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Asia’s Growth: The China-India-Japan Strategic Triangle

JohnyD

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Asia’s Growth: The China-India-Japan Strategic Triangle

Asia, home to more than half of the global population, is likely to help mold the future course of globalization. In fact, with the world’s fastest-growing economies, the fastest-rising military expenditures, the fiercest resource competition and the most-serious hot spots, Asia holds the key to the future global order.

Asia has come a long way since the time two Koreas, two Chinas, two Vietnams and India’s partition occurred. It has risen dramatically as the world’s main creditor and economic locomotive. The ongoing global power shifts indeed are primarily linked to Asia’s phenomenal economic rise, the speed and scale of which has no parallel in world history.

How fast Asia has come up can be gauged from the 1968 book, Asian Drama: An Inquiry Into the Poverty of Nations, by Swedish economist and Nobel laureate Gunnar Myrdal, who bemoaned the manner impoverishment, population pressures and resource constraints were weighing down Asia. The story of endemic poverty has become a tale of spreading prosperity.

Yet, Asia faces major challenges. It has to cope with entrenched territorial and maritime disputes, harmful historical legacies that weigh down all important interstate Asian relationships, sharpening competition over scarce resources, especially energy and water, growing military capabilities of important Asian actors, increasingly fervent nationalism, and the rise of religious extremism. Diverse transborder trends — from terrorism and insurgencies, to illicit refugee flows, and human trafficking — add to its challenges.

Asia, however, is becoming more interdependent through trade, investment, technology and tourism. The economic renaissance has been accompanied by the growing international recognition of Asia’s soft power, as symbolized by its arts, fashion and cuisine.

But while Asia is coming together economically, it is not coming together politically. If anything, with the gulf between the politics and economics widening, Asia is becoming more divided politically. In some respects, China’s rise has contributed to making Asia more divided.

To compound matters, there is neither any security architecture in Asia nor a structural framework for regional security. The regional consultation mechanisms remain weak. Differences persist over whether any security architecture or community should extend across Asia or just be confined to an ill-defined regional construct, East Asia. The United States, India, Japan, Vietnam and several other countries wish to treat the Asian continent as a single entity. China, on the other hand, has sought a separate “East Asian” order.

One important point is that while the bloody wars in the first half of the 20th century have made wars unthinkable today in Europe, the wars in Asia in the second half of the 20th century did not resolve matters and have only accentuated bitter rivalries. A number of interstate wars were fought in Asia since 1950, the year both the Korean War and the annexation of Tibet started. Those wars, far from settling or ending disputes, have only kept disputes lingering. China, significantly, was involved in a series of military interventions, even when it was poor and internally troubled.

A Pentagon report released last year has cited examples of how China carried out military preemption in 1950, 1962, 1969 and 1979 in the name of strategic defense. The report states: “The history of modern Chinese warfare provides numerous case studies in which China’s leaders have claimed military preemption as a strategically defensive act. For example, China refers to its intervention in the Korean War (1950-1953) as the ‘War to Resist the United States and Aid Korea.’ Similarly, authoritative texts refer to border conflicts against India (1962), the Soviet Union (1969), and Vietnam (1979) as ‘Self-Defense Counter Attacks’.” The seizure of Paracel Islands from Vietnam in 1974 by Chinese forces was another case of preemption in the name of defense. Against that background, China’s rapidly accumulating power raises important concerns today.

In fact, it is the emergence of China as a major power that is transforming the geopolitical landscape in Asia like no other development. Not since Japan rose to world-power status during the reign of the Meiji Emperor (1867-1912) has another non-Western power emerged with such potential to impact the global order as China today.

But there is an important difference: When Japan rose as a world power, the other Asian civilizations, including the Chinese, Indian and Korean, were in decline. After all, by 19th century, much of Asia, other than Japan and Taiwan, had been colonized by Europeans. So, there was no Asian power that could rein in Japan.

Today, China is rising when other important Asian countries are also rising, including South Korea, Vietnam, India and Indonesia. Although China now has displaced Japan as the world’s second biggest economy, Japan will remain a strong power for the foreseeable future, given its more than $5 trillion economy, Asia’s largest naval fleet, high-tech industries, and a per-capita income still nine times greater than China’s.

When Japan emerged as a world power, its rise opened the path to imperial conquests. However, the expansionist impulses of a rising China are, to some extent, checkmated by the rise of other Asian powers. Militarily, China is in no position to grab the territories it covets, although its defense spending has grown almost twice as fast as its GDP.

Today, as China, India and Japan maneuver for strategic advantage, they are transforming relations between and among themselves in a way that portends closer strategic engagement between New Delhi and Tokyo, and sharper competition between China on one side and Japan and India on the other.

Yet, given the fact that India and China point across the mighty Himalayas in very different geopolitical directions and that Japan and China are separated by sea, they need not pose a threat to each other, especially if they were to abstain from hostile actions against one another and strive to avoid confrontation. The interests of the three powers are getting intertwined to the extent that the pursuit of unilateral solutions by any one of them will disturb the peaceful diplomatic environment on which their continued economic growth and security depend.

Ensuring that the Japan-China and China-India competition does not slide into strategic conflict will nonetheless remain a key challenge in Asia. That, in turn, demands that a strong China, a strong Japan and a strong India find ways to reconcile their interests in Asia so that they can peacefully coexist and prosper.

Never before in history have all three of these powers been strong at the same time. In fact, there is no previous history of the three powers having been involved in a bilateral or trilateral contest for preeminence across Asia.

China’s ascent, however, is dividing Asia, not bringing Asian states closer. By picking territorial fights with its neighbors and pursuing a muscular foreign policy, China is compelling several other Asian states to work closer together with the United States and with each other.

If the Chinese leadership were forward-looking, it would utilize 2011 — the year of the rabbit — to make up for the diplomatic imprudence of 2010 that left an isolated China counting only the problems states of North Korea, Pakistan and Burma as its allies. The onus now is clearly on a rising China to show that it wants to be a responsible power that seeks rules-based cooperation and acts with restraint and caution.

But the People’s Liberation Army’s growing political clout and the sharpening power struggle in the run-up to the major leadership changes scheduled to take place from next year raise concerns that the world will likely see more of what made 2010 a particularly tiger-like year when China frontally discarded Deng Xiaoping’s dictum, tao guang yang hui(conceal ambitions and hide claws).

A tiger’s claws are retractable, but China has taken pride more in baring them than in drawing them in. While manipulating patriotic sentiment, it has pursued hardline policies even at home, tightening its controls on the Internet and media and stepping up repression in Tibet and Xinjiang. China’s domestic policy has a bearing on its external policy, because how it treats its own citizens is an internal dynamic likely to be reflected in the way it deals with its neighbors and other states.

On a host of issues — from diplomacy and territorial claims to trade and currency — China spent 2010 staking out a more-muscular role that only helped heighten international concerns about its rapidly accumulating power and unbridled ambition. But nothing fanned international unease and alarm more than Beijing’s disproportionate response to the Japanese detention of a fishing-trawler captain in September 2010. While Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan’s standing at home took a beating for his meek capitulation to Chinese coercive pressure, the real loser was China, in spite of having speedily secured the captain’s release.

Japan’s passivity in the face of belligerence helped magnify Beijing’s hysterical and menacing reaction. In the process, China not only undercut its international interests by presenting itself as a bully, but it also precipitately exposed the cards it is likely to bring into play when faced with a diplomatic or military crisis next — from employing its trade muscle to inflict commercial pain to exploiting its monopoly on the global production of a vital resource, rare-earth minerals.

Its resort to economic warfare, even in the face of an insignificant provocation, has given other major states advance notice to find ways to offset its leverage, including by avoiding any commercial dependency and reducing their reliance on imports of Chinese rare earths. A more tangible fallout has been that China is already coming under greater international pressure to play by the rules on a host of issues where it has secured unfair advantage — from keeping its currency substantially undervalued to maintaining state subsidies to help its firms win major overseas contracts.

No less revealing has been the gap between China’s words and the reality. For example, China persisted with its unannounced rare-earth embargo against Japan for weeks while continuing to blithely claim the opposite in public — that no export restriction had been imposed. Like its denials last year on two other subjects — the deployment of Chinese troops in Pakistani-held Kashmir to build strategic projects and its use of Chinese convicts as laborers on projects in some countries too poor and weak to protest — China has demonstrated a troubling propensity to obscure the truth.

In fact, the more overtly China has embraced capitalism, the more indigenized it has become ideologically. By progressively turning their back on Marxist dogma —imported from the West — the country’s ruling elites have put Chinese nationalism at the center of their political legitimacy. The new crop of leaders, including President Hu Jintao’s putative successor, Xi Jinping, will bear a distinct nationalistic imprint. Xi is known to be a more assertive personality than Hu.

That suggests that China’s increasingly fractious relations with its neighbors, the U.S. and Europe will likely face new challenges.

More broadly, a fast-rising Asia has become the fulcrum of global geopolitical change. Asian policies and challenges now help shape the international economy and security environment.

Yet major power shifts within Asia are challenging the continent’s own peace and stability. With the specter of strategic disequilibrium looming large in Asia, investments to help build geopolitical stability have become imperative.

China’s lengthening shadow has prompted a number of Asian countries to start building security cooperation on a bilateral basis, thereby laying the groundwork for a potential web of interlocking strategic partnerships. Such cooperation reflects a quiet desire to influence China’s behavior positively, so that it does not cross well-defined red lines or go against the self-touted gospel of its “peaceful rise.”

While the U.S. is thus likely to remain a key factor in influencing Asia’s strategic landscape, the role of the major Asian powers will be no less important. If China, India, and Japan constitute a scalene strategic triangle in Asia, with China representing the longest side, side A, the sum of side B (India) and side C (Japan) will always be greater than A. Not surprisingly, the fastest-growing relationship in Asia today is probably between Japan and India.

If this triangle turned into a quadrangle with the addition of Russia, China would be boxed in from virtually all sides. Japan plus Russia plus India, with the U.S. lending a helpful hand, would not only extinguish any prospect of a Sino-centric Asia, but would create the ultimate strategic nightmare for China. However, a Russian-Japanese rapprochement remains far off.

Against this geopolitical background, Asia’s power dynamics are likely to remain fluid, with new or shifting alliances and strengthened military capabilities continuing to challenge the prevailing regional order.

Brahma Chellaney is the author, most recently, of “Asian Juggernaut: The Rise of China, India and Japan” (HarperCollins, 2010) and “Water: Asia’s New Battlefield” (Georgetown University Press, 2011).


IntelliBriefs: Asia’s Growth: The China-India-Japan Strategic Triangle
 
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Japan has way more interest in China than India.

Dont count on Japan to gain anything against China.

And if China could let a hand to Japan against Russia, Japan would jump into Chinas league instantly.

Wishful thinking, the author, if not pipe dreaming.

Again if India want to be a global player, it has to align with China. Now the only effective voice India can put forward is through BRICS. In UN and G 20, India is only a bysider.
 
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And who said India is not aligned to China ? India and China at the highest level understand the sensitivities of each other. It is not recognised in the media circles but that is a fact.
 
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Japan has way more interest in China than India.

Dont count on Japan to gain anything against China.

And if China could let a hand to Japan against Russia, Japan would jump into Chinas league instantly.

Wishful thinking, the author, if not pipe dreaming.

Again if India want to be a global player, it has to align with China. Now the only effective voice India can put forward is through BRICS. In UN and G 20, India is only a bysider.
1299944.jpg
 
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Japan has way more interest in China than India.

Dont count on Japan to gain anything against China.

And if China could let a hand to Japan against Russia, Japan would jump into Chinas league instantly.

Wishful thinking, the author, if not pipe dreaming.

Again if India want to be a global player, it has to align with China. Now the only effective voice India can put forward is through BRICS. In UN and G 20, India is only a bysider.

your view here is based on China being the Big daddy and other country to follow suit.....

But there is a big daddy called USA...besides China can never compete militarily with Russia so no chance of going against Russia...

Pakistan thinks that they have blessing of super power like USA in the past
since China is now supporting them (only country though) pakistanis feel they ought to be a super power

dream on
 
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India is trying to align chian for the fear of being trampled under dragon's feet.Like the weak accept the slavery of of strong india is weak slave of china hence in turn its an indirect slave of china's friend Pakistan too.

like what USA did to you na we ain't that dumb:cheesy:

nothing good on TV thanks for the entertainment:smitten:
 
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ohh puma.. Keep your china factor with you.i know you are doing your duty well. Keep trolling....... I don't care about puppet like pakistan.... If India is like somalia what about pakistan. A tiny forest full of animals and civilians...
 
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What kind of Bakwass is this? (Bakwass means nonsense for those members who don't know Urdu)

China-India-Japanese strategic alliance?

China has hostile relations with both India and Japan. China has territorial disputes with Japan and India.

How is Pakistan a problem state? War on Terrorism is the most idiotic war ever fought, and the Americans know they are losing the war.

Comparing Pakistan to Nork Korea and Myanmar is ludicrous! Pakistan has a decent foreign policy. Myanmar and North Korea are pariah states.
 
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What kind of Bakwass is this? (Bakwass means nonsense for those members who don't know Urdu)

China-India-Japanese strategic alliance?

China has hostile relations with both India and Japan. China has territorial disputes with Japan and India.

How is Pakistan a problem state? War on Terrorism is the most idiotic war ever fought, and the Americans know they are losing the war.

Comparing Pakistan to Nork Korea and Myanmar is ludicrous! Pakistan has a decent foreign policy. Myanmar and North Korea are pariah states.

In the eyes of Americans, Pakistans are starting to become like NK and Burma. Americans are still wondering why Pakistan was hiding OBL if Pakistan is an American allie.
 
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Even BRICS is all about China only.Take out China out of BRICS the whole thing will fall like sand out of fist.India is not even an effctiive voice in south asia UN,G-20 all is long way.India is to Asia like what somalia is to Africa.

By saying that you`ve just insulted pakistan.
 
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Japan has way more interest in China than India.
Thank you for showing that you don't understand Japan.

And if China could let a hand to Japan against Russia
Meaning China would attack Russia?

Japan would jump into Chinas league instantly.
You clearly don't understand Japanese mentality.

Japanese don't see China as equal to them; Japanese see China the same way China sees Vietnam.

Again if India want to be a global player
India already is a global player. You see how the US and Vietnam come to India to seek a security alliance against China.
 
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Thank you for showing that you don't understand Japan.


Meaning China would attack Russia?


You clearly don't understand Japanese mentality.

Japanese don't see China as equal to them; Japanese see China the same way China sees Vietnam.


India already is a global player. You see how the US and Vietnam come to India to seek a security alliance against China.

How is India a global player? India is only a regional power.

China has a larger economy than Japan. Japanese people are getting older. China has a young population.
Based on these circumstances, who do you think is going to win in the long run?
Japanese can keep thinking the China is inferior to them. If the Japanese keep thinking like that, they are just simply arrogant, ignorant, and embarrassingly stupid.
 
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How is India a global player? India is only a regional power.

China has a larger economy than Japan. Japanese people are getting older. China has a young population.
Based on these circumstances, who do you think is going to win in the long run?
Japanese can keep thinking the China is inferior to them. If the Japanese keep thinking like that, they are just simply arrogant, ignorant, and embarrassingly stupid.

and what you are. just why you people always stand for D?(k measuring contest. we don't need your certificate ok. think about your own country than flaming on India, or GOP appointed you to keep trolling against India.
 
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How is India a global player? India is only a regional power.
India is a global player because Indian participation is asked in international affairs.

China has a larger economy than Japan.
And a 10 times larger population. So individual Chinese make 1/10th of what individual Japanese make.

Japanese people are getting older. China has a young population.
Based on these circumstances, who do you think is going to win in the long run?
Surprisingly, the pictures are similar. China too has a Japan-like problems, in that a small population of young people resulting from on-child policy is asked to support a much larger group of the elderly.

India on the other hand is full of young population, so its growth won't stall for a while. But not China, which stands to hit the growth brick wall even before it reaches a GDP-per-capita of $10,000 due to the burden of small population of young people being asked to support a larger population of the elderly.

If the Japanese keep thinking like that, they are just simply arrogant, ignorant, and embarrassingly stupid.
Let's see who gets the last laugh. Granted Japan is going down, but China's outlooks aren't so rosy. China still is a 3rd world country, with 80% of population still being incredibly poor due to the wealth concentration.
 
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Japan has way more interest in China than India.

Dont count on Japan to gain anything against China.

And if China could let a hand to Japan against Russia, Japan would jump into Chinas league instantly.

Wishful thinking, the author, if not pipe dreaming.

Again if India want to be a global player, it has to align with China. Now the only effective voice India can put forward is through BRICS. In UN and G 20, India is only a bysider.

India is a Bysider and Pakistan is the next great super power is it ? .... grow up pal ...Cheers !!!
 
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