Modi's visit to China: How long can policy of accommodation continue?


By R S Kalha

May 11 (IANS): The rise of China as a great power is no longer a matter of speculation; it is a given fact. Most nations today seriously consider the Chinese factor when determining policy. The question uppermost in the minds of Indian policy makers is: should we contain or oppose the rise of China, singly or in tandem with others, or should we seek an accommodation? There are no easy answers. No doubt Modi's closest advisors would be grappling with this question on the eve of his first official visit to China as the prime minister of India.

Just as India became independent, a vast strategic shift in the power matrix of Asia took place. Japanese power lay completely shattered at the end of the Second World War. The British withdrew from India leaving India politically divided into two states and its armed forces split - and soon in serious conflict over Kashmir. On the other hand, China wracked by civil war in the last century, with warlords holding sway, not only became politically united, but a new invigorated and a determined government assumed office. The strategic fulcrum of power had shifted in Asia from south to the north of the Himalayas.

The question therefore that faced India's first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru was how to deal with Chinese power on our northern borders. In short, Nehru's answer was to seek an accommodation with China and play for time till India was able to fully develop economically and militarily to meet the emerging challenge. That he failed is another question.

Unfortunately, for present-day policy planners, the power equation with China has worsened since Nehru's time to the detriment of India. China's economy is five times larger than that of India; its military budget three times larger; and its foreign exchange reserves are ten times larger than ours. The Chinese have developed first-rate communications infrastructure right up to our borders; we are still struggling. But we still retain one great strategic advantage - the Indian Ocean where the Indian Navy dominates.

The Indian Ocean is the third largest ocean in the world covering about 20 percent of water on the earth's surface. The Indian peninsula, which stretches about 1,600 km straight into the heart of the ocean, dominates its geographical space. The importance of the Indian Ocean region also lies in the fact that nearly 100,000 ships traverse it on an annual basis carrying 700 million tonnes of cargo, but most important of all there are four transit 'choke-points' of which the Straits of Malacca dominate. The Malacca Straits are a shallow, narrow waterway that connects the Indian Ocean with the South China Sea. At some points it is only 23 metres deep.

China relies heavily on imported oil, gas and other natural resource commodities to feed its growing economy and it is estimated that its crude oil imports may exceed 300 million tonnes shortly. Nearly 18 percent of China's total energy consumption is based on imported oil and at current trends, nearly 80 percent of oil imports pass through this route. In case the Straits of Malacca were ever to be blockaded, it would mean a detour of at least three to four days extra through unsafe waters.

Since Nehru and the 1962 conflict, successive Indian prime ministers have sought neither strategic accommodation nor confrontation with China. While serious attempts were made to settle the boundary question, it was realized that a settlement was not imminent. Therefore it made better policy to first stabilize the border areas to minimize incidents. From denying that a dispute existed under Nehru, to stating that till the issue was settled, there would be no normalization, to Rajiv Gandhi's assertion that relations may develop side by side with the boundary negotiations, the Indian position has moved quite significantly.

Atal Bihari Vajpayee went even further and agreed that a boundary settlement be explored "afresh from a political perspective", thus abandoning Nehru's stance that the Sino-Indian boundary was established by "treaty, custom and usage".

Finally, in Article III of the Political Parameters and Guiding Principles Agreement signed in April 2005, Manmohan Singh accepted a "package settlement" and "adjustment of its position" on the boundary issue. So with India having moved so far, why then does China not agree?

Suffice it to say that China senses no pressure from India, be it military, political or economic. In fact, if gestures be read as harbingers of policy change, we seem to be signalling a move towards the old policy of accommodation. The Rafale deal has been reduced from 126 fighters to a more financially viable 36 fighters; the strength of the Mountain Strike Corps reduced from 90,000 to 35,000 soldiers and politically there has not even been a pro-forma protest when President Xi Jinping announced the building of railway lines, oil and gas pipelines and the China-Pakistan economic corridor through Pakistani-occupied Kashmir. The Chinese remain protectionist on facilitating Indian exports in the key pharma and IT sectors, thus ensuring a continued massive trade deficit.

The task before Modi is daunting as no easy solutions are obvious. He would need the unstinting support of all, for whichever policy option he adopts it will have momentous repercussions.

One thought: Modi should announce the upgrading of the Andaman and Nicobar base to a full-fledged naval command before departure. It would be a signal of intent that the Chinese will not miss.

 

(R.S. Kalha is a former secretary, Ministry of External Affairs, India, and author of book "India-China Boundary Issues - Quest for Settlement (ICWA 2014). He can be contacted at rskalha@gmail.com)

  

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Comment on this article

  • Praveen, Udupi

    Mon, May 11 2015

    Very few comments..Looks like feku bhakts are tired of Fekugiri.

    DisAgree [8] Agree [7] Reply Report Abuse

  • geoffrey, hat hill

    Mon, May 11 2015

    A very mature and realistic writeup revealing where exactly we stand against China in different fields. An eye opener for those who get carried away by media hype and live in fools' paradise.

    DisAgree [7] Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • sunill, bengaluru

    Mon, May 11 2015

    it is an eyeopener to people like u who till now was boasting usa/eu waseternal superpower and no one can replace it and undermining china

    DisAgree [3] Agree [7] Reply Report Abuse

  • geoffrey, hat hill

    Mon, May 11 2015

    Yes, the comparison is between China and India. As of now despite it's military might China has a long way to catch up with western Europe or US. Look at the quality of Chinese goods. Of course they are cheap both in price and quality. When encountered with defective commodities, it's normal to say 'it must be made in China' All said done done, Sunil, stop day dreaming of getting pally and milking China
    They are way beyond our reach.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • Jossey Saldanha, NY

    Mon, May 11 2015

    China makes a killing by dumping all spurious goods in India and grants 46 billion aid to PAKISTAN.
    WILL FEKU EVER UNDERSTAND ...

    DisAgree [5] Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • N.M, Mangalore

    Mon, May 11 2015

    Modi is still in honeymoon mode.

    He has 4 more years to visit, Nauru, Madagascar, Benin, Liberia, Lesotho, Bolivia, Moldovia, Tahiti, Guam, Guinea, Rwanda, Burundi, Peru , Haiti, Kiribati, Uganda, Iceland, Eritrea, Suriname, Burukina Faso.

    Feku has a busy itinerary ahead of him....wonder if Jashoda ben will be released from house arrest and join him on these tours.

    DisAgree [12] Agree [15] Reply Report Abuse

  • sunill, bengaluru

    Mon, May 11 2015

    modi will visit all the south east asian countries to improve strategic advantage for india after his next week visit of china,mongoloia and south korea followed by russia in july.

    after that maximum he may visit london and israel.dont forget that most of the countries he visited untill now are not visited for more than 30-40 years by prev indian govts.so it was needed to establish relations.

    DisAgree [13] Agree [13] Reply Report Abuse

  • gm, mlur

    Mon, May 11 2015

    When is his India Visit? Any Plans?

    DisAgree [6] Agree [7] Reply Report Abuse

  • Amith, udupi

    Mon, May 11 2015

    Ek Chini cum chai pila dena ...

    DisAgree [8] Agree [8] Reply Report Abuse

  • John, Udupi

    Mon, May 11 2015

    Modi this time will be making Chai for Chinese President from tea leaves of China but with Made in India label!. Kud ko ullu banaying and India ko bhi ullu banaying!.Modi bakhts take note!. Ram temple will not be built, India will be top beef exporter to the world but not top beef eater!,. 15 lakhs of black money in every account will only be a dream!, Make in India lables will continue to be made in china and finally India will again vote Modi back to power in 2019!. Any doubt!?

    DisAgree [5] Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse

  • Ramesh S, mangalore

    Mon, May 11 2015

    ..INDIAN media never acknowledged MODI's efforts & his style of foreign policy..just read reputed Paki news media DAWN & watch GEO news..they have written many articles on MODI and just few days back also they are surprised, amazed & terrified how MODI hand picked NSA Ajit Davol, foreign secretary Jaishankar..and how he engaging & making personal friendship with foreign leaders to isolate Pakis internationally so on..they clearly states that there is no business as usual with INDIA any more..while our media reported its a MODI misadventures to stop secretary level talk for talking with separatists, the Paki media reports its a calculated clever move by MODI Govt to show their superiority stating that we can stop & start talks as per our will..

    DisAgree [10] Agree [8] Reply Report Abuse

  • gm, mlur

    Mon, May 11 2015

    Indian media tired now showing all fake about him.

    DisAgree [4] Agree [10] Reply Report Abuse

  • Declan, Mumbai

    Mon, May 11 2015

    Conrad,
    Modi's journey from CHAI to CHINA

    DisAgree [3] Agree [11] Reply Report Abuse

  • Ramesh S, mangalore

    Mon, May 11 2015

    ..NEHRU, messed up the whole thing..He was never a nationalistic leader, he had a slave mentality, thats why he couldnt see beyond great Briton..He had only one dream that is consolidating his political position to continue family politics..Selling poverty internationally, keeping poor further poor & acting like champions of poor..PAPPU continuing this legacy..then how come INDIA will become strong economically?..how pro business is anti poor!!..the biggest blunder of NEHRU is he didnt realise that CHINA will capture TIBET..He totally failed Kashmir..so much so that he even accepted a visa system for Kashmir which later cancelled due to protest for JANA SANGH leaders..If visa system continued Kashmir would have been a separate with help of pakis & chinese..even successive Congress Govts failed to have strategic relation with neighbors which fell to influence of CHINA gradually..even with vast resources we never tried to became independent, still people out there ridiculing MAKE IN INDIA, pulling MODI's leg..Only a economically strong INDIA can curtail CHINA..

    DisAgree [14] Agree [12] Reply Report Abuse

  • sunill, bengaluru

    Mon, May 11 2015

    the only way for india if it wants to become economical and military superpower is to mend its relations with russia and china and only keep business relations with west as west are a rapidly declining .modi knows this and will initiate steps accordingly in his forthcoming tours of china(may) and russia(july)

    DisAgree [5] Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse

  • gm, mlur

    Mon, May 11 2015

    Modi ke saath tumko bechtha tho kuch tho paida hotha tha, next time tour mein modi ke saath jana usko advise dene ke liye.

    DisAgree [8] Agree [8] Reply Report Abuse

  • geoffrey, hat hill

    Mon, May 11 2015

    You mean to say in May and July it's China's and Russia's turn respectively to get milked by our milkman?

    DisAgree [2] Agree [3] Reply Report Abuse

  • Vincent Rodrigues, Katapadi/B'lore

    Mon, May 11 2015

    Modi might have gone to China as a tourist to see the different places in China.All the best for his joy ride,

    DisAgree [11] Agree [21] Reply Report Abuse

  • Valerian D'souza, Udupi / Mumbai

    Mon, May 11 2015

    True. The rise of China as a great power is is a given fact.
    It is evident from the look, trade and even from Olympics.
    However, they went too past, uncontrolled development. It develops suicidal tendencies also.
    Naturally development is has to be gradual.
    India too will develop even better with peace, provided we reform our archaic laws, taxes, business laws, reform our judiciary and politics. Then we will have handling capacity.
    Infrastructure development is next, possible after having done the first.

    DisAgree [3] Agree [14] Reply Report Abuse

  • Elroy, Karkala

    Mon, May 11 2015

    India can do better than China. But we are devided among ourselves. We want separate state. Telangaand andhra are fighting was like India PAkistan. Karnataka Maharashtra , Karnataka Tamilnadu, and so on....if we are fighting for supremacy within states we cant solve our problems. In china prime ministers are uted for coruption....how many in India?? zero... we no need to visit china to learn we have manpower we have brains but we need honesty in working which is not there. The wost part is the educated are the one who are so corrupt that they have used all the loopholes in judiciary and the poor being hanged just because they dont have enough support to get bail. We have the best IT companies still our governments work in papers. Railway tickets are computerised still the corrupt minds are corrupting computers. We can install CCTV s in police stations still we are not doing. We can install CCTVs in cities stuill we dont have budget. If Obama comes we have all the budget to install it. nonsense and joke. Rupees is going down and our bhakths are praising government that they are getting more rupees for dollar. Uneducated frogs.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • Mangalurian, Mangaluru

    Mon, May 11 2015

    The writer claims: "Nearly 18 percent of China's total energy consumption is based on imported oil and at current trends, nearly 80 percent of oil imports pass through [Indian Ocean with the South China Sea] route. In case the Straits of Malacca were ever to be blockaded, it would mean a detour of at least three to four days extra through unsafe waters".

    This may appear to be the case. But the reality is a little different.

    China is fully covered for Energy supplies - no matter what happens to the route mentioned by the author. How? Through the Gwadar port ("a major destination in the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor").

    Gwadar, sold by Oman to Pakistan in 1950s, is just across the Persian Gulf from the major energy sources. China is able to ship all the oil it wants overaland, and possily much much faster than the sea-route mentioned by the author.

    China is the manufacturing powerhouse of the world. Modi might make his "Make in India" noise, but there are not many takers. Modi is wasting Indian taxpayers' money by visiting China.

    India needs to ask itself, what are India's long-term benefits by buying all the manufactured goods from China? The Indian Government must provide tax-free incentives to Indian businesses for manufacturing goods.

    DisAgree [7] Agree [16] Reply Report Abuse

  • sunill, bengaluru

    Mon, May 11 2015

    NOt only that. u forget russia whic h is having more oil and gaz than entire gulf which is next door neighbour to china

    DisAgree [11] Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse

  • jb, mlore

    Mon, May 11 2015

    Modi knows to play his games smartly, atleast there is an visible effort. After China visit he is going to Mongolia. Mongolia is totally neglected by the whole world since its preoccupied with trading with 90% china and 10% russia since there are its neighbours, with china setting the rules of the trade. It is country with huge minerals and Modi is signing a deal with them for Uranium. The size of order might be small compared to other countries like Australia and Canada but gives more hope for Mongolia that there is now one more country it can rely on other than China.

    DisAgree [12] Agree [11] Reply Report Abuse

  • Mangalurian, Mangaluru

    Mon, May 11 2015

    There are at least two inaccuracies in your statement.

    The statement "Mongolia is totally neglected by the whole world" is incorrect, because, Russia has been exploiting Urbanium in Mongolia since at least 1995. Uranium mining is fairly active in Monglia for quite some time, and it has noting to do with China.

    The second statement "Modi knows to play his games smartly" in terms of engaging Mongolians is also inaccurate.
    India signed an agreement with Mongolia in September 2009 for the Uranium supply. (Mongolia has signed agreements with countries as well, including France, for the supply of Uranium).

    I do not at blame Modi for taking credit for the various accomplishments of the UPA.

    But before commenting, I expect the readers here to do a little research to verify if Modi has indeed made a difference. Unfortunately so far he has not on any front.

    DisAgree [5] Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse

  • sunill, bengaluru

    Mon, May 11 2015

    mongolia is a landlocked country sandwiched between 2 countriesone a past superpower and one future superpower.inner mongolia which constitutes 50% of mongolia is captured by china.

    china is also waiting for a oppurtune time to capture the rest of mongolia as it considers that country as thiers same like tibet.usa tried to improve diplomacy in mongolia but failed as it is a landlocked country between 2 enemies of usa.

    whatever mongolia decideds will happen only with the approval of china.this is the truth

    DisAgree [4] Agree [6] Report Abuse


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