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Mutual concern over US militarism brings China and India closer
By K. Ratnayake
27 April 2005
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Chinese Premier Wen Jiabaos recent tour of South Asia
on April 5-12 marked a further step in a still tentative rapprochement
between China and India. The two countries, which fought a war
in 1962, moved toward settling their border differences as well
as opening up closer economic relations. Wen, who also visited
Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, stressed his most important
visit was to India where he spent the last four days of
the eight-day tour.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh summed up New Delhis
enthusiasm for the visit when he welcomed Wen, declaring India
and China together reshape the world order. Wen, who was
accompanied by a delegation of around 100 top Chinese officials
and business leaders, met with other senior Indian politicians,
including Congress Party leader Sonia Gandhi. At the conclusion,
the two prime ministers issued 21-point joint statement listing
12 agreements, protocols and memoranda of understanding between
their countries.
A settlement to the longrunning border dispute was high on
the list. The complex issues include Chinas claims to Indian-controlled
Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim and Indias counterclaims to
Chinese-controlled Askai Chin, adjacent to the Ladakh region of
Kashmir. Beijing has also been concerned about the activities
of Tibetans, including the Dalai Lama, who live in exile in India.
During the visit, the two leaders agreed to a framework for
resolving the border differences. In their joint statement, China
agreed that Sikkim belonged to India. In return, New Delhi reiterated
that Tibet was part of China and that Tibetan exiles would not
be allowed to engage in anti-Chinese activities. The remaining
differences would be settled through friendly consultations.
On the economic front, the joint statement announced that trade
between two countries would be increased to $US20 billion by 2008up
from $13 billion in 2004. The two leaders agreed to establish
joint economic groups, mechanisms for trade and investment promotion,
closer financial relations, improved IT cooperation and the enhancement
of direct shipping and aviation links.
One key area involved oil and gas. The two sides agreed to
cooperate in the field of energy security and conservation
and to encourage agencies in the two countries to work together
in the survey and exploration of petroleum and natural gas
resources in third countries. The agreement is significant
as both countries are in competition for resources to meet their
rapidly growing demands for energy.
Over the past decade, India and China have experienced high
rates of economic growth as foreign capital has flooded in to
take advantage of their huge reserves of cheap labour. Whereas
China has become the workshop of the world, India
has transformed into the office of the world, with
foreign investors exploiting its supply of cheap, educated, English-speaking
technicians, computer programmers and office workers.
The Indian and Chinese ruling elites both have ambitions to
play a more prominent international role, making them rivals,
not only for markets and resources, but for influence in the Asian
region. India and China, for instance, are each seeking to expand
economic and political relations with the Association of South
East Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries. China has longstanding relations
with the military junta in Burma, which borders India and where
New Delhi is trying to expand its presence.
The real question, however, is not so much what is leading
to competition and possible conflict, but what is drawing the
two countries together. While the ties are far from certain, there
has been a marked warming in the relationship after decades of
tension. Speaking to the press, Indian Foreign Secretary Shyam
Saran declared: India and China are partners, not rivals.
We do not look upon each other as adversaries.
The joint statement hinted at the reasons. It noted each countrys
important role in the process of promoting the establishment
of a new international political and economic order and
that the two sides are supportive of democratisation of
international relations and multilateralism. Mentions of
multilateralism and the UNs importance for global
peace are oblique, but obvious references to Washingtons
unilateral and illegal invasion of Iraq.
The central factor pushing the two countries together is mutual
concern over the consequences of unbridled US militarism. For
China, the attempt to mend its fences with India is part of efforts
to break out of what it fears is American encirclement. In the
wake of the September 11 attacks on the US, the Bush administration
occupied Afghanistan, established US military bases for the first
time in Central Asia and sought to rebuild a military presence
in South East Asia.
Washington has been strengthening economic and military ties
with New Delhi as well, in part as a further measure against China.
Over the past five years, the US and Indian militaries have engaged
in intelligence sharing as well as joint exercises. Top-level
meetings have taken place on a range of issues, including US plans
for an anti-ballistic missile defence shield. The shift represented
a break from previous Cold War relations when India had close
ties with the Soviet Union, while rival Pakistan enjoyed the backing
of the US and China. Beijing is clearly hoping to at least neutralise
US influence in New Delhi.
Chinas relations with Pakistan and Bangladesh are also
aimed at preventing any US encirclement. Beijing is building a
deepwater port at Gwadar in Pakistan, strategically located near
the Persian Gulf. The facility will be equipped with surveillance
gear to monitor the surrounding ocean and will be open for use
by Chinese vessels, including naval ships. Beijings involvement
in the construction will help extend its naval reach to protect
Chinas vital oil supplies from the Middle East. During Wens
visit, Bangladesh offered China access to its Chittagong port.
Indian interests
The reasons for Indias decision to strengthen ties with
China are not so obvious. Since US President Bill Clinton visited
South Asia in 2000, focussing particularly on India, New Delhi
has placed considerable store on its developing relations with
Washington. Those links became closer under the Bush administration
and particularly in the immediate aftermath of September 11, 2001.
India fully backed the US toppling of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan,
hoping that it would weaken rival Pakistan.
But New Delhis calculations that the US would back Indias
own war on terrorismagainst Pakistani-backed
armed militants fighting to end Indian rule of Kashmirproved
not to be the case. While it did exert pressure on Pakistan to
rein in Islamic fundamentalism, Washington was also concerned
to keep Musharraf in power and on side. Having ended its support
for the Taliban, Pakistan became an important component of US
military efforts to combat armed opposition to the US occupation
of Afghanistan.
The US-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003 fuelled fears in
Indian ruling circles about the dangers of US unilateralism. New
Delhis criticisms of the war were limited but the government
declined to send Indian troops to support the occupation. In the
aftermath of the invasion, the Bharathiya Janatha Party (BJP)-led
government, which had championed US-Indian relations, began to
cautiously turn elsewhere.
Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee travelled to Europe in
2003 and visited France and Germany, which had both been critical
of the invasion. Writing in Business Line, one columnist
noted at the time that the tour coming after Iraq war, and
the sweeping economic changes in Europe is both timely and crucial
for India.
Vajpayee also made a trip to Beijing in 2003the first
by an Indian prime minister in decades. The visit was particularly
noteworthy given the stance of his government just five years
before. In 1998, Vajpayee defended Indias decision to carry
out nuclear tests in a letter to US President Clinton by referring
to the threat to India posed by the Chinese nuclear arsenal. His
defence minister George Fernandez went one step further, declaring
China to be Indias number one enemy.
By 2003 that rhetoric had been shelved. During Vajpayees
visit, China raised the prospect of a triangular relationship
between Russia, China and India. A Press Trust of India report
cited a senior Chinese official as saying: China, Russia
and India share many common interests in promoting a democratic
international relationship and safeguarding international security
and stability... Wen raised the issue again during his visit
this month.
Sections of the Indian ruling elite responded positively to
Vajpayees initiative. The Hindu commented that Beijing
and New Delhi could through their combined leadership, impart
a needed balance to global affairs. It went on to declare
that a relationship with China was vital at a time of unprecedented
flux in international relations, rudely shaken by the American
doctrine of pre-emption and war on Iraq.
The BJP-led government was defeated in last years general
election as a result of broad hostility to the impact of its economic
restructuring program. The Congress Party, which dominated Indian
politics for most of the post-war period, was closely associated
with the so-called non-aligned movement and forged close relations
with the Soviet Union during the Cold War. It has nevertheless
continued the relationship with the US established under Vajpayee.
Just last month, however, the visit by US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice to New Delhi reinforced concerns in Indian ruling
circles that the US pays scant regard to their interests. She
bluntly expressed the Bush administrations opposition for
proposals by India and Pakistan to build a gas pipeline from Iran.
While Washington is seeking to maximise pressure on Iran, New
Delhi has ties with Tehran and places considerable importance
on the pipeline.
In an indirect rebuff to Rice, Indian petroleum minister Mani
Shankar Aiyar recently announced that he had proposed to China
the construction of a pipeline that would begin in Irans
natural gas fields, cross Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and Myanmar;
and end in Yunnan province in southwestern China. Aiyar
plans to visit China later in the year to discuss the plan.
Of course, relations between China and India are not plain
sailing. The two countries remain regional rivals and are seeking
to use each other to further their own economic and strategic
interests. On his visit, the Chinese prime minister did not give
an unqualified commitment to support Indias ambition for
a permanent seat in the UN Security Council. And just before Wens
arrival, Indian Defence Minister Pranab Mukherjee warned that
New Delhi had to keep an eye on the modernisation of Chinas
armed forces.
By turning to China and other countries, India is clearly trying
to lessen any dependency on Washington. Whether the Bush administration
is prepared to allow New Delhi to engage in such a balancing act
is another matter. Following Wens trip to India, US State
Department spokesman Richard Boucher dismissed as pure speculation
comments that India-China relations would harm America. Behind
the scenes, however, it is not difficult to imagine that the White
House is far from happy that its plans to use India against China
have suffered something of a setback.
See Also:
India joins the scramble for oil
[12 April 2005]
Burma visit highlights India's "Look
East" strategy
[6 April 2005]
US Secretary of State presses
India and Pakistan to abandon Iranian gas pipeline
[31 March 2005]
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