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  • China's foot in India's door

    (Republished with permission from Japan Focus)

    China's growing presence in South Asia rides on its accelerated economic and strategic influence in the region. This article gauges the interplay between economic, particularly resource factors, and strategic factors in China's advance in the region and its relations with South Asian nations.

    One measure of China's economic outreach is its current trade volume with all South Asian nations, which now approaches $20 billion a year. [1] Its bilateral trade with India alone accounts for $13.6 billion a year, a number that Chinese Prime Minister Wen Jiabao has projected to grow to $30 billion by 2010. [2] Yet it constitutes just 1% of China's global trade as compared to 9% of India's. [3]



    These statistics pale in comparison with trade between China and East Asian nations. China's trade with Japan, which was valued at $213 billion in 2004, [4] is more than 15 times that between Beijing and Delhi. In 2004, China passed the United States as Japan's largest trading partner. What is remarkable about Sino-Indian trade, however, is its dramatic acceleration to $13.6 billion in 2004 from $338 million in 1992. [5] The projected $30 billion trade between China and India by 2010 will likely surpass Indo-US trade that is currently valued at $20 billion a year.

    Sino-Indian trade links are gathering strength from India's computer software industry. Wen attested to this strength when he began his April 9-12 visit to India with a stop in Bangalore, the Indian Silicon Valley. China, which excels in production of computer hardware but lags in computer software, is sending students to India for education and training in software engineering. Similarly, it has opened its doors to Indian software companies. Yet the software industry only accounts for a fraction of the two-way trade between Beijing and Delhi. Even Indian software giants such as Tata Consultancy Services that have opened branches in China are largely dependent on multinationals. [6] "Only a small proportion of its work there is for Chinese customers." [7]

    As a matter of fact, India's exports to China are predominantly raw and processed materials, especially steel. Many skeptics among Indians believe that India's inflated exports will drop when China's construction boom ends. On the other hand, some fear that cheaply produced Chinese imports will eventually hurt India's domestic industrial base. [8]

    Except for Delhi, Beijing runs trade surpluses with all other partners in the region, including Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. But China makes up for its trading edge with massive investment in these countries' infrastructural development, socio-economic needs and above all energy production projects. Of all these areas, investment in energy production has touched off the stiffest competition both inside and outside the region. A case in point is the recent US offer of nuclear power plants to India. China quickly followed up with a competitive offer of its own nuclear power plants to Pakistan and Bangladesh to meet the latter's energy needs. Beijing also showers these nations with low-cost financial capital to help their struggling development sector. The largest beneficiaries of Chinese economic aid are Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal –in that order –emblematic of China's growing scale and diversification of economic presence throughout the region.

    China's growing strategic influence
    China has simultaneously deepened its strategic influence in the region, notably with India's immediate neighbors – Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Beijing has long had a close strategic partnership with Islamabad, but its overtures to the remaining countries were hobbled by the 1962 Sino-Indian war and its pariah status as the "communist other", which it endured until the early 1970s. China's move into South Asia gained momentum following its conversion to a market economy in the 1980s, as its coffers swelled with trade and investment dollars. This economic strength opened the path to South Asia, beyond its longtime ally, Pakistan. China skillfully deployed economic incentives to draw Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka into its strategic orbit.

    For China, Bangladesh is a doorway to India's turbulent northeastern region, including the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, to which China lays territorial claims. Although China has backed off its claim to Sikkim, a tiny kingdom that was incorporated into the Indian Union in 1975, its claim to Arunachal Pradesh remains unchanged even after the new-found bonhomie between Beijing and Delhi.

    One issue of tension in South Asia concerns a conflict between India and Bangladesh over another northeastern state, Assam, where Indian leaders claim some 20 million Bangladeshis have moved. Bangladesh denies such claims. It is certain, however, that Assam has a significant Muslim minority that currently accounts for 30% of its population. Nevertheless, Indian officials, especially L K Advani, leader of the Bhartiya Janta Party (BJP), which promotes Hindutva, a version of hyper Hindu nationalism, fear that Assam will become India's second Muslim-majority state, after the state of Jammu and Kashmir. [9] Above all, China prizes Bangladesh for its immense natural gas reserves of 60 trillion cubic feet (TCF), which rival those of Indonesia. Bangladesh's geographic proximity to Myanmar makes these reserves accessible to China through pipelines. Also, Dhaka has granted China exploration rights for developing natural gas fields of its own [10], but large-scale development of gas fields will wait until the question of pipeline is settled.

    In the meanwhile, Bangladesh has opened to Chinese exploration "one of the world's largest reserves of best quality bituminous coal", which is ash-free and has little sulfur content. [11] Khalida Zia, Bangladesh's prime minister, during her August 17-21 visit to China, further agreed to Beijing's investment in developing her country's natural gas fields, targeting that source of cheap energy for manufacture of industrial and consumer goods for reexport to China. China will also assist Bangladesh in nuclear power production. [12] By contrast, India's access to Myanmar's gas reserves hinges on Dhaka's willingness to allow Delhi a passage for laying a gas pipeline.

    Oil exploration
    Sino-Bangladesh economic relations are not, however, without friction. The major irritant is the textile industry that accounts for 77% of Bangladesh's annual exports, which are valued at close to $4.6 billion. [13] About 1.8 million Bangladeshis are employed in this industry. With the dissolution of the Multifiber Agreement on January 1, 2005, which ended textile export quota for countries such as Bangladesh, and China's entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO), Dhaka's garment industry will now have to compete with the world's textile giant - China.

    Beijing is, however, calming such competitive tensions by outsourcing textile jobs to Dhaka that have the comparative advantage of labor that is half the cost of China's. In addition, Prime Minister Wen, during his visit to Dhaka last April, pledged to consider zero tariffs on Bangladeshi exports to help bridge Dhaka's yawning trade gap. More importantly, it is the strategic relationship between the two that overrides their non-strategic concerns. [14] Bangladesh's Prime Minister Khalida Zia, during her visit to Beijing on December 23-27, 2002, signed the "Defense Cooperation Agreement", which was further reinforced by Wen's most recent visit to Dhaka.

    Nepal's strategic location between China and India makes it important. Nepal's borders meet China's restive western province of Tibet on the one hand, and Indian states in which Naxalites [15] are active on the other. Nepal's Maoist insurgents, who control a vast swath of the countryside, have cross-border links with India's Naxalites, whose activities in many rural areas are the bane of the Indian government. [16]

    Nepalese Maoists and Indian Naxalites share a Maoist belief in the "village" as the pivot of revolution. It is widely believed in India that both Nepalese and Indian Maoists are sympathetic to China. Beijing, however, denies links with either and whatever sympathies Mao-era revolutionaries may have had for the Naxalites, their program would seem to have little resonance among contemporary Chinese leaders. What is clear is that China and India vie for Katmandu's favor to advance their respective strategic goals. Since the replacement of Nepal's democratic government with an absolute monarchy in February of this year, India has cold-shouldered Nepal's King Gyanendra, while China has embraced him by describing the so-called royal coup as Nepal's "internal matter". [17] In return, China wants the Nepalese monarch to stay clear of any foreign (Indian or the US) influence that could make trouble in Tibet. To strengthen the political status quo in Tibet, China is integrating Nepal into the Tibetan economy, laying a highway that will connect the two.

    In the same way, Beijing cherishes friendly relations with Sri Lanka, which occupies a strategically important heft of the Indian Ocean stretching to Southeast Asia from the Middle East. After September 11, the US sought access to Sri Lankan ports, airfields and air space for its armed forces under the Acquisition and Cross Servicing Agreement (ACSA). The ACSA is the first such agreement between Sri Lanka and a Western power since its independence in 1948. (Though in the early 1980s, Colombo allowed a radio transmitter on its territory to beam Voice of America (VOA) broadcasts into China, Myanmar and North Korea.)

    Both China and India would prefer Sri Lanka to stay out of Western alliances, as they jostle for advantage with Colombo. Sri Lanka's prolonged ethnic conflict between its Sinhalese majority and the Tamil minority has, however, strained its relations with Delhi. India, with a Tamil-majority state of its own, treads cautiously in mediating the conflict, which makes it suspect with Colombo. Tamils are not just India's "co-ethnics" but "co-religionists" as well. As Hindus resisting the domination of the Buddhist Sinhalese majority, the cause of Sri Lankan Tamils resonates with the Hindu majority in India.

    This groundswell of support influences India's policies towards the Tamil-Sinhalese conflict. In May 1991, a Tamil suicide bomber assassinated Rajiv Gandhi, a former prime minister of India, for sending in 20,000 Indian troops to keep peace in Sri Lanka. Although India was outraged by the assassination, its official policy continues to seek justice for the Tamil minority. China, however, with no such concerns to balance, boldly vouches for Sri Lanka's territorial integrity with little regard for the national aspirations of the Tamil minority.

    Of all these nations, Pakistan's strategic significance has long been preeminent for China. Although smaller, Pakistan rivals India in possession of nuclear weapons. It has long denied India access to Western and Central Asian nations, while at the same time literally paving the highway of Karakoram for Beijing's direct access to Eurasia. Above all, it has tied down 500,000 to 700,000 Indian troops in the Kashmir Valley for the past 15 years, thereby indirectly easing India's challenge to China's defenses on their disputed border. Although both countries agreed to the status quo on the border, their troop deployment along it remains unaltered.

    More importantly, Pakistan emboldens the region's smaller economies to stand up to India and seek Chinese patronage, which hurts India's stature in the region. Although India is a potential regional economic powerhouse, its economic clout is far from matching China's. Moreover, India is encumbered by border disputes with almost every neighboring nation, which make its neighbors more receptive to Beijing's economic and strategic outreach.

    China's diplomatic triumph
    Besides strategic gains, China has benefited diplomatically from its growing influence with Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Today, all of these nations affirm the "one-China" policy, stating that Taiwan is an "inalienable" part of the People's Republic of China (PRC). India also has affirmed a "One-China" policy but with a difference: while declaring Tibet an integral part of China, it continues to host the Dalai Lama. By contrast, all India's neighbors shun the Dalai Lama while proclaiming that Tibet is an integral part of China.

    With China eager to join the South Asia Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), which currently represents the seven nations of Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, all six of India's partners call for Beijing's entry into the SAARC - to the palpable annoyance of Delhi. Thus, at a time when China is making successful overtures to ASEAN and throughout the South China Sea, it is also extending its diplomatic and economic reach toward South Asia, SAARC and the Indian Ocean. [18]

    India, as the resident power of South Asia, considers the region its "near abroad," and does not want Beijing to intrude on to its turf. What unnerves India most is China's eye on South Asia's biggest prize: the Indian Ocean. While India would like to prevent China's advance into its sphere of influence, it lacks the regional or international clout, diplomatically, militarily or economically to stem Beijing's march on South Asia or the Indian Ocean.

    China, however, has sought to calm Delhi. Wen's four-day visit to India on April 9-12 attests to growing efforts to woo Delhi. China's major goal is to keep India from forging military and strategic alliances with the US that might undermine Beijing's goal of reunification of Taiwan. Well aware of India's historic concerns for its territorial integrity, China deftly plays on India's nationalist instincts and its visceral aversion to domination by foreign powers. China's deft diplomacy is facilitated by the current UPA (United Progressive Alliance) government of India that rests on a liberal-left coalition, many of whose members are more suspicious of Western powers than of Beijing.

    Beijing's overtures to Delhi are strengthened by its failed effort to wean Tokyo away from the US orbit and by growing China-Japan tensions over territorial and historical issues. Tokyo's stand on Taiwan, its decision to welcome the US 1st Military Corps to Japan with important implications for aggressively redefining the US-Japan Security Treaty, and its view of Beijing as a threat to Japan's national security, all further distance the two. Against this background, Wen's ability to convince Delhi to agree to form the "India-China Strategic and Cooperative Partnership for Peace and Prosperity" is significant. The partnership has been touted in Beijing as "the most significant achievement" of Wen's four-nation tour (April 5-12), which took him to Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. [19]

    Seeing new possibilities for a breakthrough in its relations with India, Beijing recently made a number of bold concessions as a means to improve relations. Not only did China accept the long-disputed territory of Sikkim as part of the Indian Union, Wen even presented Indian Prime Minister Man Mohan Singh with cartographic evidence of his government's changed stance: an official map that shows Sikkim in India. In response, Delhi backed off its long-held stand on Tibet, accepting it as an integral part of the PRC. For its part, Delhi agreed to accept the status quo in their border dispute until a mutually satisfying resolution is found. China wants to keep Aksai Chin, an area of 35,000 square miles in Ladakh, Kashmir, which it seized from India in 1962 while India wants to reclaim Aksai Chin through negotiations. Aksai Chin offers strategic access to China's restive western region of Xinjiang, which makes it difficult for China to let go of it.

    Significantly, China agreed to support India's bid for a United Nations Security Council seat, albeit without specifying whether it would endorse the Indian call for veto power. This stands in sharp contrast to China's leading role in blocking Japan's effort to obtain a Security Council seat. China has also softened its longstanding commitment to Pakistan on Kashmir, perhaps in part because of the reported infiltration of Muslim fighters from Kashmir into the Chinese Muslim-majority autonomous region of Xinjiang.

    China appears to be prepared to make these concessions to Delhi in order to forge a "strategic partnership". For its part, India is interested not only in defusing tensions with China. With China poised to overtake the US as India's largest trade partner, India is also seeking to boost bilateral trade and ensure energy security. India's giant appetite for energy resources will soon rank it as the world's third largest consumer of fossil fuels after the US and China. Delhi hopes its strategic partnership with Beijing will facilitate its energy drive.

    However, the quest for energy is marked by both competition and cooperation between Beijing and Delhi. In South Asia, it is the competition that dominates. India is competing with China to woo energy-rich nations such as Bangladesh and Myanmar that are politically closer to China. Thus far, Delhi has been blocked in attempts to build a pipeline to India from Myanmar, which would run through Bangladesh. The fact that Myanmar remains within the Chinese sphere of influence, makes it difficult to move ahead with the plan. [20]

    China, on the other hand, is building a 1,250-kilometer pipeline from gas fields in Myanmar to its Yunnan province. China is also building a deep-sea port at Gwadar, Pakistan, along the Arabian Sea coast, which will help diversify its energy shipments to Central Asia from the Middle East. [21] For its part, India is building Chahbahar port in Iran to gain access to oil and gas reserves in central Asia through Afghanistan. Elsewhere, India and China are cooperating in energy development. For example, they have agreed to invest to develop Iran's giant oilfield of Yadavaran. Similar joint ventures between Beijing and Delhi have been made in oil and gas development in the Sudan.

    While strengthening ties with India, China faces the challenge of keeping Pakistan on its side. Islamabad has a long history of military alliances with the US from CENTO (Central Treaty Organization) and SEATO (Southeast Asia Treaty Organization) in the past to its present status as the major non-NATO US ally in the region and a nation whose importance to the US grew with the war in Afghanistan. Unlike India, Pakistan always has been malleable to US influence. Wen, however, drew Pakistan into a "Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Good Neighborly Relations [22]", which binds both signatories to desist from joining "any alliance or bloc which infringes upon the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity of the other side". [23] President General Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's military leader, has attempted to keep the contents of the treaty under wraps by blocking the release of its full text, despite the fact that China's People's Daily published it. Nevertheless it is obvious which of the two will have to avoid unwanted alliances, and whose interests of "sovereignty, security and territorial integrity" will be served.

    Conclusion
    China has invested in South Asia's smaller economies of Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka to gain a strategic foothold and create a diplomatic profile in the region. This effort has transformed the region from India's "near abroad" into China's own backyard. India's economic power and military might in the region are counterbalanced by a growing Chinese presence. China has, for the most part, used its strengthened position in the region to make peace with Delhi in such longstanding conflicts as border disputes, and it has joined India in joint energy development projects, despite the latter's strategic partnership with the US. China's gains in reaching accommodation in both South Asia and Southeast Asia stand in sharp contrast to the deepening conflicts in China-Japan relations.


    http://atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/GH24Df05.html

  • #2
    India has only just begun to flex its economic mussle, China liberalized a full decade before India ever did and Indian growth rates over the last 14 years are similar to Chinese growth rates in the mid eighties.

    China should not be viewed as an enemy but rather as a parterner, I will deal with the Chinese over irrational Jehadis anyday.

    Comment


    • #3
      China is India's potential enemy #1.
      We just need to clean up the NE , and thats the end of Bangladesh's so called influence.

      and as for their economic might , none of our CEO who toured China are scared.

      Comment


      • #4
        China cannot afford to antagonise India.

        Why did Wen Jiabao try to please his Indian guests and announce China's support to India becoming a UNSC permanent member then?

        Samudra's right about our CEOs.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Samudra
          We just need to clean up the NE , and thats the end of Bangladesh's so called influence.
          Honestly, BD has zero influence in NE. The insurgents are USING BD, the minute BD tries to gain territory, these insurgnets would beat them hard....same goes for China. Read about the clashes between Assamese and BD immigrants, given a chance the assamese would kick all the bengalis out.
          A grain of wheat eclipsed the sun of Adam !!

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          • #6
            China is a rational chess player, they perceive India as a long term threat and are engaged in a policy of encirclement, believe me if India can check them back, they will gladly dump their local dog in the region, China is rational in this way, they care more about profits than anything else.

            For example, if one day Russia were to convince China that India would be on board an axis alliance, China would comply gladly as this would furthur its interests. am not suggesting that we should do this but simply giving an example of how China will always do what suits its interests, economic and strategic, we simply have to play the game knowing the above two points.

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            • #7
              Sameer
              The Chinese encirclement is but a figment of our imagination.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Samudra
                Sameer
                The Chinese encirclement is but a figment of our imagination.


                Then you have not noticed the Chinese derived Pakistani "indegenous missiles" and the early 60s Chinese (blueprint) nukes in the Pak inventory.

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                • #9
                  But certainly ever since a couple of dozen Agni 2s have been pointed their way, a more friendly atmosphere has been created (with China)

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                  • #10
                    China encirclement of India is fact. But i agree with Sameer when he sya thta he would prefer dealing with rational chinese than th ejehadis. Chinese ardefintely india enemy no 1 but they are an intelligent enemy.like the thief in panchantantra who gave up his life so that his victims were spared.China wish to keep Inddia tied but if India rises up to challenge, China will also recognise that.
                    Keyboard is mightier than gun

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                    • #11
                      Point of view

                      Originally posted by devgupt View Post
                      China encirclement of India is fact. But i agree with Sameer when he sya thta he would prefer dealing with rational chinese than th ejehadis. Chinese ardefintely india enemy no 1 but they are an intelligent enemy.like the thief in panchantantra who gave up his life so that his victims were spared.China wish to keep Inddia tied but if India rises up to challenge, China will also recognise that.
                      I think you and Sameer are looking at it just from an Indian view point. From where I am sitting, the Chinese just want more territory, either de facto or with overpowering economic/political influence. They took Tibet and they have always wanted Nepal, Sikim and Bhutan. I do not think they are trying to encirle India per se. The Chinese for "China" is "CHOONG" which means CENTER (and in long meaning "center of the world"). When Marco Polo first went to China in the 15th century, the Chinese had the highest GDP in the world. They want to go back to that state. Even with all that communist influence for the past 60 years, the 4000 years tradition of wanting to be the center of the world is still there.

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                      • #12
                        I was for a minute taken aback with the word Choong!


                        "Some have learnt many Tricks of sly Evasion, Instead of Truth they use Equivocation, And eke it out with mental Reservation, Which is to good Men an Abomination."

                        I don't have to attend every argument I'm invited to.

                        HAKUNA MATATA

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                        • #13
                          The Chinese for "China" is "CHOONG" which means CENTER (and in long meaning "center of the world")
                          Hey it's "Zhong", The Mandarin name for China is "Zhong Guo" meaning Middle Country....
                          Seek Save Serve Medic

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Choong sounded rather of an offensive term and so I blinked.

                            Doesn't matter what China calls itself. To me, it is not the Middle Country, but the country to the North and North East! ;)


                            "Some have learnt many Tricks of sly Evasion, Instead of Truth they use Equivocation, And eke it out with mental Reservation, Which is to good Men an Abomination."

                            I don't have to attend every argument I'm invited to.

                            HAKUNA MATATA

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Ray View Post
                              Choong sounded rather of an offensive term and so I blinked.

                              Doesn't matter what China calls itself. To me, it is not the Middle Country, but the country to the North and North East! ;)
                              With all respect BG Sir you are talking like a typical Foreign Devil
                              Seek Save Serve Medic

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