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India watches anxiously as Chinese influence grows

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A $46bn economic corridor through disputed territories in Kashmir is causing most concern

Talk of a new Silk Road may be intended to evoke romantic, non-threatening images of desert caravans, ancient ships and trade in exotic commodities. But China’s grand plan for a network of railways, highways, pipelines and ports across central Asia, and around Southeast Asia is generating anxiety in New Delhi.

With the 3,488km border between the two Asian neighbours still a matter of formal dispute, Indian strategic policy analysts are divided on whether China’s new Silk Road project is a strategic and economic threat to their country — or an opportunity. Many see the project — which the Chinese have called One Belt, One Road (OBOR)as something that must be carefully navigated, as Beijing develops large projects in countries that India considers part of its natural sphere of influence. However, New Delhi lacks the financial power to offer a credible alternative.

“The Indian government is very careful about the way it handles the China rhetoric, and it isn’t ready to come out arms swinging against OBOR, but it is sitting with its arms folded making it very clear that it will not endorse the project if it doesn’t like the way it was put together as a Chinese fait accompli,” says Shashank Joshi, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a British defence and security think-tank.

“They cannot be seen to be outwardly hostile to a scheme which many smaller Asian neighbours view as a good opportunity for large flows of Chinese capital that India cannot deliver,” he says.

Brahma Chellaney, professor of strategic studies at New Delhi’s Centre for Policy Research, sees China’s new Silk Road initiative as a repackaging — in more palatable terms — of China’s so-called “string of pearls” strategy, which India views as an attempt to strategically encircle it.

The “string of pearls” theory argues that Chinese investment in ports in south Asia is a precursor to developing overseas naval bases. China has, for example, already built a major port at Hambantota in Sri Lanka, which overlooks important shipping lanes that carry much of the world’s oil trade, and which India views as strategically important for its own defence.

The visit of Chinese submarines at the Colombo port in 2014 raised fears that the facility’s purpose is not economic but military. Chinese investment is also planned for ports in Bangladesh and Myanmar, raising concerns that they may serve a dual purpose.

“The new Silk Road is just a nice new name for the strategy they’ve been pursuing,” says Mr Chellaney. “They’ve wrapped that strategy in more benign terms. The Chinese dream is pre-eminence in Asia, and this goes to the heart of that dream.”

“It’s not just a trade initiative,” he says. “What China is doing has a strategic element that is increasingly obvious.”

India is most exercised about plans for a $46bn economic corridor linking China and Pakistan, India’s nuclear-armed neighbour and rival. That blueprint envisions goods travelling from China’s western region to Pakistan’s Gwadar, a once sleepy Arabian Sea port now run by the China Overseas Port Holding Company. It is considered a staging point between central Asia and the Gulf.

Part of the corridor will pass through Pakistan-held Kashmir, a territory that is still the subject of a decades-old, unresolved dispute between India and Pakistan. Indian analysts say that acceptance of the corridor would effectively acknowledge Pakistan’s rights over the territory now under its control, while India’s own claims over Kashmir have yet to be resolved — something New Delhi considers unacceptable. “This is a large scale project bringing People’s Liberation Army personnel [said to be guarding some project locations] right into the heart of what India considers to be occupied territory,” Mr Joshi says.

At a recent conference in Gwadar, Pakistan’s Army Chief, General Raheel Sharif, accused India of deliberately attempting to undermine the project. “India, our neighbour, has openly challenged this development initiative,” he said. “We will not allow anyone to create impediments or turbulence in any parts of Pakistan.”

But wary as India may be of Chinese ambitions, analysts say New Delhi needs to take a measured approach to the new Silk Road, and embrace individual components.

India is already a member of the Chinese-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, which will finance much of the infrastructure, potentially giving it some leverage over how the plan unfolds.

“For every belt they create, and every road that we create, can we create a slip road that connects Indian opportunities to the larger global market rather than reject it outright?” asks Samir Saran, of the Observer Research Foundation. “Can we … use their institutions to our own advantage?”

-------------------------

What ever China is doing it's matter of concern of India :rofl:
 
India must counter China's masterplan to dominate Asia. India is the only country that has the power to stand up to the Chinese. India has the money, the brains, and the leadership needed to lead Asia and the world.

I have no doubt that under Modi-ji's brilliant leadership, all of Asia will be united behind India. India will become a superpower by 2020!



http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e9baebee-0bd8-11e6-9456-444ab5211a2f.html#axzz48Co9Af00

India watches anxiously as Chinese influence grows

Talk of a new Silk Road may be intended to evoke romantic, non-threatening images of desert caravans, ancient ships and trade in exotic commodities. But China’s grand plan for a network of railways, highways, pipelines and ports across central Asia, and around Southeast Asia is generating anxiety in New Delhi.

With the 3,488km border between the two Asian neighbours still a matter of formal dispute, Indian strategic policy analysts are divided on whether China’s new Silk Road project is a strategic and economic threat to their country — or an opportunity. Many see the project — which the Chinese have called One Belt, One Road (OBOR) — as something that must be carefully navigated, as Beijing develops large projects in countries that India considers part of its natural sphere of influence. However, New Delhi lacks the financial power to offer a credible alternative.

“The Indian government is very careful about the way it handles the China rhetoric, and it isn’t ready to come out arms swinging against OBOR, but it is sitting with its arms folded making it very clear that it will not endorse the project if it doesn’t like the way it was put together as a Chinese fait accompli,” says Shashank Joshi, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a British defence and security think-tank.

“They cannot be seen to be outwardly hostile to a scheme which many smaller Asian neighbours view as a good opportunity for large flows of Chinese capital that India cannot deliver,” he says.

Brahma Chellaney, professor of strategic studies at New Delhi’s Centre for Policy Research, sees China’s new Silk Road initiative as a repackaging — in more palatable terms — of China’s so-called “string of pearls” strategy, which India views as an attempt to strategically encircle it.

The “string of pearls” theory argues that Chinese investment in ports in south Asia is a precursor to developing overseas naval bases. China has, for example, already built a major port at Hambantota in Sri Lanka, which overlooks important shipping lanes that carry much of the world’s oil trade, and which India views as strategically important for its own defence.

The visit of Chinese submarines at the Colombo port in 2014 raised fears that the facility’s purpose is not economic but military. Chinese investment is also planned for ports in Bangladesh and Myanmar, raising concerns that they may serve a dual purpose.

“The new Silk Road is just a nice new name for the strategy they’ve been pursuing,” says Mr Chellaney. “They’ve wrapped that strategy in more benign terms. The Chinese dream is pre-eminence in Asia, and this goes to the heart of that dream.”

“It’s not just a trade initiative,” he says. “What China is doing has a strategic element that is increasingly obvious.”

India is most exercised about plans for a $46bn economic corridor linking China and Pakistan, India’s nuclear-armed neighbour and rival. That blueprint envisions goods travelling from China’s western region to Pakistan’s Gwadar, a once sleepy Arabian Sea port now run by the China Overseas Port Holding Company. It is considered a staging point between central Asia and the Gulf.

Part of the corridor will pass through Pakistan-held Kashmir, a territory that is still the subject of a decades-old, unresolved dispute between India and Pakistan. Indian analysts say that acceptance of the corridor would effectively acknowledge Pakistan’s rights over the territory now under its control, while India’s own claims over Kashmir have yet to be resolved — something New Delhi considers unacceptable. “This is a large scale project bringing People’s Liberation Army personnel [said to be guarding some project locations] right into the heart of what India considers to be occupied territory,” Mr Joshi says.

At a recent conference in Gwadar, Pakistan’s Army Chief, General Raheel Sharif, accused India of deliberately attempting to undermine the project. “India, our neighbour, has openly challenged this development initiative,” he said. “We will not allow anyone to create impediments or turbulence in any parts of Pakistan.”

But wary as India may be of Chinese ambitions, analysts say New Delhi needs to take a measured approach to the new Silk Road, and embrace individual components.

India is already a member of the Chinese-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, which will finance much of the infrastructure, potentially giving it some leverage over how the plan unfolds.

“For every belt they create, and every road that we create, can we create a slip road that connects Indian opportunities to the larger global market rather than reject it outright?” asks Samir Saran, of the Observer Research Foundation. “Can we . . . use their institutions to our own advantage?”
 
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Nah India Can Become Hypa Powa by 2020 under Leadership of Brilliant mastermind Modi G :rofl::rofl::rofl:

Look at Super Weapons of Hypa Powa India Man
6+++++ Gen Tejas o_O
5+++ Gen LCH :p:
4+++ Gen Arjun Tank :woot:

:toast_sign::toast_sign::toast_sign::toast_sign:


You are very true!

Under Modi-ji's brilliant leadership, India will become a uber-super-Vedic-power by 2020!

India will re-discover all Vedic technologies such as teleportation, interstellar space travel, anti-gravity machines, plastic surgery, genetic engineering, and fusion power. These Vedic technologies will enable India to leapfrog all nations to become a cosmic superpower by 2020!
 
these last lines in red r a message to india. Give up on Kashmir and become part of the greater development in the region. Or else stay isolated in yr geographical nightmare, and only dream about becoming a super power one day.
 
these last lines in red r a message to india. Give up on Kashmir and become part of the greater development in the region. Or else stay isolated in yr geographical nightmare, and only dream about becoming a super power one day.

Isolated ?

Almost of the world is willing (and is doing )to do busines of india, does that make the definition of isolated.
It doesn't matter if we do any business with pakistan or not, we take it as pakistan dont exist, and move on with the rest of the world. Doesn't really matter if its just minus one country from the rest of the world.
 
Isolated ?

Almost of the world is willing (and is doing )to do busines of india, does that make the definition of isolated.
It doesn't matter if we do any business with pakistan or not, we take it as pakistan dont exist, and move on with the rest of the world. Doesn't really matter if its just minus one country from the rest of the world.

Let them be.
They are basically jealous of the recent attention India is getting.
They just cannot swallow the fact that India is actually moving forward.
 
A $46bn economic corridor through disputed territories in Kashmir is causing most concern

Talk of a new Silk Road may be intended to evoke romantic, non-threatening images of desert caravans, ancient ships and trade in exotic commodities. But China’s grand plan for a network of railways, highways, pipelines and ports across central Asia, and around Southeast Asia is generating anxiety in New Delhi.

With the 3,488km border between the two Asian neighbours still a matter of formal dispute, Indian strategic policy analysts are divided on whether China’s new Silk Road project is a strategic and economic threat to their country — or an opportunity. Many see the project — which the Chinese have called One Belt, One Road (OBOR)as something that must be carefully navigated, as Beijing develops large projects in countries that India considers part of its natural sphere of influence. However, New Delhi lacks the financial power to offer a credible alternative.

“The Indian government is very careful about the way it handles the China rhetoric, and it isn’t ready to come out arms swinging against OBOR, but it is sitting with its arms folded making it very clear that it will not endorse the project if it doesn’t like the way it was put together as a Chinese fait accompli,” says Shashank Joshi, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a British defence and security think-tank.

“They cannot be seen to be outwardly hostile to a scheme which many smaller Asian neighbours view as a good opportunity for large flows of Chinese capital that India cannot deliver,” he says.

Brahma Chellaney, professor of strategic studies at New Delhi’s Centre for Policy Research, sees China’s new Silk Road initiative as a repackaging — in more palatable terms — of China’s so-called “string of pearls” strategy, which India views as an attempt to strategically encircle it.

The “string of pearls” theory argues that Chinese investment in ports in south Asia is a precursor to developing overseas naval bases. China has, for example, already built a major port at Hambantota in Sri Lanka, which overlooks important shipping lanes that carry much of the world’s oil trade, and which India views as strategically important for its own defence.

The visit of Chinese submarines at the Colombo port in 2014 raised fears that the facility’s purpose is not economic but military. Chinese investment is also planned for ports in Bangladesh and Myanmar, raising concerns that they may serve a dual purpose.

“The new Silk Road is just a nice new name for the strategy they’ve been pursuing,” says Mr Chellaney. “They’ve wrapped that strategy in more benign terms. The Chinese dream is pre-eminence in Asia, and this goes to the heart of that dream.”

“It’s not just a trade initiative,” he says. “What China is doing has a strategic element that is increasingly obvious.”

India is most exercised about plans for a $46bn economic corridor linking China and Pakistan, India’s nuclear-armed neighbour and rival. That blueprint envisions goods travelling from China’s western region to Pakistan’s Gwadar, a once sleepy Arabian Sea port now run by the China Overseas Port Holding Company. It is considered a staging point between central Asia and the Gulf.

Part of the corridor will pass through Pakistan-held Kashmir, a territory that is still the subject of a decades-old, unresolved dispute between India and Pakistan. Indian analysts say that acceptance of the corridor would effectively acknowledge Pakistan’s rights over the territory now under its control, while India’s own claims over Kashmir have yet to be resolved — something New Delhi considers unacceptable. “This is a large scale project bringing People’s Liberation Army personnel [said to be guarding some project locations] right into the heart of what India considers to be occupied territory,” Mr Joshi says.

At a recent conference in Gwadar, Pakistan’s Army Chief, General Raheel Sharif, accused India of deliberately attempting to undermine the project. “India, our neighbour, has openly challenged this development initiative,” he said. “We will not allow anyone to create impediments or turbulence in any parts of Pakistan.”

But wary as India may be of Chinese ambitions, analysts say New Delhi needs to take a measured approach to the new Silk Road, and embrace individual components.

India is already a member of the Chinese-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, which will finance much of the infrastructure, potentially giving it some leverage over how the plan unfolds.

“For every belt they create, and every road that we create, can we create a slip road that connects Indian opportunities to the larger global market rather than reject it outright?” asks Samir Saran, of the Observer Research Foundation. “Can we … use their institutions to our own advantage?”

-------------------------

What ever China is doing it's matter of concern of India :rofl:

P0k is a disputed land. And Chinese interefere in there .so we will take actions

Well China can do whatever they want and we will continue our developments for our own national interests .
Perhaps it may undermine Chinese interests in other sectors .
After all we are the world fastest growing economy.
 
How shocking...China enhancing its influence over Pakistan. Who would have guessed that, a completely new concept.

Btw.. what happened to the string of pearls?
 
BEIJING: Sharp depreciation of yuan coupled with neighbours' suspicions are "holding back" China from the full rollout of its mega Silk Road project, prompting the country's think tanks to term the ambitious initiative as a "high risk project".

The depreciation of yuan late last year raised the cost of currency settlement for Chinese firms conducting overseas businesses, Chu Yin, an associate professor at the University of International Relations here said.

"The use of the yuan as a settlement currency overseas is a problem as the government is very cautious to take bold steps out of fear of shorting the yuan in the offshore market," Chu was quoted as saying by Hong Kong-based 'South China Morning Post'.

The depreciation almost amounting to four per cent helped Chinese exports to post better numbers but depreciated yuan denominated overseas investments.

"Moves such as draining offshore yuan are a retreat of the currency's global push. Companies are facing a complicated process in currency settlement along with its very limited use in the region [of Southeast Asia]," Chu said.

"'One Belt, One Road' (official name of Silk Road) is a high-risk project. We are bound to see some ill-conceived projects in the future, but it is more important to see how many are successful rather than how many fail," he said.

The 'One Belt, One Road' push also needed to maintain "a low profile" to counter suspicion among neighbouring countries, Chu said.

The Silk Road plan initiated by Chinese President Xi Jinping involved a maze of roads including the revival of ancient Silk Road connecting China and Europe throughCentral Asia, Bangladesh, China, India, Myanmar (BCIM), 21st Maritime Silk Road (MSR) and the $46 billion China, Pakistan Economic Corridor (CEPC) through the Pakistan occupied Kashmir (Azad Kashmir).

China has set up $40 billion Silk Road Fund to roll out the initiative.

India for its part backed only BCIM and declined to endorse the MSR over its concerns of Chinese domination in Indian Ocean and protested over CEPC as it goes through the P o K.

Chinese enterprises signed nearly 4,000 project contracts across 60 countries - with a cumulative value of $92.6 billion - last year.

The figure is equivalent to 44 per cent of China's total overseas project contracts.

Despite the impressive investment figures, there are concerns both within and outside the Chinese government that the initiative may have been "too hasty, too broad, too ambitious and without sufficient preparations for unexpected contingencies," Post quoted Christopher Johnson, a senior researcher with the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington as saying in a research report.

Profits should be the key focus, Chu said.

"We should scale back some of the infrastructure projects as many of them don't make money," he said, adding that "some projects saw returns of about one per cent".

Some infrastructure projects were even at risk of default because of the market turmoil in neighbouring countries, accentuated by an economic slowdown in the region and capital flows to the US, Chu said.

China should allow more market access to foreign companies when Beijing itself is reaching out to other global markets. This will help dispel the speculation that the initiatives are self-serving, he said.

"The success of the 'One Belt, One Road' relies on how we view it and also how our neighbouring countries treat it," Chu said.

China is pushing its initiatives in Kazakhstan and other central Asian countries that have traditionally been strongholds of Russia.

Speculation is also rife that Russia is getting worried over China's increasing presence there as Astana, Kazakhstani capital, wants to use Beijing's economic strengths to cut its dependence on Moscow, the report said.

Meanwhile, in Southeast Asia, Beijing is challenging the presence of Japan, which has enjoyed strong economic dominance in the region for over three decades.

"Almost every province and some cities in China have set up funds or unveiled projects to dovetail with One Belt, One Road, but there was no agency to coordinate overseas investment," said an economist at a think tank in Jakarta.

"The ministries do not share information. Each goes its own way. Without proper communication with local people, it is easy to fuel fears of neocolonialism and speculation about China's real intentions," the report quoted Jakarta-based economist as saying.

http://m.economictimes.com/news/def...ect-hits-road-blocks/articleshow/52175264.cms
 
Wont be disputed territory if the Indians respect the wishes of the Kashmiris and VACATE it, lets resolve the dispute, India Out Now.

So ya.... how about Pakistan follows the UN's resolution on Kashmir and vocate Pakistan held Kashmir !????
 
Isolated ?

Almost of the world is willing (and is doing )to do busines of india, does that make the definition of isolated.
It doesn't matter if we do any business with pakistan or not, we take it as pakistan dont exist, and move on with the rest of the world. Doesn't really matter if its just minus one country from the rest of the world.
U still have no idea of how much yr regionally isolated ehh?
 
P0k is a disputed land. And Chinese interefere in there .so we will take actions

Well China can do whatever they want and we will continue our developments for our own national interests .
Perhaps it may undermine Chinese interests in other sectors .
After all we are the world fastest growing economy.

How lovely, when India undertake infrastructure in disputed South Tibet which China strongly protest and India chose to ignore but you don't allow other to do the same in their respective territory:lol:
 
AND mod is sleeping on military's modernisation.
 
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