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Boxing It In: China’s Approach to India

New Delhi has usually chosen to oppose China’s moves. Perhaps it’s time India creatively engages with its neighbour.

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Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi comes to New Delhi this week ostensibly in preparation for the G-20 summit in Hangzhou next month, for which Prime Minister Narendra Modi will visit China, and the BRICS Summit in Goa, for which Chinese President Xi Jinping will visit India in October. However, high-level meetings no longer impact matters significantly as they used to. Nor do they even help to keep matters on an even keel if the incursions during Li Keqiang’s and Xi’s visits to India in 2013 and 2014 respectively or China’s objection to India’s NSG entry, despite Modi’s personal intervention with Xi, are anything to go by.

The question therefore, that Wang’s visit and the two forthcoming meetings between Modi and Xi must occasion is simple – what exactly is India’s place in China’s foreign policy calculus?

New Delhi has usually chosen to oppose China’s moves. Perhaps it’s time India creatively engages with its neighbour.
What is India’s place in China’s foreign policy calculations? (Photo: Reuters)
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The Rise and Fall of Expectations from Modi

When Modi took over as Prime Minister, the Chinese were fully convinced that here was an Indian leader they could do business with. Modi’s personal qualities and his many visits to China as Gujarat Chief Minister were highlighted as signalling an impending change in bilateral ties. Modi’s many visits abroad and the dynamism that he seems to impart to Indian foreign policy continue to be remarked on frequently in China and the Indian economy too, is seen to be growing faster under his stewardship.

However, souring things for the Chinese in the first instance has been the Indian government’s implacable opposition to Xi’s pet ‘belt and road initiative’ (BRI), including the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) passing through Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir. The other big disappointment for the Chinese has been the extremely slow pace of Indian economic reforms including on issues such as land acquisition and the Goods and Services Tax.

Modi, the reformer, was expected to perform better, pushing through initiatives to welcome foreign, and particularly, Chinese investment. Given these two aspects, such matters as India’s ever-closer partnership with the United States or its position on the South China Sea issue – which normally would be seen as par for the course in international politics – have had a cascading negative effect on bilateral ties.

As a result, halfway through the Modi term, the Chinese leadership seems to have made a couple of determinations about India. One, that it is neither moving fast enough for nor is it open enough to Chinese economic interests, and two, that given both its lack of capacity and its political rivalry with China, India had to be boxed in South Asia.

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New Delhi has usually chosen to oppose China’s moves. Perhaps it’s time India creatively engages with its neighbour.
File photo of India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi (right) and Chinese President Xi Jinping. (Photo: Reuters)
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Snapshot

China Thinks India Needs to Be Boxed In South Asia

  • Chinese analysts point out that South Asia is China’s neighbourhood just as much as it is India’s.
  • China thinks India can no longer treat the subcontinent as its backyard.
  • Indo-Chinese cooperation will best serve regional economic integration, China believes.
  • China’s trying to indirectly get Indian assent for greater involvement in South Asia and to expend Indian energy in the region itself by forcing it to counter Chinese trade and investments.
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China’s Arguments

However, this is not simply a repeat of the past. The Chinese have advanced subtle and highly sophisticated arguments that Indian policymakers can contest only if they are willing to make massive changes in India’s policies towards its neighbourhood.

First, Chinese analysts stress that South Asia is not just India’s neighbourhood, but China’s too. China, they point out shares borders with five SAARC members – almost as many as India does – and is the largest trading partner for most. Whatever happens in South Asia also affects China almost immediately in Xinjiang and Tibet and therefore, China has legitimate political and security interests in the region.

Second – and this is an example of the Chinese trying to change Indian behaviour – surely India can no longer treat the subcontinent as its backyard, for this is a defensive strategy arising out of the 1962 conflict and the Cold War, and can no longer be feasible if India truly has global ambitions.

Third, and related, the Chinese point out that regional economic integration, which is also an objective of SAARC, would be best served by cooperation between India and China, including joint investments and ventures in neighbouring countries. The unstated message is to cooperate with China on the BRI. On Pakistan, however, while the Chinese express their openness to connecting the CPEC to India, they are quick to put the onus on India saying that integration also depends on the state of Indo-Pak bilateral ties.

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New Delhi has usually chosen to oppose China’s moves. Perhaps it’s time India creatively engages with its neighbour.
A signboard seen from the Indian side of the Indo-China border. (Photo: Reuters)
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What Does China Achieve?

Thus, China does two things. One, it indirectly tries to obtain Indian assent for greater Chinese activity and presence in South Asia. It would seem evident that where China is in a strong position, ie, in Pakistan, there is little enthusiasm for anything to do with India. Where this is not the case and where Indian opposition counts as a significant factor, as in Nepal or Sri Lanka, Beijing is ready to discuss cooperation.

Two, given the gap between Indian and Chinese capabilities, it ensures that India expends its energies in South Asia itself trying to counter the ingress of Chinese trade and investments, and perhaps also tourism and soft power.

New Delhi has hitherto functioned more in a default setting of opposition to Chinese moves. However, the time has come for India to either adopt active alternatives to the BRI or think creatively about engaging with the BRI and CPEC both for reasons of facing up to reality as well as shaping it.

(The author is Assistant Director and Fellow at the Institute of Chinese Studies in Delhi. He can be reached at jabinjacob@gmail.com.)

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Topics:  Narendra Modi   China    Xi Jinping 

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