continued to pursue deceitfully Kautylia’s statecraft and military strategy intimidating and subduing small states, destabilizing neighbours and patronizing subversion and terrorism in the region. Its footprints are found in the bogey of Pakhtunistan, civil strife in Sri Lanka, secession of Bangladesh, insurgencies in Balochistan, patronage of separatist groups in Sindh, bloodshed in Karachi, border dispute with China.

The continued political and economic stability and close strategic alliance with the USA after the collapse of the erstwhile Soviet Union, India has been relentlessly pursuing its hegemonic designs. To realize its long cherished dream of being the major power in greater Asia, India went into the tight embrace of the USA and started behaving as a counterpoise to China miscalculating its own military power, the USA reliability and the Chinese military and strategic threshold and suffered humiliation to the chagrin of the sane Indians. As put it by an analyst, ‘one minor Chinese military move took the wind out of the Hindutva nationalist regime of Prime Minister Narendra Modi which miserably failed to give a reasonable political, diplomatic, economic or military response to the Chinese move along the LAC’. The membership of the Quad and the new ally – the USA – did not help avert the blow to its prestige.

India suddenly realized it had no other option than falling back on the old ally – Russia. The Indian Defence Minister lost no time in rushing to Kremlin to buy military hardware (Mig-29, SU-30, S-400 Missile defence system, K-class submarines, T-90 Tanks etc worth more than $16 billion) and also to seek Russian help to ease tension with China. The Chinese message to India and its strategic allies was loud and clear that it does not know to compromise on its territorial integrity and strategic interests including BRI or CPEC in the region. The Chinese move dealt a heavy blow to the grandeur and the awe and fear of India in the region. China has moved to strike a long term partnership with Iran excluding India from all the main projects including Chabahar and the building of roads and railways to connect with Afghanistan. India has also lost Afghanistan, Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh to China.

India’s defence budget in the recent years leapfrogged to $71billion in 2019. With increasing tension at LAC, it will have to spend even more on defence related purchases. The US is India’s fourth largest supplier of arms after Israel and France. The defence trade between the two countries jumped from $200million in 2000 to $20billion in 2020. The US designated India as the major defence partner in 2016 and signed three defence cooperation agreements with it between 2016 and 2019. This emboldened it to revoke article 370 and 35 A of its Constitution abolishing the special status of the Kashmiris, shutting and locking down the valley for almost a year, indulging in blatant Islamophobia, atrocities against Muslim minority and audacious genocidal moves in Jammu and Kashmir. The Modi regime has internationalized the Kashmir dispute bringing in China as the third stakeholder.

The writer was a member of the Foreign Service of Pakistan and he has authored two books

https://dailytimes.com.pk/646417/the-indian-rivalry-with-china-its-strategic-humiliation/
 
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The Indian rivalry with China: its strategic humiliation
July 27, 2020

M Alam Brohi


Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru was a liberal leader of world stature at par with Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founding father of Pakistan. While M.A. Jinnah was a hardcore realist, Pandit Nehru was an idealist. He harboured a grand idea about the independent India being the leader of the South East Asia. He knew that the Sub-continent lying on the mouth of vital regions of Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East and Africa enjoyed enormous economic and strategic importance, and the Ocean surrounding it had vitally served trade and commerce between the East and the West giving predominance to the British Empire as the major world power. The matter of the fact is that the emergence of Pakistan had frustrated Nehru’s ambition to see India substituting the British Empire as the greater power. The successors of Nehru continued to entertain this delusional ambition.

Back in the mid 1940s, Nehru wrote in his “Discovery of India” that the “Pacific is likely to take the place of the Atlantic in the future as the nerve centre of the world. Though not directly a Pacific state, India will inevitably exercise an important influence there. India will also develop as the centre of economic and political activity in the Indian Ocean area, in South East Asia and right up to the Middle East. Her strategic position gives her an economic and strategic importance in a part of the world which is going to develop rapidly in the future. If there is a grouping of the countries bordering on the Indian Ocean on either side of India including Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), India, Burma (Myanmar), Malaya (Malaysia), Siam, Java (Indonesia),the present day minority problems will disappear, or at any rate, will have to be considered in an entirely different context”.

The reflections of Pandit Nehru amply demonstrated that he wanted to replace the British Empire in this region with India as the political and economic leader of the groupings of small states. “The small national state is doomed. It may survive as a culturally autonomous area but not as an independent political unit”, he further wrote. In one of his interviews with the Washington Post as quoted by the Daily Dawn in its issue of 21 December 1963, he gave vent to his thoughts about the Sub-continent saying that “Confederation remains our ultimate goal, though if we say it openly, they are alarmed that we want to swallow them up”.

This is how Nehru thought of India as the leading power or the hegemon of the region before the departure of the British Imperialists and even after the Partition. The political and strategic policies towards the small states of the region India adopted under the leadership of Nehru and his successors were driven by this long cherished ambition of becoming the hegemon power. While cloaking its designs by the mantle of Non Aligned Movement, democracy, freedom of people and sweet talk of good neighborliness, it continued to pursue deceitfully Kautylia’s statecraft and military strategy intimidating and subduing small states, destabilizing neighbours and patronizing subversion and terrorism in the region. Its footprints are found in the bogey of Pakhtunistan, civil strife in Sri Lanka, secession of Bangladesh, insurgencies in Balochistan, patronage of separatist groups in Sindh, bloodshed in Karachi, border dispute with China.

The continued political and economic stability and close strategic alliance with the USA after the collapse of the erstwhile Soviet Union, India has been relentlessly pursuing its hegemonic designs. To realize its long cherished dream of being the major power in greater Asia, India went into the tight embrace of the USA and started behaving as a counterpoise to China miscalculating its own military power, the USA reliability and the Chinese military and strategic threshold and suffered humiliation to the chagrin of the sane Indians. As put it by an analyst, ‘one minor Chinese military move took the wind out of the Hindutva nationalist regime of Prime Minister Narendra Modi which miserably failed to give a reasonable political, diplomatic, economic or military response to the Chinese move along the LAC’. The membership of the Quad and the new ally – the USA – did not help avert the blow to its prestige.

India suddenly realized it had no other option than falling back on the old ally – Russia. The Indian Defence Minister lost no time in rushing to Kremlin to buy military hardware (Mig-29, SU-30, S-400 Missile defence system, K-class submarines, T-90 Tanks etc worth more than $16 billion) and also to seek Russian help to ease tension with China. The Chinese message to India and its strategic allies was loud and clear that it does not know to compromise on its territorial integrity and strategic interests including BRI or CPEC in the region. The Chinese move dealt a heavy blow to the grandeur and the awe and fear of India in the region. China has moved to strike a long term partnership with Iran excluding India from all the main projects including Chabahar and the building of roads and railways to connect with Afghanistan. India has also lost Afghanistan, Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh to China.

India’s defence budget in the recent years leapfrogged to $71billion in 2019. With increasing tension at LAC, it will have to spend even more on defence related purchases. The US is India’s fourth largest supplier of arms after Israel and France. The defence trade between the two countries jumped from $200million in 2000 to $20billion in 2020. The US designated India as the major defence partner in 2016 and signed three defence cooperation agreements with it between 2016 and 2019. This emboldened it to revoke article 370 and 35 A of its Constitution abolishing the special status of the Kashmiris, shutting and locking down the valley for almost a year, indulging in blatant Islamophobia, atrocities against Muslim minority and audacious genocidal moves in Jammu and Kashmir. The Modi regime has internationalized the Kashmir dispute bringing in China as the third stakeholder.

The writer was a member of the Foreign Service of Pakistan and he has authored two books

https://dailytimes.com.pk/646417/the-indian-rivalry-with-china-its-strategic-humiliation/
Russians are getting rich
 
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Such a powerful peace.

Couldn't agree more on India's notorious plans of regional hegemony from day one, also the fact that they haven't accepted Pakistan as an independent country. They wish that Pakistan would collapse and they ll take over.
 
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I see it as a positive development in the larger scheme of things. China’s aggression should firmly push us into the western quadrant of geo-power. India is not and should not be non-aligned. Nehru was an idealist fool. Hopefully, countering China should lead India to join a coalition of western countries who view China equally with an animus. Such an alignment should foster a better functioning free market economy in the country in the fullnes of time. Pakistan is a great example of how one can benefit by making sensible alliances. Your economy early on benefitted because of your alliances and the borrowed sensible economic practices, before mr Bhutto decided to foolishly started to pursue socialism
 
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Nehru a liberal leader?

What is Mr. Brohi smoking?
Nehru was a covert hindu extremist while Patel was an overt one. They are all the same wines in different bottles.

Anyways - To Pakistani readers.
In a letter to Nawab of Bhopal in 1948. Nehru clearly mentioned that either we will form a confederation with Pakistan or it will be war. Meaning Pakistan will be brought back into hindu control.

This is the very reason Nehru wanted Kashmir even more after having lost NWFP referendum despite congress govt there.
He wanted to touch today's KP and support the hindu masquerading as a muslim ( bacha Khan) to liquidate Pakistan.

Pakistan denies india access to middle east and central Asia two of the most vital areas. China has benefited a lot from this and it will and has emerged as a global power.

Hindu India, by denying Kashmir to Pakistan and massacring muslims have forever made Pakistan its enemy and rejected Mr. Jinnah's (RA) proposal of Canada/US like relation. India will forever remain handicapped from reaching middle east and central asia and India might even fragment more.
 
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I see it as a positive development in the larger scheme of things. China’s aggression should firmly push us into the western quadrant of geo-power. India is not and should not be non-aligned. Nehru was an idealist fool. Hopefully, countering China should lead India to join a coalition of western countries who view China equally with an animus. Such an alignment should foster a better functioning free market economy in the country in the fullnes of time. Pakistan is a great example of how one can benefit by making sensible alliances. Your economy early on benefitted because of your alliances and the borrowed sensible economic practices, before mr Bhutto decided to foolishly started to pursue socialism
I thought India is a shupa powa with white servants. Why are you begging white people for help instead?

 
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The Indian rivalry with China: its strategic humiliation
July 27, 2020

M Alam Brohi


Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru was a liberal leader of world stature at par with Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founding father of Pakistan. While M.A. Jinnah was a hardcore realist, Pandit Nehru was an idealist. He harboured a grand idea about the independent India being the leader of the South East Asia. He knew that the Sub-continent lying on the mouth of vital regions of Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East and Africa enjoyed enormous economic and strategic importance, and the Ocean surrounding it had vitally served trade and commerce between the East and the West giving predominance to the British Empire as the major world power. The matter of the fact is that the emergence of Pakistan had frustrated Nehru’s ambition to see India substituting the British Empire as the greater power. The successors of Nehru continued to entertain this delusional ambition.

Back in the mid 1940s, Nehru wrote in his “Discovery of India” that the “Pacific is likely to take the place of the Atlantic in the future as the nerve centre of the world. Though not directly a Pacific state, India will inevitably exercise an important influence there. India will also develop as the centre of economic and political activity in the Indian Ocean area, in South East Asia and right up to the Middle East. Her strategic position gives her an economic and strategic importance in a part of the world which is going to develop rapidly in the future. If there is a grouping of the countries bordering on the Indian Ocean on either side of India including Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), India, Burma (Myanmar), Malaya (Malaysia), Siam, Java (Indonesia),the present day minority problems will disappear, or at any rate, will have to be considered in an entirely different context”.

The reflections of Pandit Nehru amply demonstrated that he wanted to replace the British Empire in this region with India as the political and economic leader of the groupings of small states. “The small national state is doomed. It may survive as a culturally autonomous area but not as an independent political unit”, he further wrote. In one of his interviews with the Washington Post as quoted by the Daily Dawn in its issue of 21 December 1963, he gave vent to his thoughts about the Sub-continent saying that “Confederation remains our ultimate goal, though if we say it openly, they are alarmed that we want to swallow them up”.

This is how Nehru thought of India as the leading power or the hegemon of the region before the departure of the British Imperialists and even after the Partition. The political and strategic policies towards the small states of the region India adopted under the leadership of Nehru and his successors were driven by this long cherished ambition of becoming the hegemon power. While cloaking its designs by the mantle of Non Aligned Movement, democracy, freedom of people and sweet talk of good neighborliness, it continued to pursue deceitfully Kautylia’s statecraft and military strategy intimidating and subduing small states, destabilizing neighbours and patronizing subversion and terrorism in the region. Its footprints are found in the bogey of Pakhtunistan, civil strife in Sri Lanka, secession of Bangladesh, insurgencies in Balochistan, patronage of separatist groups in Sindh, bloodshed in Karachi, border dispute with China.

The continued political and economic stability and close strategic alliance with the USA after the collapse of the erstwhile Soviet Union, India has been relentlessly pursuing its hegemonic designs. To realize its long cherished dream of being the major power in greater Asia, India went into the tight embrace of the USA and started behaving as a counterpoise to China miscalculating its own military power, the USA reliability and the Chinese military and strategic threshold and suffered humiliation to the chagrin of the sane Indians. As put it by an analyst, ‘one minor Chinese military move took the wind out of the Hindutva nationalist regime of Prime Minister Narendra Modi which miserably failed to give a reasonable political, diplomatic, economic or military response to the Chinese move along the LAC’. The membership of the Quad and the new ally – the USA – did not help avert the blow to its prestige.

India suddenly realized it had no other option than falling back on the old ally – Russia. The Indian Defence Minister lost no time in rushing to Kremlin to buy military hardware (Mig-29, SU-30, S-400 Missile defence system, K-class submarines, T-90 Tanks etc worth more than $16 billion) and also to seek Russian help to ease tension with China. The Chinese message to India and its strategic allies was loud and clear that it does not know to compromise on its territorial integrity and strategic interests including BRI or CPEC in the region. The Chinese move dealt a heavy blow to the grandeur and the awe and fear of India in the region. China has moved to strike a long term partnership with Iran excluding India from all the main projects including Chabahar and the building of roads and railways to connect with Afghanistan. India has also lost Afghanistan, Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh to China.

India’s defence budget in the recent years leapfrogged to $71billion in 2019. With increasing tension at LAC, it will have to spend even more on defence related purchases. The US is India’s fourth largest supplier of arms after Israel and France. The defence trade between the two countries jumped from $200million in 2000 to $20billion in 2020. The US designated India as the major defence partner in 2016 and signed three defence cooperation agreements with it between 2016 and 2019. This emboldened it to revoke article 370 and 35 A of its Constitution abolishing the special status of the Kashmiris, shutting and locking down the valley for almost a year, indulging in blatant Islamophobia, atrocities against Muslim minority and audacious genocidal moves in Jammu and Kashmir. The Modi regime has internationalized the Kashmir dispute bringing in China as the third stakeholder.

The writer was a member of the Foreign Service of Pakistan and he has authored two books

https://dailytimes.com.pk/646417/the-indian-rivalry-with-china-its-strategic-humiliation/
India trying to compete with China is like a Russian Lada trying to compete with a F1 Race Car.
 
. . .
China can beat India by using cows as shields for their military installations.
 
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I still don't understand why India wants to be the second UK.UK itself has failed.Indians are equal to everyone else in South Asia. Why do Indians think they can unify all countries? Even I think they want to rule Burma just because the UK ruled Burma.
They believe that if islam never arrived they would rule over the entire south asia, and burma and the himalayas.

Delusions can now easily be defined as Indian dreams
 
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I still don't understand why India wants to be the second UK.UK itself has failed.Indians are equal to everyone else in South Asia. Why do Indians think they can unify all countries? Even I think they want to rule Burma just because the UK ruled Burma.

India exist as a second hand imperialist. They want to be the top slave serving it’s former master. It’s independence and democracy is a farce. It exists to serve as a western lackey in South Asia.Pakistan separate from India is the best thing ever for Pakistanis. Let’s hope India would disintegrate for the sake of its people.
 
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I see it as a positive development in the larger scheme of things. China’s aggression should firmly push us into the western quadrant of geo-power. India is not and should not be non-aligned. Nehru was an idealist fool. Hopefully, countering China should lead India to join a coalition of western countries who view China equally with an animus. Such an alignment should foster a better functioning free market economy in the country in the fullnes of time. Pakistan is a great example of how one can benefit by making sensible alliances. Your economy early on benefitted because of your alliances and the borrowed sensible economic practices, before mr Bhutto decided to foolishly started to pursue socialism
such a stupid foreign policy. you are the one who share border and has dispute with both Pakistan an China, not the west, not the US, not the Japan, not the Australia.
India is being used as cannon fodder, a front line state.
good luck.
 
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I still don't understand why India wants to be the second UK.UK itself has failed.Indians are equal to everyone else in South Asia. Why do Indians think they can unify all countries? Even I think they want to rule Burma just because the UK ruled Burma.

The brits have to take blame too. They simply transferred the power to congress. Other than pakistan no one had any choice - if they held referendum in south or bengal i am pretty sure they would have voted for independence.
 
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I see it as a positive development in the larger scheme of things. China’s aggression should firmly push us into the western quadrant of geo-power. India is not and should not be non-aligned. Nehru was an idealist fool. Hopefully, countering China should lead India to join a coalition of western countries who view China equally with an animus. Such an alignment should foster a better functioning free market economy in the country in the fullnes of time. Pakistan is a great example of how one can benefit by making sensible alliances. Your economy early on benefitted because of your alliances and the borrowed sensible economic practices, before mr Bhutto decided to foolishly started to pursue socialism

Good luck with having China as your Permanent enemy, keep funding Western Military industrial Corps at the cost of poor people.
 
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