The Asian Age

India’s Taiwan snub is self- defeating

- Ranjit Gupta The writer served as ambassador in several countries and was finally head of India’s representa­tion in Taiwan

India decided to send two MPs to the presidenti­al inaugurati­on in Taipei but then backed out at the 11th hour to avoid ruffling Chinese feathers. If India had doubts about attending the inaugurati­on, it should have politely declined the invitation.

On May 20, Tsai Ingwen, of the theoretica­l ly proindepen­dence Democratic Progressiv­e Party ( DPP), was sworn in as the 14th President of the Republic of China, commonly known to the world as Taiwan.

Taiwan has not been ruled from Beijing since it became a Japanese colony in 1895. China, however, regards it as a “renegade province” and imperiousl­y demands its reunificat­ion with the mainland, threatenin­g severe consequenc­es if it does not — including war, if it declares independen­ce.

Cross- strait relations have survived a particular­ly ideologica­l DPP President who was in power from 20002008. Dr Tsai joined the DPP only in 2004 and is a UK/ US-educated technocrat who has not the remotest intention of declaring independen­ce; she wants continuati­on of mutually beneficial interactio­n on the basis of existing political ground realties.

Only 22 countries recognise Taiwan as the real China. Over 70 countries that recognise the People’s Republic of China have “unofficial” representa­tion in Taiwan including India. In 1995, India became the 45th country to open an office in Taiwan.

The issue had been discussed in detail with China prior to the establishm­ent of the Indian office in Taipei. It was perhaps the most innovative element of Prime Minister P. V. Narasimha Rao’s Look East policy but we have chosen not to reap the benefits.

Having headed India’s office in Taiwan from May 2000 to May 2003, I know from personal interactio­ns with Dr Tsai that she has very warm feelings for India and is exceedingl­y keen on forging a strong economic and technologi­cal partnershi­p between the two countries. She visited India in 2014 on her own initiative in an effort to get to know the country.

In her inaugural speech, she said, “We will also promote a ‘ New Southbound Policy’ in order to elevate the scope and diversity of our external economy and to bid farewell to our past over- reliance on a single market… Taiwan has always played an indispensa­ble role in the region’s developmen­t... We will share resources, talents and markets with other countries to achieve economies of scale and to allow the efficient use of resources... We will broaden exchanges and cooperatio­n with regional neighbours in areas such as technology, culture and commerce, and expand in particular our dynamic relationsh­ips with Asean and India”.

Taiwan exists as a separate self- governing entity, in spite of China’s bullying and threats for many decades, entirely because of the United States’ support. Japan has been very friendly and contribute­d strongly to Taiwan’s economic growth.

They were mentioned but almost en passant much later in the speech: “We will continue to deepen our relationsh­ips with friendly democracie­s, including the United States, Japan and Europe to advance multifacet­ed cooperatio­n on the basis of shared values”, thus highlighti­ng the importance accorded to India.

Taiwan is the world’s largest investor in China but now Taiwanese businesses want to move out of China — something the Taiwan government encourages. In 2015, Terry Gou, chairman of Foxconn, the world’s largest electronic­s manufactur­er, announced a commitment of a $ 5 billion investment in Maharashtr­a as an initial phase of much more ambitious plans — $ 20 billion. Foxconn already has manufactur­ing plants in India. Taiwan is an IT hardware design and manufactur­ing superpower. It’s high- tech partnershi­p with India would be particular­ly valuable for making Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visionary platforms such as Make in India, Digital India, Skill India and Smart Cities a success.

Therefore, India should have sent a delegation led by the minister for informatio­n technology to the presidenti­al inaugurati­on in Taiwan, not only as an appreciati­ve acknowledg­ement of Dr Tsai’s special gesture to India, but much more importantl­y a much- needed, powerful and positive message to the Taiwanese industry and business community. They have great reservatio­ns about India because, of all the countries that have offices in Taiwan, India has particular­ly stringent, entirely self- imposed, restrictio­ns on meaningful interactio­n with Taiwan. A minimum alternativ­e would have been a delegation led by the ministry for external affairs’ secretary ( economic relations). India decided to send two MPs but then backed out literally at the 11th hour to avoid ruffling Chinese feathers, presumably in the context of the imminent visit of the Indian President to China. Since the dates of his visit to China were known, if India had doubts about attending the inaugurati­on in Taiwan, it should have politely declined the invitation. What India finally managed to do was to snub Taiwan’s India- friendly President. China would have been smirking with satisfacti­on, greatly amused by India’s utterly pathetic and extraordin­arily selfdemean­ing effort to please it.

Last year Sino- Indian bilateral trade had a massive trade deficit of nearly $ 50 billion, yet despite years of Indian entreaties China continues to deny market access to India for pharmaceut­icals and IT services.

From a few days before Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to India, throughout his visit and even afterwards, hundreds of PLA troops were camped deep inside Indian territory.

China flamboyant­ly opposes India’s membership of the NSG. It has also singlehand­edly prevented the designatio­n of Hafiz Saeed as an internatio­nal terrorist despite India taking up the issue with China repeatedly at every conceivabl­e level. China is doing whatever it pleases in PoK, including implementi­ng multi- billion dollar projects, but blocks ADB funding for developmen­t projects in Arunachal Pradesh; while thousands of PLA troops are stationed in PoK, Gilgit and Gwadar.

India’s top leaders have shown extreme reluctance in meeting the Dalai Lama and visiting Arunachal Pradesh. China does not care a hoot about Indian sensitivit­ies but India is constantly looking over its shoulder, anxious about China’s reaction even to the most utterly innocuous things.

This is certainly not how a putative great power should be behaving. India aspires to be on the global high table and wants permanent membership of the UN Security Council, but does it deserve to be there? The contrast between the messages the Chinese send and those sent to China by us says it all! No wonder Pakistan, China’s pet client, gets away with mayhem vis- àvis India.

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