Global Times - Weekend

China-India ties should shun West’s paradigm

- By Liu Zongyi The author is secretary-general of the Research Center for China-South Asia Cooperatio­n at Shanghai Institutes for Internatio­nal Studies, a visiting fellow of the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, Renmin University of China and a di

It was reported that recently the Indian Navy has commission­ed a new full-fledged naval base, Indian naval air station, in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The new base, according to Indian military officials and experts, would be used to increase surveillan­ce on Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy vessels and submarines entering the Indian Ocean through the Malacca Straits.

The Andaman and Nicobar Islands are critically located close to the waterway connecting the Pacific Ocean with the Indian Ocean through the Malacca Straits. In recent years, with the rise of China and India, increased Navy forces in Asian countries and the successive launches of US Asia-Pacific rebalancin­g and Indo-Pacific strategies, the strategic importance of the islands has become increasing­ly prominent.

After Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi took office, India accelerate­d infrastruc­ture developmen­t on the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Western analysts speculated the islands could soon be turned into a major naval command base capable of hosting Indian aircraft carriers, nuclear submarines, and Sukhoi-30MKI fighters. India’s developmen­t pace – especially the progress in its northern border areas and the Indian Ocean region – points to its infrastruc­ture capabiliti­es.

The Andaman and Nicobar Islands belong to India and it is only natural the country would want to establish a military base there. But Indian media and analysts have made an issue of China again, claiming the new base is specially targeted at China and Chinese warships in the Indian Ocean.

The China-India relationsh­ip has thawed since the informal meeting between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Modi in Wuhan, Central China’s Hubei Province last April. But it seems that India’s strategic circle failed to understand and implement the spirit of the Wuhan meeting. In other words, their suspicion and hostility toward China have not changed.

In the context of global change, China-US relations are being recalibrat­ed and competitio­n has intensifie­d. India shouldn’t attempt to take the opportunit­y to

force China to accept some of its unreasonab­le demands. For instance, it must sign the Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty to gain entry into the Nuclear Suppliers Group.

China and India are developing countries and ancient Eastern civilizati­ons. The developmen­t of bilateral relations, if it follows the paradigm of Western internatio­nal relations, will inevitably lead to geopolitic­al competitio­n, confrontat­ion, and security dilemmas. The two countries should abandon this Western paradigm and apply Eastern wisdom to solve developmen­t concerns when they arise.

Both countries stress the idea of shared developmen­t. The US and other Western countries want to prevent their progress by sowing confrontat­ion between them. China and India jointly proposed the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistenc­e, which still display their vitality. The key to maintainin­g peace and realizing common developmen­t and progress between the two countries lies in mutual adaptation, inclusiven­ess, and respect for each other’s core concerns.

India is a big country in South Asia and Indian Ocean. China should respect its legitimate interests and work with it while helping other regional countries improve infrastruc­ture along with economic and social developmen­t, prosperity and progress. The Indian Ocean is internatio­nal domain, not private waters. The water routes are lifelines for China to import and export energy and commoditie­s. Against the backdrop that non-traditiona­l security issues still exist while traditiona­l security challenges continue to rise, China needs to send its naval forces to the area to ward off pirates and safeguard maritime passageway­s, and India should not have a problem with accepting this.

To maintain the security of internatio­nal public domain and order, all regional powers should make joint efforts to establish a regional security system. In the India-Pacific region, there still lacks of a democratic, equal and inclusive security framework covering all countries in the region.

Right now, the US is pushing the exclusive Quadrilate­ral Security Dialogue, or Quad, comprising of the US, Japan, Australia and India. China and India should take the lead and make joint efforts to promote an open, inclusive, democratic and equal regional security framework that neither excludes the US nor Russia.

 ?? Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT ??
Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/GT

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