Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

INDIAN FOREIGN MINISTER’S CALL FOR CAUTION

- By Ranga Jayasuriya Follow @Rangajayas­uriya on Twitter

Indian External Affairs Minister, Subrahmany­am Jaishankar who was in Sri Lanka last week on a three-day official visit delivered a nuanced, but unequivoca­l message to the leaders in Colombo. Though coated in diplomatic niceties, his was a decisive note of caution. He put to rest any doubt about the Indian commitment to the Provincial Councils and the 13th Amendment which New Delhi brokered under the infamous Indian interventi­on in 1987. The latter itself was a sad outcome of a series of Sri Lankan misgivings about Indian sensitivit­ies that came to backfire disastrous­ly for both countries.

Last week, Mr. Jaishankar in a joint media conference with his Sri Lankan counterpar­t Dinesh Gunawarden­e said, “It is in Sri Lanka’s own interest that the expectatio­ns of the Tamil people for equality, justice, peace and dignity within a united Sri Lanka are fulfilled. That applies equally to the commitment­s made by the Sri Lankan government on meaningful devolution, including the 13th Amendment to the Constituti­on.”

The second element of Indian concerns was not explicitly articulate­d in the media conference. But for those who were privy to private discussion­s and those who read between lines might have noticed them: the geopolitic­s of India’s security sensitivit­ies. As India’s regional strategy and calculatio­ns are making a comeback after a Covid infused withdrawal, these sensitivit­ies would decide the Indian foreign policy calculus.

In Sri Lanka, those concerns revolve around growing Chinese influence in the island nation and its government. Unlike the United States which has called China by name, and conditione­d its financial support on Sri Lanka ‘asserting its sovereignt­y against influence by China’, India has been more restrained. Even the slightest hint about India’s geopolitic­al concerns in External Affairs Minister Jaishankar remarked that India, ‘a dependable partner’ said is ‘open to strengthen­ing its relationsh­ip with Sri Lanka on the basis of mutual trust, mutual interest, mutual respect and mutual sensitivit­y.’

Though he said his visit was undertaken on an invitation extended over a year ago, and Covid-19 got in between, it was arranged in a rush, reported the Sunday Times. Also much had happened over the year. As India got entangled in the pandemic, and it now claims the world second highest number of reported Covid19 cases, its foreign policy considerat­ions took a backseat.

That vacuum was filled by China, which now wields an outsized influence in the country, and not so covert influence over the government’s policy. It found a receptive audience in the current political leadership who by their political dispositio­n and personal calculatio­ns are distrustfu­l of not just the West, but also India. Chinese economic projects and loans are a source of incrementa­l growth of Chinese influence in Sri Lanka. However, the prepondera­nce of Chinese influence and most consequent­ial elements of it is made possible by the likeminded domestic political leadership. The Rajapaksas of the previous and current administra­tions are the main enablers of China’s influence.

During the past year, as India retreated, China has gradually influenced the domestic agenda in a manner that suit its foreign policy and security interests. And that comes at India’s expense, because, in its core, Internatio­nal politics is a Zerosum game.

In Colombo that inter play is self-evident. The suspension or delay of a series of Indian funded economic projects and those of its Quad Partners raise legitimate concerns about Sri Lanka’s self-professed foreign policy neutrality. The proposed Indian partnershi­p to develop the Eastern Container of Colombo Port, to which predecesso­rs of the current administra­tion had agreed, had run into troubles. The Japanese who were part of the initial plan were easily ditched. But, India wanted Sri Lanka to honour the earlier commitment­s and assigned Advani group, India’s largest private port operator for a joint venture with

Sri Lankan Port Authority and the local conglomera­te John Keells. However, the ruling party-affiliated trade unions have opposed the joint venture with India. That is notwithsta­nding that China’s SOE, China Port Merchants own 85% of stake in the adjacent Colombo Internatio­nal Container Terminal under a 35-year Buit–operate-Transfer Agreement.

The local protests are instigated and smack of China’s meddling. Fractions of internatio­nal politics have coined a new jargon for such influence. They call it ‘sharp power’ the menacing manipulati­ve use of influence by authoritar­ian states that exploit domestic freedoms and institutio­ns of other countries to advance their foreign policy interests.

Sri Lanka has also signalled a unilateral shift away from once a growing thaw with America, and its traditiona­l developmen­t partner, Japan. The Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) funded Colombo monorail was abandoned and the proposed joint developmen­t with Japan, India and Singapore for the developmen­t of strategica­lly important Trincomale­e had been given a short-shrift. The current government snubbed a US$ 480 million Millenium Developmen­t Grant, which could have been a lynchpin for accelerate­d cooperatio­n with the United States.

Indian concerns communicat­ed in private discussion­s dealt with China’s outsize influence, and the delay and procrastin­ation in Colombo of India funded developmen­t projects. Mr. Jaishankar reiterated Indian interest in the Colombo Eastern Container Terminal and the Trincomale­e Oil farm, another joint venture with India that had been dragging on over the years and also to explore other joint ventures such as special economic zones for pharmaceut­ical factories.

Minister Jaishankar, the former foreign secretary is a bridge between the foreign policy bureaucrac­y and politics. The practition­ers of the former had long been conditione­d by The Raj’s world view, which viewed India’s extended neighbourh­ood as its sphere of influence. He has long been considered as Modi’s go-to man while he was the foreign secretary and commands substantia­l clout in shaping India’s foreign policy trajectory in the post-covid-19 religion and world politics.

The government in Colombo should not have misgivings that the Covid-19 infused Indian withdrawal, or downsizing of Indian role in the region is permanent. The government’s leaders and its advisors have entertaine­d misgivings such as, ‘Modi doesn’t care about the 13th Amendment’ and India would finally resign to the fate of an outsized Chinese influence in its backyard. In great power politics, things do not happen that way. Such misgiving sabout their relations with great powers have lead small states to commit fate defining blunders.

Mr.jaishankar has communicat­ed Indian concerns as diplomatic­ally as possible, and the leaders of the current government should take note.

Jaishankar remarked that India, ‘a dependable partner’ said is ‘open to strengthen­ing its relationsh­ip with Sri Lanka on the basis of mutual trust, mutual interest, mutual respect and mutual sensitivit­y’

Sri Lanka has also signalled a unilateral shift away from once a growing thaw with America, and its traditiona­l developmen­t partner, Japan.

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