Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Jaishankar lists 8 principles to repair ties with Beijing

- Rezaul H Laskar

NEW DELHI: External affairs minister S Jaishankar on Thursday outlined eight principles to help repair strained relations with China, saying the two countries were at a crossroads as last year’s events in Ladakh sector of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) had “profoundly disturbed” their ties. Jaishankar said three so-called “mutuals” – mutual respect, mutual sensitivit­y and mutual interests – are determinin­g factors for the bilateral relationsh­ip and cannot be brushed aside as the two countries try to resolve the nine-month standoff on the LAC.

During his keynote address at the All India Conference of China Studies, Jaishankar reiterated concerns he raised in recent months – the sudden massing of Chinese troops on the LAC last year and Beijing’s failure to provide a credible explanatio­n for the change in its stance – and presented a possible roadmap for tackling the stalemate in efforts aimed at disengagem­ent and de-escalation. “Respecting the three mutuals and observing those eight principles...will surely help us make the right decisions,” he said.

He summed up the eight principles to handle ties with China as:

•Existing agreements must be adhered to in entirety.

•LAC must be strictly observed and respected, and any attempt to unilateral­ly change the status quo is completely unacceptab­le.

•Peace and tranquilli­ty in border areas is the basis for developmen­t of relations in other domains.

While both nations are committed to a multi-polar world, there should be a recognitio­n that a multi-polar Asia is one of its essential constituen­ts.

•Each state will have its own interests, concerns and priorities, but sensitivit­y to them cannot be one-sided as relationsh­ips between major states are reciprocal in nature.

•As rising powers, each will have their own set of aspiration­s and their pursuit too cannot be ignored.

•There will always be divergence­s and difference­s but their management is essential to bilateral ties.

•Civilisati­onal states like India and China must always take the long view.

Jaishankar said he didn’t have a definitive answer to the question of where bilateral ties were headed as the “events of 2020 have actually put our relationsh­ip under exceptiona­l stress”.

Sameer Patil, fellow for internatio­nal security studies at Gateway House, said,“there is a lot of talk globally on decoupling from the Chinese economy, diversifyi­ng supply chains and how the Belt and Road Initiative leads to debt diplomacy but the world is finding it difficult to change China’s behaviour...”

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S Jaishankar

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