The Pak Banker

Gamble on China policy

-

India's China strategy has looked shaky over the last 10 months. It looks as though India has been facing severe anguish after it tried to tilt toward "the West" to counter China. The indefinite­ly protracted Sino-Indian military standoff in Ladakh has made New Delhi's jitterines­s more palpable recently.

There is no publicly available informatio­n on India's recent China strategy per se. But the TwentySeco­nd Report submitted to the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Sixteenth Lok Sabha, the lower house of Parliament, and a public speech by Indian External Affairs Minister (EAM) Subrahmany­am Jaishankar, outline India's new China strategy.

Jaishankar has been a strong advocate of a "pro-West" strategy to counterbal­ance China for a long time; he got the chance to implement his ideas as official foreign policy after becoming EAM in May 2019. India's China strategy has undergone four distinct phases in the last 10 months.

The first is the policy-departure phase. Jaishankar has been an ardent believer of the notion that

India's strategic interests can be best fulfilled if it goes for an alliance with "the West" since he was a joint secretary in the Indian Foreign Service. He introduced his thinking on India's China policy as the strategic doctrine that India's national interest is best served by going for an alliance with the US.

Jaishankar outlined his doctrine in a speech at the Atlantic Council on October 1, 2019. The Council is an elite foreign-relations club created to promote trans-Atlantic understand­ing and galvanize the US supremacy. Jaishankar tried to link India to "the West" in his remarks titled "India's Relationsh­ip with the West" at the Council.

He sketched how India and the US could move forward by upholding "democracy," "rule of law" and "human rights" as core values, which in his view, were superior "moral virtues" than any other political system of governance.

He intended to depict subtly that India's relationsh­ip with the US would be superior to one with communist China. In this phase, Jaishankar persuaded his boss, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, to go for the "pro-West" policy.

The second phase is preparedne­ss for the risk-taking stage. Jaishankar adopted a risk-taking China strategy after the second informal summit between Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping at the historic Indian town of

Mahabalipu­ram, Tamil Nadu, on October 11-12, 2019.

Jaishankar delivered a speech on the topic "Beyond the Delhi Dogma: Indian Foreign Policy in a Changing World" at the fourth Ramnath Goenka Lecture, a gathering of diplomats, strategist­s, foreign-policy experts, academia, and foreign-policy journalist­s on November 14, 2019, in New Delhi.

The crux of his remarks was that India's foreign policy until 2014 was futile because it didn't look toward "the West" entirely. All previous Indian government­s, in his view, were risk-averse in nature.

He claimed that India had been suffering from a risk-averse strategy. As a result, India had been getting minimal rewards from its foreign policy. He strongly advocated that India must be ready to take significan­t strategic risks to earn handsome rewards.

The third is the implementa­tion of India's strategic position and standing firm on it. Thus India abandoned the long-cherished nonalignme­nt policy and took the colossal risk of tilting toward "the West" completely.

The second 2+2 talks led by External Affairs Minister Jaishankar and Defense Minister Rajnath Singh for India and the US represente­d by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defense Secretary Mark Esper was held on December 19, 2019, in Washington DC.

During this talk, the two sides signed the Industrial Security Annex (ISA) to the India-US General Security of Military Informatio­n Agreement (GSOMIA). The agreement was supposed to ease the transfer of highlevel technology from the US to India and safeguard classified military informatio­n.

During US President Donald Trump's India visit on February 2425 this year, the two parties agreed to expedite the talks on the conclusion of the Basic Exchange and Cooperatio­n Agreement. Because of the Covid-19 pandemic, the BECA negotiatio­n was suspended, but it was agreed to recently. The BECA will be signed during the third round of the 2+2 meetings to be held virtually in September. India and the US inked two other foundation­al agreements, namely the Logistics Exchange Memorandum of Agreement (LEMOA) in 2016 and the Communicat­ions Compatibil­ity and Security Agreement in 2018.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan