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Break the Sino-Pak connection

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Break the Sino-Pak connection​

The talks between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President Hu Jintao at the sidelines of the BRICS summit in Sanya, in China, has led to yet another step - albeit incremental - to restore some kind of normality to Sino-Indian ties which have been buffeted by controversy in the last three years.

The problem, to be fair, was not the fault of one or the other side. Beijing's calculated go-slow on the dialogue between the Special Representatives was to signal its unhappiness with the growing proximity of India to the US. This was sought to be countered by India through a mediadriven campaign to paint China as an aggressor on the Sino-Indian border. Events in Tibet on the eve of the 2008 Olympics compounded the problem.

The Chinese then escalated matters by stapling visas to Indian passport holders who were residents of Kashmir, signaling a shift in its Kashmir stance. When this, in August 2010, included the then chief of the Army's Northern Command, Lt Gen B. S. Jaswal, India terminated military-to-military exchanges.

Sino-Pak

The Wen Jiabao visit in December and the meeting with Hu have clearly reversed the slide. As is its wont, China won't announce that it has ended the stapled visa regime, but they will revert to the regular visas henceforth. India will send a military delegation to visit China, and will include a representative of the Northern Command. Just when the special representative level talks will press on from the high- point of 2005 is difficult to predict, as is the immediate future of Sino-Indian rapprochement. The reason is that some of the underlying causes for the estrangement remain.

One instance of this is the media- driven effort to derail Sino-Indian relations. Early this month, a TV channel known for its steroid- driven approach to news, came up with what appeared, at first sight, to be a sensational report claiming that Chinese troops were deployed alongside the Pakistanis along the Line of Control in Kashmir. The news package, complete with stock footage of massed tanks, missiles and marching soldiers, was clearly designed to scare. The hidden subtext of the programme was the growing danger to India of a two-front war.

A closer scrutiny revealed that the report was based on a speech made by Lt Gen K. T. Parnaik, the new Northern Army commander, at a media seminar that had taken place in Jammu some nine days previously.

At least two on-the-spot media reports merely have the general talking of Sino-Pak cooperation emerging as a possible future threat to the country. Referring to Chinese road and bridge building activity in Gilgit and Baltistan, the general said that the developments could "jeopardise our geostrategical interests in the long run and pose great military challenges not only along the Sino- Indian border but also along the Line of Control for us." All quite kosher stuff, the kind of things generals are paid to think about, and, note, that the danger was talked of in the future tense.

So alarming has been the effort by some media groups to promote bad blood between India and China that last December, at the end of his three- day visit to India Wen Jiabao complained that despite the fact that not a shot had been fired on the Sino-Indian border for a long time, "the boundary question has been repeatedly sensationalised by the (Indian) media…" China's close military relationship with Pakistan is no secret. Neither is the fact that there are hundreds of Chinese personnel in the region participating in some 30 odd projects in the Azad Kashmir- Northern Areas region of Kashmir. But any talk of the Sino- Pak nexus must also take into account the fact that the Karakoram highway linking the two countries is virtually dysfunctional, with some 24 km of it under a lake formed by last year's floods and landslides. Indeed, many Chinese personnel are involved in rebuilding this road.

Options

We can, of course, make a fundamental objection to the presence of all Chinese personnel in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir based on our claim over the entire state. But India has not formally taken that view. Instead, the criticism has come via what appear to be clearly inspired efforts to heighten Sino- Indian tensions through the media. This is a dangerous game and has, alarmingly, been played once earlier in 1959-1962 when a belligerent Indian media pushed an unprepared Indian Army into a disastrous war with China. Those who see some sinister design in the Chinese presence in Pakistan, or parts of territory claimed by India are missing the wood for the trees. Improving Pakistan's infrastructure or helping maintain it, is the least pernicious nature of the Pakistan-China link.

By providing nuclear weapons and missiles to Pakistan, China has already done far greater harm to Indian security than it can now do in any other way. As the record shows, the Chinese did not merely facilitate Pakistan's nuclear programme, they actually gifted a weapon design to them, and tested that weapon at their own range in 1990. Since then it has provided Islamabad ballistic missiles, and more recently, cruise missiles to carry these weapons.

India can shout this from the rooftops and denounce China with all its might and main. But that is unlikely to get us anywhere. We can, of course, contemplate war to redress our wrongs, but no matter what our chicken hawks may say, that would be an act of lunacy. India could alternatively ally itself to a big power like the US to settle scores with China. The US may pull Pakistan's chestnuts out of the fire, but it is unlikely to oblige India. We could well end up pulling America's chestnuts out of the fire.

Strategy

If you look at the current situation, it would appear that Indian policy feels compelled to move on two ruts called Pakistan and China. Those who advocate unrelenting hostility to Pakistan and China are actually trying to take us deeper into those ruts.

Any Indian grand strategy must have as its principal aim the need to weaken the links between our two inimical neighbours.

How you do it is not the issue. Because if you can't you will lose the game. This strategy has to yield a policy that makes better ties - rather than hostility with New Delhi - the preferred option in Beijing and Islamabad.

India has managed to establish a mutually beneficial economic relationship with China. It now needs to shape the ties in such a way that Beijing is made conscious of the cost of alienating New Delhi.

Pakistan is a more complex problem. For the present, the Pakistani deep state comprising the Army and hard-line religious fundamentalists have the upper hand. Broadly, Manmohan Singh's policy of persisting with what seems to be a Sisyphean effort to normalise ties with Pakistan is a better option than adopting a hostile posture towards it. Carefullyplanned and executed engagement, at least points to a way out instead of remaining mired at a dead end.

The irony is that those who are warning about the dangers of a two- front war are doing everything to make that a reality. Instead, they ought to be educating us about a viable strategy of delinking the China-Pakistan connection - our key strategic headache - one that will define our geostrategic footprint in our region and Asia.

India may be right to demonise China and denounce the sinister nature of the Sino-Pakistan relationship, but unrelentingly hostile rhetoric cannot substitute for a viable strategy that will ensure a peaceful neighbourhood, in which India can race against time to use its demographic dividend to eliminate poverty, and become a developed country.
Manoj Joshi | April 15, 2011 | Updated 08:22 IST

Break the Sino-Pak connection : Manoj Joshi: India Today
 
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While the writer points out the need to establish better relationships which is good, it is shortsighted and myopic to say that India should work in direction of breaking Sino Pakistan ties. IT is like acting for short term objectives rather than longterm goals. It will never be successful.
 
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Both Pakistan and China need each other. China is doing an excellent job in looking after its own national and strategic interests. No one will listen to indians bark. Everyone in Pakistan is PRO-CHINA even Islamist political parties, such as Jamat-e-Islami, are PRO-CHINA.

THE PAKISTAN-CHINA CONNECTION CAN NEVER BE BROKEN.

:pakistan: :china:
 
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the writer is giving his views only. So far it seems that india likes making friends and doesn't like having close friends.
 
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Manoj Joshi himself failed to mention how's that possible to break ties between China and Pakistan.. but this is the nature of our beloved neighbor and this shows how low at mentality they are.. After-all Pakistan never thought to break the Indo-US ties... What this article demonstrated is called "Nech Mentality"
 
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Exactly. :cheers:

Keeping up the Sino-Pakistani alliance is in our "permanent interests".

Unless the entire geography of the world changes. Which could never happen.

There is nothing called permanent interests. The day China feels cost of Pakistani friendship outweigh its benefits, this lovey-dovey relationship will end.
 
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There is nothing called permanent interests. The day China feels cost of Pakistani friendship outweigh its benefits, this lovey-dovey relationship will end.

Don't you know one of the most important quotes in geopolitics?

"Nations have no permanent friends and no permanent enemies. Only permanent interests."

Like I said, China will always need Pakistan for Gwadar port, for a land-link to the Middle East for pipelines, and as a gateway to the Islamic world. Permanent interests.

The geography is not going to change. Unless the whole of Southeast Asia vanishes from the map, we will still need Gwadar port to bypass the Malacca straits.
 
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The writer makes valid observations.

China, like any country, will look out for it's own interests. The calculation so far has been that those interests are better served by Pakistan than by India. India will do everything to convince China to reverse that assessment. Pakistan, for it's part, must not become complacent. The world is always changing and, whatever geopolitical calculations were true last decade, may not add up the same in the next decade. It's not just about China, Pakistan and India. There's Afghanistan, Iran, Bangladesh, etc. and their relationship with the first three countries. It's all interconnected.

At the very least, Pakistan needs to become a strong self-sufficient power that can decide its foreign policy without being beholden to benefactors. To put it bluntly, Pakistan needs to become a country that can help China diplomatically and otherwise, rather than one that depends on China.
 
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Not happy with the article they both need each other if he made such an article then he should also write the ways to do it untill then it is his WET DREAMS not possible
 
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Like I said, China will always need Pakistan for Gwadar port, for a land-link to the Middle East for pipelines, and as a gateway to the Islamic world. Permanent interests.

The geography is not going to change. Unless the whole of Southeast Asia vanishes from the map, we will still need Gwadar port to bypass the Malacca straits.

Fact of the matter is that currently Gwadar port is failing, while a land link to the middle east through Pakistan is too dangerous to be viable. Friendship with Pakistan might be great to potray friendliness towards rest of the Islamic countries, but I wonder how long can that be enough.
 
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Fact of the matter is that currently Gwadar port is failing, while a land link to the middle east through Pakistan is too dangerous to be viable. Friendship with Pakistan might be great to potray friendliness towards rest of the Islamic countries, but I wonder how long can that be enough.

LOL, how is Gwadar port "failing"?

Sure, it is not living up to expectations currently, but that is beside the point.

If we can one day use it as an "alternate route", for shipping and oil supplies, it will already have fulfilled its purpose for us.
 
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LOL, how is Gwadar port "failing"?

Sure, it is not living up to expectations currently, but that is beside the point.

If we can one day use it as an "alternate route", for shipping and oil supplies, it will already have fulfilled its purpose for us.

Lol, let me rephrase that: Gwadar port is not giving the desired returns.

My point was - For how long will China be ready to invest in friendship with Pakistan, hoping for returns, given that Pakistan continues to have such heavy baggage?
 
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As long as China-India dispute remains, there is no possible way for india to break Chinese ties with Pakistan, further the strategic location of Pakistan is in the interest of China not in a 1000 yrs would China wants to dislocate their relations...Lastly the region of Gawadar is a Gold mine what lies beneath is yet to be explored, The only nation to provide extensive help is China and the Energy sharing would largely help Chinese energy needs.

No Pakistan will only become strong self sufficient one it pays off its last dollar of the debt, how is it going to happen?

My point was - For how long will China be ready to invest in friendship with Pakistan, hoping for returns, given that Pakistan continues to have such heavy baggage?

For as long as China wants...Know that China has also multiple billions of dollars of projects in progress they've to spend there as well. If China wanted they would have invested even more in Gawadar but at this time due to turbulent regional situation as well as wrong Govt sitting in Pakistan, China is not going to risk it so soon..Surely they'll one day do that..
 
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