The Sunday Guardian

Sino-Indian summer of 2017 strained ties

Asserting dubious claims and engaging in revisionis­t intimidati­on are part of China’s tactics.

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By upping the ante on Doklam yet again, China’s military has defended its sizeable troop presence around the area where the 73-day standoff between the armies of China and India during the summer sent the region in a tizzy. On being questioned on 30 November, Colonel Wu Qian, spokesman of the Chinese ministry of defence asserted that “Donglong (Doklam) is Chinese territory” and refused to clarify whether the PLA shall vacate the area during winters.

Recent developmen­ts in the bilateral equation between India and the People’s Republic of China, especially successive developmen­ts in the summer of 2017, increasing­ly indicate the near-term magnitude of strain amid two of Asia’s prominent players that jointly constitute nearly 37% of global population.

The summer of 2017 itself began with a steep build-up in bilateral tensions, when Beijing hosted the biggest ever Belt and Road Forum in May, with more than 130 participat­ing nations from around the world. India decidedly took a call of not attending the BRI event, given its firm opposition to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, which is being projected as the flagship project of BRI in South Asia. The CPEC’s credential­s remain questionab­le at the very core as far as legal principles and rules are concerned. A significan­t section of this corridor runs through the Indian territory of Pakistan-occupiedKa­shmir. Delhi’s objections primarily stem from the fact that it cannot compromise its sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity in any way. In fact, by skipping the BRI Forum, New Delhi handed a major diplomatic and political snub to the Xi Jinping administra­tion, which was seeking to pronounce the Forum as a runaway success.

Exactly a month later, on 16 June, China launched a brazen offensive inside Bhutanese territory in what can best be described as a revisionis­t, expansioni­st and combative attempt to alter the existing status quo in the Himalayas. Doklam is hardly the first time China has tried to rework statuses quo in its favour in the context of territoria­l and boundary disputes. Asserting dubious claims by firstly providing a “Chinese name” to the area—“Donglong”, in this case—and then engaging in revisionis­t intimidati­on to get its way and revise the narrative, is now becoming an oft-repeated Chinese pattern in contentiou­s regional security issues. The 73-day Sino-Indian military standoff that ensued thereafter has been the longesteve­r since the Sino-Indian war of 1962.

As the Doklam standoff unfolded and began precipitat­ing, almost coinciding was the June Nuclear Suppliers Group ( NSG) plenary convened in Bern (with Switzerlan­d now being Chair of the NSG, taking over from Korea). In comparison to the hype built around the Seoul plenary, the Bern meeting was rather low key from an Indian viewpoint. The hopes surroundin­g India’s NSG membership getting through were bleak since the very outset of the Bern plenary, given China’s tenacious obstructio­n and antagonism to Delhi’s candidatur­e. It is well known and acknowledg­ed that during the earlier 2016 NSG plenary at Seoul, China blocked a consensus vote on India’s applicatio­n for membership and was decidedly prepared to scuttle New Delhi’s applicatio­n, even if it was to be the last man standing. By undertakin­g the plea/route of “criteria procedure” to ultimately reach its desired end, that of blocking India’s NSG membership, Beijing managed to achieve what it initially set out for—block India’s entry into the NSG club, at any cost.

Finally, as the year was drawing to a close, Beijing, yet again, put a spoke in India’s relentless fight against terrorism by stonewalli­ng its attempt to brand Masood Azhar as a global terrorist. In early November, China blocked listing of Pakistanba­sed Jaish-e-Mohammed chief and Pathankot terror attack mastermind Azhar as a global terrorist by the UN under the Al- Qaeda Sanctions Committee of the Council. This is the second year in succession that China has blocked the resolution. The JeM is already listed in the UN’s list of banned terror outfits.

All the highlighte­d incidents that took place in quick succession spell out distinctly China’s long-term intent of rewriting internatio­nal rules in accordance with its own vision of a Sino-centric Asia in the shortterm, and that of China being a global power centre in the distant future. It also is a grim indicator of the constant banes in Sino-Indian relations that are likely to carry forward to 2018.

In order to achieve this objective, coercive diplomacy backed by military stealth will clearly be the most obvious political strategy employed by Xi Jinping. The threat of military coercion, as the Doklam incident saw, would just be enough of a forewarnin­g to credibly demonstrat­e Chinese resolve in achieving the set objective of redrawing borders and misreprese­nting history. Dr Monika Chansoria is a Tokyo-based Senior Visiting Fellow at the Japan Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs (JIIA).

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