Deccan Chronicle

Modi’s foreign policy in need of urgent reset

- Latha Jishnu

Consider the past and you shall know the future, says a Chinese proverb. That is something the Narendra Modi government did not keep in mind when it embarked on its illconside­red move to confront the Chinese on the Doklam border row last year. An aggressive stance as India knows to its cost since the bruising 1962 war has never helped it to get the better of China.

But the past was ignored by the BJP regime which has thoughtles­sly needled the Chinese over the past three years. The nadir was reached with Doklam. China began building a huge military complex in mid-January, close to the site where Indian troops had been despatched rather impetuousl­y to stop the constructi­on of a road in July 2017. Beijing asked India not to interfere in “legitimate” infrastruc­ture developmen­t in its sovereign territory.

Some lessons appear to have been learned. India is now going all out to address China’s sensitivit­ies. Institutio­nal frameworks that were given short shrift earlier are back at the centre of a more realistic policy that is being pieced together by the ministry of external affairs.

The architect of the salvage mission is new foreign secretary Vijay Gokhale, a seasoned China hand, who appears to be well regarded by the authoritie­s in Beijing. Last month, Mr Gokhale’s meetings with top Chinese officials resulted in a decision by the two sides to initiate a sustained level of dialogue which will include external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj’s visit to China. It is hoped that by the time Mr Modi meets Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on summit in June in Qingdao, relations between the two countries would have been set on a firmer footing. The question is how willing Modi supporters and the BJP’s ideologica­l mentor, the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh, are to accept the new reality. Convinced of their latent superiorit­y, the saffron brigade of Hindu supremacis­ts believes China is a competitor that needs to be contained and that India and the US are natural allies in such a project. Besides, there is the deep-rooted yearning to avenge the defeat of 1962.

The MEA is taking a more pragmatic view of geopolitic­al realities. The official release on Mr Gokhale’s talks in Beijing notes the “need to build on the convergenc­es between India and China and address difference­s on the basis of mutual respect and sensitivit­y to each other’s concerns, interests and aspiration­s”. That explains why MEA was able to persuade the government to issue a circular asking senior officials not to attend functions marking the 60th anniversar­y of the Dalai Lama’s exile in India. With ties to all its neighbours in tatters and allies turning hostile, Mr Modi is staring at a largely blank balance sheet.

The reset in relations with China is likely to have an impact on Delhi’s dealings with Islamabad, too.

The frustratio­n with the government’s inability to deal with the volatile Pakistan border prompted a general to state that “restoring ceasefire requires statesmans­hip, not brinkmansh­ip.”

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