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Why Bhutan Hates India? Thimphu leans towards China

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nothing to do with japan until you posted with that stupid pic and made a clueless comparison

Read post #88 and you posted another stupid pic and made the same clueless comparison .

Just because two high officials handshake doesnot show anything
 
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India's policy was never and will be never to dominate any one. it is the policy of those countries who are claiming the land and waters of other nations thousands and thousands miles away where their kings sneezed once thousands year before. As for as bravery is concerned, It is the sole virtue of china whose sole achievement is back stabbing india while feigning friendship. And please dont mind the guys who are continuously kicking your arse by snatching your one big island and virtually ruling It

Yearh India is angel in South Asia...ask your surrounding countries:rolleyes:, if you talk about back stabbing, who has start first by harboring Dalai lama and slave owners before Indi Chin blai blai turn into Indo Chini bye bye, infact you're not back stabbing, you're more like...front stabbing...as for the rest it's delusional thinking.


Read post #88 and you posted another stupid pic and made the same clueless comparison .

Just because two high officials handshake doesnot show anything

The pciture is just shown for those delusional Indians who claim that Bhutanese hate Chinese to the core of their hearts...and you should be impressed :D because this picture is extreme rare and it's first time high level of Chinese and Bhutanese official shaked hand and discuss the incoming normalization...for those clueless Indians.

As Japanese handsake indeed show nothing, because we have done this at yearly bases...nithing special.
 
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Yearh India is angel in South Asia...ask your surrounding countries:rolleyes:, if you talk about back stabbing, who has start first by harboring Dalai lama and slave owners before Indi Chin blai blai turn into Indo Chini bye bye, infact you're not back stabbing, you're more like...front stabbing...as for the rest it's delusional thinking.
India got stabbed while robbery not stolen something and running away,so the 'front stabbing' is more rational.
 
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The pciture is just shown for those delusional Indians who claim that Bhutanese hate Chinese to the core of their hearts...and you should be impressed :D because this picture is extreme rare and it's first time high level of Chinese and Bhutanese official shaked hand and discuss the incoming normalization...for those clueless Indians.

As Japanese handsake indeed show nothing, because we have done this at yearly bases...nithing special.

You have answered yourself .

Shaking hands show nothing special . Even if they hate you or love you , they will hand shake as shown by japanese PM.

The only one delusional here is you ...That too over a stupid hand shake.
 
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You have answered yourself .

Shaking hands show nothing special . Even if they hate you or love you , they will hand shake as shown by japanese PM.

The only one delusional here is you ...That too over a stupid hand shake.

We're not delusinal, shake hand with Bhutan is historycal event:

India frets as Bhutan falls in China Teacup

News of Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao meeting his Bhutanese counterpart Jigme Yoser Thinley, on the sidelines of the UN Conference on Sustainable Development at Rio de Janeiro last month, grabbed considerable attention in India. The Chinese state-owned Global Times announced that the Bhutanese leader had expressed willingness to establish diplomatic ties with China.

While the news was later denied by the Bhutanese, there are a number of issues that the incident raises about India’s relations with its smaller neighbours and specifically with Bhutan and China. It would appear that neither New Delhi nor ordinary Indians pay much attention to their smaller neighbours unless the Chinese get involved.

Why are Bhutan’s relations with China of such importance to India? The tiny Himalayan constitutional monarchy happens to be the only other country besides India that has a land boundary dispute with China. While Bhutan and China began direct negotiations on the boundary dispute in 1984, they are yet to establish full diplomatic relations, thwarted so far by Indian pressure on the Himalayan nation.

Despite Thimphu’s recent denial that it was seeking diplomatic relations with Beijing, it has been evident for some time now that Bhutanese authorities including both the monarchy and elected representatives are interested in precisely this — Bhutan for example, has had a one-China policy and Chinese representatives were invited to the coronations of both the former and current kings.

While the economic reasons are self-evident, the desire to maintain a little more distance from New Delhi is also attractive politically for Bhutan. Despite being a small nation, Bhutan is not short of ambitions for a more active role internationally. And such a role demands greater freedom of action in the foreign policy domain including the assertion of its sovereignty vis-à-vis India and the mending of fences with the Chinese.

India and Bhutan have long shared a ‘special’ relationship signified by their treaty of friendship first signed in 1949 and later revised in 2007. The revised treaty, it might be noted, was occasioned by the impending turn to parliamentary democracy in Bhutan and places the two countries on a substantially more equal footing with both sides agreeing to “cooperate closely with each other on issues relating to their national interests” instead of Bhutan being “guided” by India “in regard to its external relations.”
Indeed, as parliamentary democracy takes roots in Bhutan, questions will be increasingly asked about Thimphu maintaining such ‘special’ ties with India, and about Indian military presence in the country.

The trend will be towards greater balance and neutrality. Thus, the Bhutanese opening up to China is to be expected, even if Thimphu will probably be careful not to play the card as disastrously as Kathmandu has.

Meanwhile, the boundary dispute with China is a major national concern for Bhutan. It has apparently already lost a substantial chunk of the area under dispute including the Kula Kangri peak, to slow encroachment by the Chinese. However, the Chinese record on boundary settlements so far, shows a substantial willingness to make territorial concessions to smaller neighbours and Bhutan’s association with India in the dispute has probably disadvantaged the smaller nation.

Thimphu for its part seems willing to accept the Chinese offer of conceding Bhutanese claims in its north in return for letting China have disputed areas in the Chumbi Valley in the west.

However, such a concession in the Chumbi has huge security implications for India. Any widening of the Chumbi salient in China’s favour threatens the narrow Siliguri corridor, not very far away, that connects India to its northeast.

There are limits however, to how much pressure India can bring to bear on Bhutan especially in the era of parliamentary democracy in Bhutan. And given its rather poor record of relations with democratic governments in the neighbourhood, India can ill-afford to alienate another neighbour. New Delhi will therefore, need to tread very carefully here.

Meanwhile, owing to Bhutan’s close historical ties to Tibet and its identity as a Buddhist nation, it will continue to be concerned and wary about Chinese actions in general and in Tibet and on the religious front, in particular.

To these must be added, its desire to preserve its unique model of development. It would appear therefore, that even as Bhutan seeks greater freedom of manoeuver in its ties with India, there remain plenty of reasons that should allow the two countries to continue coordinating their foreign policies.
India frets as Bhutan falls in China Teacup - Analysis - DNA
 
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Bhutan is a free country. It can have relations with any country. Just because they are opening up to China, how does that mean they are dumping India?
 
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Actually, Why all its neighboring countries - China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan, hate and spit on India ??
 
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Actually, Why all its neighboring countries - China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan, hate and spit on India ??

Because petty Pakistanis has to resort to quote Rupee News to hold up their battered ego.
 
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