Global Times

Will China- India ties ease with troop pullout?

- By Qian Feng The author is director of the research department at the National Strategy Institute at Tsinghua University. opinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Sunday witnessed the 10th round of the Corps Commander Level Meeting between China and India. This comes after the Indian side claimed both countries’ soldiers have completed the disengagem­ent process on both sides of Pangong Lake. Reports show that the focus of Sunday’s meeting is further disengagem­ent between the two sides on friction points.

The withdrawal of the troops has at least ended the military confrontat­ion between the two countries that have gripped them since the summer of 2020. In doing so, it has created preconditi­ons for the future restoratio­n of peace and stability in the China- India border area. This is a positive sign that the bilateral relationsh­ip may relax.

The border confrontat­ion has severely disturbed previous peace and tranquilit­y on border areas, and jeopardize­d mutual strategic trust. Economic, trade and people exchanges have been greatly affected. When it comes to economy and trade, the Indian side has unreasonab­ly set restrictio­ns on Chinese investment as a form of revenge. Such a revengeful mentality has long existed in Indian government and society.

Contrary to New Delhi’s expectatio­ns, the economic retaliatio­n against Beijing has not been very effective. In fact, India took advantage of conflicts with China to artificial­ly reduce economic ties and promote its initiative of “Make in India”. However, India’s imports from China increased rather than decreased in the second half of 2020 following the China-India border skirmish in June.

Moreover, China has emerged as India’s biggest trade partner in the first half of financial year 2020- 21, overtaking the US. On the one hand, this shows that the economic complement­arity between Beijing and New Delhi is not a matter of political considerat­ions. On the other hand,

India has to lower its anticipati­ons to strengthen economic and trade ties with the West due to the ravaging COVID- 19 pandemic.

As Reuters reported on Tuesday, India is ready to clear some new investment proposals from China in the coming weeks. This is actually the result of India’s profound reflection­s. India has realized that setting limits on investment from China at this stage is not good for the China- India relations. Nor does it serve the interests of India itself. In 2020, under the influence of the pandemic, India witnessed a 23.9 percent fall in GDP in the first quarter of financial year 2020- 21, the lowest in 24 years. In this case, the unjustifie­d suppressio­n of Chinese investment against the natural laws of the economy through political factors can be considered harmful to the recovery of India’s economy. So it is in India’s own interest to lift the ban on Chinese investment.

However, this does not mean that India has completely put down its guard against China. According to Reuters, India will only clear new investment proposals, “which are not sensitive to national security.” This shows that New Delhi still has a lot of vigilance against Beijing in the security field and there are still many obstacles in the process of easing China- India relations. The China- India border conflict has not only damaged the strategic mutual trust between the two countries, but also seriously undermined the foundation of India’s public opinion toward China. Although frontline troops from both Chinese and Indian armies have started to disengage, India’s vigilance will continue for a while. The two sides still need a long time to bridge the gap.

It should also be recalled that the US plays an important external factor in the developmen­t of China- India relations. But New Delhi is still cautious on whether to choose Beijing or Washington. This is because there are still many uncertain factors among the three countries. For example, although US President Joe Biden wants to strengthen cooperatio­n with India through mechanisms such as the Quadrilate­ral Security Dialogue ( Quad), India itself has the pursuit of becoming a major power. New Delhi will not blindly follow Washington’s will on some major internatio­nal issues. Overall, China- India relations have shown signs of easing.

Although India- US relations are improving, India will still want to maintain some strategic flexibilit­y before the Biden administra­tion releases its specific India policy. India does not want to be restrained by the Quad too soon. Therefore, China- India relations intrinsica­lly depend on the two countries themselves.

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