China has been adamant in not acknowledging the de facto
boundary between India and China demarcated by the British and claims
that the entirety of Arunachal Pradesh is part of China and calls it
South Tibet. The refuge provided by India to the Tibetan religious
leader Dalai Lama and his ‘Government in exile’ has always been a thorn
in the relationship between the two countries. Yet in the recent years
there had been a sort of softening of rhetoric from the Chinese side on
the border issue; but suddenly they have come up with an official stand
against India’s long held position on the issue of Arunachal Pradesh
being a part of the Indian republic. Analysts believe that the sudden
change in the China’s attitude towards India is perhaps because of
their increasing military and economic prowess vis-à-vis India.
It
is not only the Arunachal Pradesh issue that is causing damage to the
Sino-India relationship. India is also miffed at China’s offer to
Pakistan on building a dam in the Pakistan occupied Kashmir territory.
Last month, Pakistan and China signed a memorandum of understanding to
build the US $ 12.6 billion Diamir-Bhasha dam on the Indus river in Pak
occupied Kashmir, PoK. China has been a great ally of Pakistan and has
been supplying investment and technology know-how to Pakistan including
missile technology and weapons. Since the 1962 Sino-Indian war, China
has been aligning themselves more and more to Pakistan in a bid to
confront their ‘common enemy’, India.
It
is not only to Pakistan that China is expanding their influence, but
also to Nepal. China and Nepal find common ground in being nations
leaning towards Communism. But India can passively watch growing
influence of China in Nepal only at its on peril. The outrageous
geopolitical ambition that China has on India’s neighbours should be
countered effectively otherwise there is every chance that India would
lose its position as a major economic power in the Indian subcontinent.
Growing Chinese influence on Nepal would be a security threat to India
in the long run.
India
needs to aggressively pursue its foreign policy if it has to sustain
any ambition of becoming one of the major economic power houses of the
world. It must be noted that such an aggressive pursuance of foreign
policy looks bleak from the present Indian Foreign Minister, SM
Krishna. He is rather reactive than proactive, a characteristic feature
not desirable for a Foreign Minister. As of now, it seems that the
Indian foreign affairs machinery is rather obsessed with its
relationship with the United States. There is less importance given to
other countries, especially our neighbours like Pakistan, Sri Lanka,
Nepal, Myanmar and China. Pakistan is enhancing its foothold on Sri
Lanka and is leaving no stone unturned to improve their traditional
relationship with China. India has almost forgotten Nepal and Myanmar
and its engagement in Afghanistan is only because of the US interest in
having India’s involvement in that country. These are all ominous signs
for a country of India’s stature.
The
border issue is not the only subject on which China has shown its
inclination towards countering India. In colluding with Pakistan, China
has been lodging its protest against the India-US nuclear deal,
especially after Barack Obama came to power in the US. Moreover China
has been working against India’s bid to become a permanent member of
the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). China also tried to block
the Asian Development Bank loan to build a dam in Arunachal Pradesh.
What has agitated India recently was China’s act of providing visa to
people from Kashmir in a separated sheet of paper, saying that Kashmir
is a disputed territory. China recently denied providing visa to people
from Arunachal Pradesh and said that those people don’t need visa to
come to China as they are Chinese.
Media
on both sides of the border has got a great say in the present
condition of India-China relationship. The media in the Chinese side,
particularly the official media, has been highly critical of India. In
one of the recent articles in Chinese Communist party’s official
newspaper, People’s Daily, there had been an article criticising India and its global ambitions. (Find that article here at http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90780/91343/6783357.html)
There is a sort of diatribe against India, its colonial past and its
alleged ambition to become a super power thwarting the aspirations of
its other neighbours. At the same time, when Indian media alleged that
China has increased its incursions in the eastern border of India, the
Indian government accused the media of blowing things out of proportion
and warned legal actions against the media. The official governmental
stance was that there had been no “significant increase” in the Chinese
incursions as reported by the media. That would certainly mean that the
government is accepting that there have been continuous Chinese
incursions along the eastern border of India all these years.
One
of the most remarkable things about the recent India-China spat was the
absence of any remarks from any of the CPI (M) leaders in India.
Normally known for their rhetoric on any thing related to Indian
foreign policy, may it be the Indo-US nuclear deal, the ASEAN pact or
the climate change policy, they have been conspicuous with their
absence in making remarks. And again that is not a surprise because the
CPI (M) in India has always been a self-proclaimed supporter of Chinese
Communist Party and the Chinese government. Even the split in the
Communist Party of India in 1964 was basically because of the party’s
support for China during the Sino-Indian war of 1962.
It
is in the common interest of both India and China to bridge the divide
as soon as possible. Both countries have to find areas where they can
work together and try to solve all outstanding issues, including border
disputes, through dialogue and abstain from making outrageous remarks
that would further worsen the already diminished cordial relationship
between the two countries.
(Find the original post here at Candid Minds)
(Find the original post here at Candid Minds)