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India just sent a message to China : Narendra Modi invites Mongolia's new president Khaltmaa Battulg

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Narendra Modi invites Mongolia's new president Khaltmaa Battulga: India just sent a message to China

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has invited Mongolia's new president Khaltmaa Battulga to visit India, a diplomatic move that may have significant effect on international relations in South Asia.

After all, when you invite a person who fought and won the Mongolian presidential election on a populist, anti-China platform, and that too at a time when a heated standoff between New Delhi and Beijing continues along the border in the Sikkim sector, heads are bound to turn.

Modi_Battluga_Reuters.jpg

Prime Minister Narendra Modi (left) and Mongolian president Khaltmaa Battulga. Reuters

Modi, himself, had visited Ulaanbaatar — the capital of Mongolia — in 2015. India had, at that time, extended a line of credit of $1 billion to Mongolia. After Modi's invitation, the then President Pranab Mukherjee also sent a message to Battulga, saying both India and Mongolia believed in democracy, according to The Economic Times.

This India-Mongolia bonhomie has now found hope for even better ties with Battluga's victory.

To understand Battluga's anti-China views, which in fact helped him win the presidential election, it is important to note that China purchases 80 percent of Mongolian exports, according to AFP.

Mongolia's economy grew by a measly one percent last year, a stark contrast from an impressive 17 percent in 2011. It has been hit hard by a more than 50 percent fall in the price of copper, its main export, over the past five years, while slowing growth in its biggest customer China has hobbled the economy.

Given the slow growth, anti-China sentiment has been growing in Mongolia and people want to reduce the country's dependence on China, something which was advocated by Battluga, said the report in The Economic Times.

In fact, Battluga will inherit a $5.5 billion International Monetary Fund-led bailout designed to stabilise its economy and lessen its dependency on China. An incident which also worsened the ties between China and Mongolia was when the Buddhist-majority Mongolia had invited Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama to visit the country in November 2016.

An angry China had reportedly closed an important border with Mongolia after Dalai Lama's visit, resulting in many Mongolian truck drivers, who were left stranded at the border, according to News18. Eventually, Mongolia gave in to pressure from China and promised never to invite the Dalai Lama again.

China views the Dalai Lama as a separatist seeking to split Tibet from China and strongly opposes all countries from hosting the monk, who has been based in India since fleeing Tibet during an abortive uprising against Chinese rule in 1959.

Now that Battluga has come to power in Mongolia, India has sensed an opportunity.

Perhaps J Mohan Malik, professor at the Asia-Pacific Centre for Security Studies in Honolulu, described it best when he told The Times of India: "President Battulga’s victory provides an opportunity for strengthening bilateral ties which are now part of the broader spectrum of the Sino-Indian geopolitical rivalry for the support of small and middle powers."

http://www.firstpost.com/india/nare...dia-just-sent-a-message-to-china-3857241.html


 
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Narendra Modi invites Mongolia's new president Khaltmaa Battulga: India just sent a message to China

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has invited Mongolia's new president Khaltmaa Battulga to visit India, a diplomatic move that may have significant effect on international relations in South Asia.

After all, when you invite a person who fought and won the Mongolian presidential election on a populist, anti-China platform, and that too at a time when a heated standoff between New Delhi and Beijing continues along the border in the Sikkim sector, heads are bound to turn.

Modi_Battluga_Reuters.jpg

Prime Minister Narendra Modi (left) and Mongolian president Khaltmaa Battulga. Reuters

Modi, himself, had visited Ulaanbaatar — the capital of Mongolia — in 2015. India had, at that time, extended a line of credit of $1 billion to Mongolia. After Modi's invitation, the then President Pranab Mukherjee also sent a message to Battulga, saying both India and Mongolia believed in democracy, according to The Economic Times.

This India-Mongolia bonhomie has now found hope for even better ties with Battluga's victory.

To understand Battluga's anti-China views, which in fact helped him win the presidential election, it is important to note that China purchases 80 percent of Mongolian exports, according to AFP.

Mongolia's economy grew by a measly one percent last year, a stark contrast from an impressive 17 percent in 2011. It has been hit hard by a more than 50 percent fall in the price of copper, its main export, over the past five years, while slowing growth in its biggest customer China has hobbled the economy.

Given the slow growth, anti-China sentiment has been growing in Mongolia and people want to reduce the country's dependence on China, something which was advocated by Battluga, said the report in The Economic Times.

In fact, Battluga will inherit a $5.5 billion International Monetary Fund-led bailout designed to stabilise its economy and lessen its dependency on China. An incident which also worsened the ties between China and Mongolia was when the Buddhist-majority Mongolia had invited Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama to visit the country in November 2016.

An angry China had reportedly closed an important border with Mongolia after Dalai Lama's visit, resulting in many Mongolian truck drivers, who were left stranded at the border, according to News18. Eventually, Mongolia gave in to pressure from China and promised never to invite the Dalai Lama again.

China views the Dalai Lama as a separatist seeking to split Tibet from China and strongly opposes all countries from hosting the monk, who has been based in India since fleeing Tibet during an abortive uprising against Chinese rule in 1959.

Now that Battluga has come to power in Mongolia, India has sensed an opportunity.

Perhaps J Mohan Malik, professor at the Asia-Pacific Centre for Security Studies in Honolulu, described it best when he told The Times of India: "President Battulga’s victory provides an opportunity for strengthening bilateral ties which are now part of the broader spectrum of the Sino-Indian geopolitical rivalry for the support of small and middle powers."

http://www.firstpost.com/india/nare...dia-just-sent-a-message-to-china-3857241.html


Changiz is back and is not teaming up with Asoka reincarnated.
 
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I thought Indian soldiers fire at Chinese to draw the 1st blood as to send the strong message to China, turn out India invite the president of Mongolia for a visit.
 
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Mongolia is China's Nepal. So India would like to take advantage of it on same terms.
 
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Mongolia is China's Nepal. So India would like to take advantage of it on same terms.
China had direct land border with Nepal, India and Mongolia have no border connection, in time of need Mongolia will be in rude awaken to rely on India aid when China play hard ball toward Mongolia economic lifeline.
 
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I think such moves will only deteriorate peace b/w the two giants. I understand the urge to prove yourself in Asia however, proxy wars will intensify, the interference will increase.
I hope the policy makers have considered the fallout of such moves.
 
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I think such moves will only deteriorate peace b/w the two giants. I understand the urge to prove yourself in Asia however, proxy wars will intensify, the interference will increase.
I hope the policy makers have considered the fallout of such moves.
You believe India can used
Mongolia to start a proxy war against China, Mongolian will serve as cannon fodders for India?
 
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http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...-reduce-doklam-chill/articleshow/59747691.cms

Amid Doklam row, PM Modi sends birthday wishes to Xi Jinping, Li Keqiang

:no:

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/...-standoff-paris-climate-change/1/1011294.html

China today praised Prime Minister Narendra Modi's leadership and India's "open foreign economic policy", in an unexpected break from the recently relentless and shrill rhetoric over the standoff in Doklam.

"India has been actively attracting foreign investment, has created a favourable investment climate and has been the largest destination for foreign direct investment in the world for the past two years," said a commentary issued by the official Xinhua news agency, which added that "strengthening of trade cooperation" between India and China and their "advocacy of open trade policy" would "definitely contribute to promoting open global trade and containing protectionism."

:agree:
 
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You believe India can used
Mongolia to start a proxy war against China, Mongolian will serve as cannon fodders for India?
No not Mangolia, I am saying such moves by India will push China to help insurgencies in Inside India and India will retaliate using their proxies. Overall, internecine moves.
 
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This is not a message, merely reporters seeing a dragon in their chicken biryani.
India has and will continue to have good relations with Mongolia. Here is Modi in Mongolia just a few months back. His visit videos are blocked by PDF and PEMRA so just the link


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China had direct land border with Nepal, India and Mongolia have no border connection, in time of need Mongolia will be in rude awaken to rely on India aid when China play hard ball toward Mongolia economic lifeline.

The direct Land border is in name only as there are only one or two passes through Himalayas which are closed during winters. Roads are rudimentary. Nepal would require infrastructure spending of multiple times their GDP to make access through Himalayas so that it can trade with China to a level that it is not dependent on India significantly. Similar is the case with Mongolia, it can trade with Russia in th north, where the terrain is more friendlier than that for Nepal, but still the major trade is with China. For the same reasons Nepal and India are bound together and Nepal too would be for similar "rude awakening" if they rely on Chinese aid. So all in all, both countries will try to wiggle to change the status quo but will get beaten back to their places. Thats the fate of small countries to endure.
 
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