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India is fast losing out to China's muscle

beijingwalker

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India is fast losing out to China's muscle
Apr 27 2018 at 11:45 PM
The leaders of China and India will meet in the city of Wuhan on the banks of the River Yangtze this weekend for an unusual summit. India's prime minister and China's president won't have aides in the room; there will be no written notes and no joint statement afterward. There will be, we are told, no agenda.

In fact, there is an agenda – a sobering one for anyone counting on India to serve as a "counterweight" to China. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's main goal for the summit is to get China to stop kicking sand in India's face. The last thing he can afford as his country approaches general elections next year is another confrontation similar to the India-China face-off in the Himalayas last year. Any such dust-up would likely end in politically disastrous humiliation for India.

The tough words that accompanied last year's standoff are no longer heard in the halls of power in New Delhi. Indian officials have muted criticism of China's Belt and Road initiative, although they still refuse to sign on to the plan.

They've essentially entered the shadow trade war between the US and China on China's side, offering to export more soybeans to keep up supply if the Chinese government does impose tariffs on US agricultural products. China has shown few signs of reciprocating these concessions.

Most embarrassingly for those of us who like to trumpet democratic India's commitment to liberal values, the government's top bureaucrat wrote to his peers in February warning them it was a "sensitive time" for bilateral relations and "advising" them to stay away from any function commemorating the 60th anniversary of the Dalai Lama's arrival in India as a refugee from Chinese persecution. The decision was made just as India's foreign secretary travelled to Beijing to lay the groundwork for this week's summit.


Some might welcome India's new posture as plain realism. The asymmetry of power and influence between the two Asian giants has rarely been so stark, especially in India's backyard.

Earlier this year, the Maldives – once closely tied to India – theatrically shifted allegiance to China and to an authoritarian political model that isolated the country's India-friendly democrats. India found it had few political levers in Male and even fewer economic incentives to offer. Most mortifyingly for a country accustomed to thinking of the Indian Ocean as its private lake, at the height of the crisis China sent a naval task force into the region for the first time in four years.

Major dilemma
Indian policymakers are now faced with a dilemma. On the one hand, they have few resources with which to challenge China. But, if they step back, they are surrendering to a familiar Chinese strategy: a multi-layered effort to force other regional powers to abandon their spheres of influence.
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India's neighbours have long been targets for China's affections. As Aparna Pande of the Hudson Institute points out, for decades 60 per cent of China's arms exports have gone to Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar.

For India's partners across the world, the Modi government's pursuit of a "reset" with China should be a warning that the South Asian giant isn't anywhere near ready to counter China's rise. Indian policymakers must pragmatically evaluate the benefits and costs of placating China. Have similar efforts in the past by Japan or the US paid off? If not, is there another option?

Many would argue there is. India has long cherished what it calls its "strategic autonomy," seeking to maintain a Jeffersonian distance from "entangling alliances". Yet that lofty disregard of global rivalries is unaffordable when an aspiring hegemon can so easily pick off your neighbours one by one.

Rather than seeking to appease China, India's interests would be better served seeking to repair and strengthen its relationships – economic and political – with democracies in Asia and beyond that share its interests and values. As the US quickly discovered when establishing its own network of post-World War Two alliances, power depends on having the right friends.

http://www.afr.com/opinion/columnists/india-is-fast-losing-out-to-chinas-muscle-20180427-h0zbw5
 
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What's interesting is very few know India's moves to counter Chinese influence.
 
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It's just the Australian media doing its best to underplay Indian overturns to China. :lol:

And for the record,

IF another Doclam was to happen , MODI would WIN the election, not lose it :cheesy: The average Indian will vote for a Modi who stand up to China, the same way the average Indian voted for a Modi who stood up the the US and Europe when they refused him a Visa.

I welcome better relationship with China (though I doubt that would happen). Though in the end, the very best friend India ever has would be India. Not anyone else.
 
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Today is not the day to fight china... India should focus on growing its economy and build up its manufacturing ability and defence industry.
 
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Our best friends are those we make money from, say, the most part of the world. What else do you care more than that.

LOL... a LOT of things. Freedom, Self respect, Dignity, Integrity, Values and culture.

A whole lot of things the average chinese know very little about.

To claim money is the only thing that matter shows how shallow the chinese thinking is. Indian value money too, but we value quite a few things more than money.
 
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LOL... a LOT of things. Freedom, Self respect, Dignity, Integrity, Values and culture.

A whole lot of things the average chinese know very little about.

To claim money is the only thing that matter shows how shallow the chinese thinking is. Indian value money too, but we value quite a few things more than money.
OK, tell that to your customers if you run a business. They can praise you to the heavens but if they refuse to buy any of your products then you will be soon out of business and I don't know how much you love them then.

LOL... a LOT of things. Freedom, Self respect, Dignity, Integrity, Values and culture.

A whole lot of things the average chinese know very little about.

To claim money is the only thing that matter shows how shallow the chinese thinking is. Indian value money too, but we value quite a few things more than money.
And IF India has all those merits you mentioned above, how many countries really love India?
 
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OK, tell that to your customers if you run a business. They can praise you to the heavens but if they refuse to buy any of your products then you will be soon out of business and I don't know how much you love them then.

There is more to life than just running a business. We run a business to sustain life, we do not have life to run a business.

You have your priorities mixed up. The purpose of life is much much grander than to accumulate wealth.

BTW I am not friends with my grocer or my service provider. I am friend with people who share my same values.

And IF India has all those merits you mentioned above, how many countries really love India?

There is no way to measure "love", nor is it required to be measured. It's more important that we love ourself, than measure how much others love us.

What you should have been asking is how much does the chinese love themselves and their society.

How many good samaritans do you have in your society ? I think you already know the answer to that question.
 
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How many good samaritans do you have in your society ? I think you already know the answer to that question.
I guess more than India does, and China offers more aid and help around the world than India, Our hospital ships "Peace Ark" sailing around the globe all year around to offer free treatment for the world's poor.
 
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I guess more than India does, and China offers more aid and help around the world than India, Our hospital ships "Peace Ark" sailing around the globe all year around to offer free treatment for the world's poor.

LOL...I don't mean your "state sponsored" good samaritans :cheesy:

I mean the local good samaritans who rush to help other people selflessly WITHIN china.
 
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LOL...I don't mean your "state sponsored" good samaritans :cheesy:

I mean the local good samaritans who rush to help other people selflessly WITHIN china.
Check youtube and find them yourself, there are so many there.
 
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Says someone who doesn't have a best friend.

We don't need "best friends", WE are a emotionally stable nation. We love ourselves enough to work maturely with all nations in the world.

Check youtube and find them yourself, there are so many there.

I did not mention this to diss china. I am just responding to your post.

I bet I can find more videos about callous chinese behaviour than any genuine good samaritans in china. And you know this.
 
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