A+ | A- | Reset
Home arrow Special Reports arrow China + India = Chindia, a strategic partnership

China + India = Chindia, a strategic partnership PDF Print
Posted by admin   
Tuesday, 15 January 2008 15:15

By C. Raja Mohan, For The Straits Times

IN THEIR talks this week in Beijing, the visiting Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Chinese President Hu Jintao hope to unveil a new phase in bilateral relations. After the unreal idealism of the 1950s, war and conflict during the 1960s and 1970s, and a wary normalisation of ties during the 1980s and 1990s, India and China are seeking to inject real strategic content into their relationship. Both countries are today acutely aware of their own changing positions in the global power hierarchy. Self-assurance in both the capitals has begun translating into a new engagement that promises to transcend the traditional emphasis on contentious bilateral issues. Although much of the world has been animated by the rise of China and the emergence of India, and their potential impact on the world - from global warming to the Asian balance of power - Beijing and New Delhi were burdened for long by a narrow bilateral framework. To be sure, the idea of 'Chindia' - of China and India taking on the world - was invented a few years ago in New Delhi. On its part, China in recent years has repeatedly reaffirmed its desire for a genuine friendship with India. Despite their aspirations for a strategic partnership, mutual suspicion over Tibet, an intractable boundary dispute, and differences over Pakistan were among the many issues that limited the scope of the relationship in the past. It is only now, amidst a grudging acceptance of each other's rise, that China and India have begun to explore a broader agenda of regional and international cooperation. Until recently, China used to view India as a mere regional power within the subcontinent. Worse still, the Chinese establishment was convinced that India, with its internal chaos, would never get its act together. Over the last decade, India has surprised China in many ways. India not only defied the international system by conducting nuclear tests in May 1998, but it has also successfully negotiated its entry into the nuclear club by cultivating a special relationship with the Bush administration. India's unprecedented high growth rates in recent years have also made it clear to Beijing that the economic momentum behind New Delhi's rise is now real and consequential. New Delhi's successful big power diplomacy - including a rapprochement with Washington and Tokyo - has made Beijing aware of India's potential to constrict China's room for manoeuvre. As India pulls away from its dispirited sibling Pakistan, China's traditional policy of balancing India within the subcontinent has become unsustainable. India, too, has steadily come to terms with the implications of China's rise. The Indian industry, which initially feared economic competition from Beijing, now sees China as a huge economic opportunity. Trade between the two nations has increased about a hundredfold - from a measly US$300 million (S$430 million) a decade ago to nearly US$38 billion in 2007. The Indian Prime Minister and the Chinese President are now expected to set more ambitious targets for bilateral trade.

India, which in the past was anxious about China's ties with its smaller neighbours, is now reconciled to the inevitability of Beijing's rising profile in and around the subcontinent. For the Indian strategic establishment, the answer lies not in a perennial gripe but in emulating China's forward-looking economic policies towards the neighbours.

{mosgoogle right}

Amidst its growing economic and military capabilities, India is now more confident of raising its own profile in the presumed backyard of China - East and South-east Asia. Given the burden of the past, Dr Singh and Mr Hu are bound to pay some attention to the old bilateral agenda. In their joint declaration, the two sides are likely to review the progress made so far on the boundary dispute and reaffirm their political commitment to its early resolution. Thanks to a reasonably stable frontier and the new breadth of the bilateral ties, the two leaders are expected to focus on the construction of a partnership that looks at a wider regional and global agenda. One element of the putative strategic partnership lies in mutual political reassurance that they do not pose a security threat to each other. On the eve of his three-day visit to Beijing, Dr Singh had once again reaffirmed that India will not join any alliance aimed at containing China. Beijing, in turn, has recognised the dangers of pushing India into the arms of the United States and the importance of encouraging New Delhi to take a more relaxed view of China's rise. Second, India and China are likely to emphasise their shared interest in regional stability in different sub-regions of Asia. The effect that a failed state in Pakistan would have on their own security is likely to nudge Dr Singh and Mr Hu to exchange views on the deepening structural crisis in India's very important western neighbour. While it is premature to talk of Sino-Indian cooperation in stabilising Pakistan, New Delhi's vastly improved relations with Islamabad have begun to alter the old triangular dynamic between India, China and Pakistan. Beyond the subcontinent, India and China will have to work hard to harmonise their positions in the Central, South-east and East Asian regions. All indications are that there is a new political will in both the capitals to begin a serious conversation about their common neighbourhood. Third, as their national interests turn global, India and China are beginning to bump into each other in different regions of the world. Dr Singh and Mr Hu now recognise the importance of minimising the potential for future conflict, and maximising the prospect for greater cooperation on a range of issues - from global trade talks to international terrorism, and from African development to energy security. As the two leaders work on a significant regional and global agenda, sceptics around the world will be looking for any movement on an issue that has cast a shadow over the future of Sino-Indian relations - China's ambiguity regarding India's nuclear deal with the United States.

An explicit signal from the Chinese leadership during Dr Singh's visit that Beijing will not oppose the implementation of the Indo-US civil nuclear initiative, and might even be prepared to embark on atomic energy cooperation with India, could fundamentally alter the popular Indian misgivings about China and pave the way for a real strategic partnership between the two Asian giants.

 C. Raja Mohan is a professor at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.

Comments (9)Add Comment
...
written by Birdbrain, January 15, 2008 15:28:12
China India = Chindia

China India Malaysia = Chindiama

So shall we call ourselves Chindiama instead of Malaysian?!

Cuckoo! smilies/wink.gif smilies/grin.gif smilies/cool.gif
report abuse
disagree 2
agree 6
...
written by beijing, January 15, 2008 16:31:25
This is how we look into the country where they call 1 people and 1 nation. Even though there is difference race and culture. I believe Malaysia will be the great nation if the government can treat all race equally by 1 people and 1 nation.
I guess another 50 years Malaysia will still be the same as it is.
report abuse
disagree 1
agree 16
...
written by Saint, January 15, 2008 17:36:17
A concern will occur for the whole of Asia if these two giants cooperate.
And if Russia is added in, it will scare the world.
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 10
...
written by DontPlayGod, January 15, 2008 18:04:05
beijing wrote:

"I believe Malaysia will be the great nation if the government can treat all race equally by 1 people and 1 nation.
I guess another 50 years Malaysia will still be the same as it is."

No, 50 years on, Malaysia will not be the same as it is now. My views have consistently been that Malaysia will go the way of Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia 20 to 25 years from now, if not earlier. Can't you see the many "Little Napoleons" are already in place waiting for this to happen? Pakistan is now heading towards a failed state, and many other West Asian states will be heading that way, too, given the rise in fanatic Islam there. Sudan is already a failed state. If the U.S. pulls out its forces from Iraq and Afghanistan, they too will quickly go the way of failed states.
report abuse
disagree 2
agree 20
...
written by Compadre45, January 15, 2008 20:50:52
Its apparent that China and India are looking for growth.

Its also apparent that BN govn, is looking for shrink.
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 2
...
written by macaufan, January 15, 2008 23:26:02
China & India is going to be the world super power, that's the fact no one can deny. but funny thing is that umno regime got no respect for India, Nazri Aziz dare to shout at Tamil-Naidu CM with " u SHUP-UP & mind ur own bznes!"!
but when the naked 'Chinese girl' squating' issue pop-up, without checking the authencity of the video & the 'chinese girl' is from China or in actual she's a malay! PM has send a group lead by umno top guns to China for explaination ! w/o opposition/&public pressure, umno regime willingly set up royal inquiry ! kakakakaaaaaa...... Y ah?
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 2
..., Lowly rated comment [Show]
...
written by temenggong, January 18, 2008 11:54:40
China and India are two very different geopolitical animals, so no strategic partnership is possible. Unless perhaps China become a free and democratic nation. They are natural competitors and rivals for space. This healthy rivalry would benefit all of us in asia and the world.
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 0
...
written by joeawk, January 18, 2008 16:17:16
It is good that the 2 Asian giants cooperate and the only problem is the amount of natural resources both of the countries will wallop.

If malaysia is smart enough, there wil be tremendous fallout to benefit from, otherwise, less of it.

Perhaps the Malaysian Chinese and Indians should pull together our funds to take advantage of this development. No politicians,please.
report abuse
disagree 0
agree 0

Write comment
This content has been locked. You can no longer post any comment.
You must be logged in to a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 
< Prev   Next >
 
Some Images Hosted With
Thank You ImageShack!
 BLOGGERS AGAINST ISA

Powered and Optimized for:
Malaysia Today by MT-TEAM