Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Ties go beyond border disputes

The Modi-Xi meet at Brics shows the way forward

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, seemed to have sensibly adopted the view that there is more to the larger Sino-Indian relationsh­ip than a border stand-off during their hour-long meeting on the sidelines of the Brics summit in Xiamen. They both agreed to treat Doklam and similar border incidents as problems that should be managed rather than treated as a fatal flaw in bilateral relations between the two largest Asian countries.

The Brics summit in China's Fujian Province was a symbol of how much larger the Sino-Indian relationsh­ip is than disputes over uninhabite­d bits of rock. The Xiamen summit continued the emerging economies tradition of laying out an internatio­nal order which would give them a greater say in rules-making and institutio­nal representa­tion. It also incorporat­ed a number of other emerging economies for the first time, signalling how the Brics concept is attractive to other players as well.

The surprise was the Chinese acquiescen­ce to a mention of Pakistan-based terrorist organisati­ons like the Lashkar e Tayyeba and Jaish e Mohammad in the joint statement. The statement does not denounce these groups or call for action against them, it merely expresses concern at these and other terrorist groups. Nonetheles­s, it reflects an evolutiona­ry step upward in Beijing’s attitude to terrorism. Namely, that while Pakistan remains its “all-weather friend,” the former’s use of terrorism to further its political agenda is a flawed policy that undermines a growing Chinese interest in regional stability. The joint statement was noticeable for speaking about almost every major internatio­nal conflict that has a bearing on world stability. It is hard to see India and China ever becoming close friends but they need not become violent rivals. By getting through the Doklam crisis without a shot being fired and even high-level summitry being sustained, they have shown that as they both rise, the potential for cooperatin­g more and confrontin­g less remains considerab­le.

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