What's new

China’s “All-Weather” Threat to India

Status
Not open for further replies.

A1Kaid

PDF THINK TANK: ANALYST
Joined
Oct 20, 2008
Messages
9,666
Reaction score
8
Country
Pakistan
Location
United States
China’s “All-Weather” Threat to India


By Robert Farley
August 8, 2013




A recent Toby Dalton op-ed discussed the role that China may have played (and may continue to play) in Pakistan’s nuclear program. Dalton argued that, apart from the specifics of the dispute, relations between Pakistan and China need to be understood in context of growing strategic tension between China and India.

This is nothing new. China and Pakistan have seen each other as (semi-) reliable allies since the 1950s, when tensions between China and India grew over Tibet and other issues. With the increasing strategic complexity associated with growing Chinese and Indian military power, however, the relationship takes on multiple new dimensions. The Pakistan-China-India triangle (with, as Dalton notes, one antagonistic, one competitive, and one cooperative leg) is embedded within a larger set of triangular relationships, including Japan, Russia, and the United States.

Pakistan is, in an important sense, Beijing’s answer to every step India takes to expand its influence in the South China Sea. To the extent that India evinces a willingness to either support the aspirations of China’s smaller neighbors (such as Vietnam) or ally with China’s more serious antagonists (such as Japan and the United States), China can respond by increasing the size and sophistication of its arms shipments to Pakistan, as well as supporting Pakistan in various international fora.

And in the end, India has no good answer for China’s support of Pakistan; it cannot blockade Pakistan, cannot peel it away from Beijing, cannot plausibly change the regime, and cannot likely find an ally as willing and capable of irritating China as Pakistan is of India. As Anatol Lieven has argued, while the current Pakistani regime has great difficult exerting control over its own territory, it sits upon a network of social relations sufficiently robust as to not seriously fear being overthrown.

...


But as other strategic triangles have shown, the balance between the cooperative and competitive legs of strategic trianges can change on short notice. Ironically, US rapprochement with China in the early 1970s may have made both less capable of aiding Pakistan, as it embedded the Indo-Pakistan relationship within the larger Cold War struggle between the US and the Soviet Union. And as India continues to build “cooperative” legs with partners such as Russia, the United States, and Japan, the utility of the triangle may become steadily more tenuous for Beijing.

Excerpt: China

Interesting article by Robert Farley, I agree with him India cannot and will not find any ally country--which is a neighbor of China that will harass and skirmish with China as much as Pakistan does with India, no regional country can contain China. Jointly Pakistan and China have been thus far successful in containing India, with the String of Pearl strategy and corroborating with Sri Lanka and Bangladesh two soft-belly regions for India. Just a few mere intrusions by China have sent India into panic and caused them to "recruit" 100,000 additional military personnel to man defensive positions along the Sino-Indian border, adding to India's military expenditure without firing a single bullet.
 
@Aeronaut

Please merge all the threads. Thanks.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom