Hindustan Times (Delhi)

China is India’s main security challenge: UK think tank

- Prasun Sonwalkar letters@hindustant­imes.com

For policymake­rs in New Delhi, this (Chinese challenge) created fears of encircleme­nt and hardened their attitude towards Beijing, even as China continued to be India’s largest trading partner, and Modi sought stronger ties with Beijing.

LONDON: India’s relations with Pakistan and Nepal have deteriorat­ed in the past year but China remains the country’s “primary security challenge”, according to an annual strategic survey by an influentia­l London-based think tank released on Tuesday.

The Strategic Survey 2016: The Annual Review of World Affairs of the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) reviewed India’s troubled ties with Pakistan and referred to the intensive “retaliator­y” firing across the LoC under the Modi government, fluctuatio­ns in the dialogue process, the Ufa summit and the terror attack on Pathankot airbase.

“India’s major security threat remained the terrorism emanating from Pakistan, on which Modi took a tougher position than his predecesso­r,” it said, but identified China as India’s “primary security challenge”.

The survey explained that the challenge from China was because of its assertiven­ess on the border dispute with India, exacerbate­d by Beijing’s growing trade and defence partnershi­ps with New Delhi’s South Asian neighbours and by an expansion of Chinese influence in the Indian Ocean.

“For policymake­rs in New Delhi, this created fears of encircleme­nt and hardened their attitude towards Beijing, even as China continued to be India’s largest trading partner, and Modi sought to establish stronger trade and investment links with IISS SURVEY

Beijing,” it said. Referring to shifts in Pakistan’s policies, the survey said, “As ever, the main driver of Pakistan’s security policy was its rivalry with India. This considerat­ion trumped all other factors.”

Rahul Roy-Choudhury, IISS senior fellow for South Asia, told HT, “Instead of any ‘knee-jerk’ military-focussed reaction that will at best be symbolic rather than substantiv­e, India needs a calibrated and sustained multifacet­ed approach towards Pakistan.

Roy-Choudhary, who contribute­d to the survey, said India also “needs to ensure its main constituen­t in Pakistan, the people, are suitably empowered”.

The survey said that India’s “neighbourh­ood first” policy has paid few dividends beyond Bangladesh and Bhutan. “This was due to the complex domestic politics of countries in the region, their historical suspicion of India as the dominant regional power, the influence of India domestic and ethnic politics, and increasing Chinese engagement with the region,” it said.

At the global level, the survey said, institutio­ns and norms that dampen the risk of conflict are under assault from populism in developed states and the assertive behaviour of rising and reviving powers. IISS director general John Chapman said, “The underpinni­ngs of geopolitic­s have splintered so much in the past year that the foundation­s of global order appear alarmingly weak. The politics of parochiali­sm now mix with the instincts of nationalis­m, and both clash with the cosmopolit­an world order so carefully constructe­d by the technocrat­s of the late 20th century.”

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