India Review & Analysis

A Taiwanese view of India-China relations

- By Namrata Hasija

After the 2014 general elections in India, the representa­tive of Taipei Economic and Cultural Centre (TECC), Delhi, was invited to the swearing-in ceremony of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. This was a strong signal, especially to China, and also an indication of improved bilateral relations.

However, for Modi’s second swearing-in ceremony, after his 2019 election, the TECC representa­tive in India was not invited, creating some disquiet among the Taiwanese. They felt the reason for the snub was India’s tilt towards China after the Wuhan Summit. This was not the first time Taiwan had been snubbed by the Indian government and, even though the relationsh­ip between India and Taiwan has seen a remarkable improvemen­t in the last few years, it has not peaked because of China’s shadow. Before the second informal summit between India and China held at Mammalapur­am, there is again some concern among the Taiwanese about where this will take India-Taiwan relations.

“We have no objections for India to make friends with any country in the world, but not at the cost of Taiwan’s relations with India. This is something (on which) we are very firm and urging the Indian government,” said TECC Representa­tive in India, Chung Kwang Tien.

Professor Mumin Chen of Taiwan’s National Chung Hsing University echoes similar thoughts, saying Taiwan does not have issues with India having good relations with China but, at the same time, India should not let that affect its relationsh­ip with Taiwan.

Roger Liu, Associate Professor, Flame University, points out that the India-China relationsh­ip is problemati­c because of the 1962 war, which could have been avoided if Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru had taken another route and not misunderst­ood the Chinese. Both India and China, he feels, have a lot in common and can work together if territoria­l issues between them could be resolved. He also feels that India needs China to counter-balance Pakistan and maintain peace in Afghanista­n after the withdrawal of US troops. Thus, in future, the world will see more structured, institutio­nalized India-China relations.

The challenge for Taiwan, however, is the People’s Republic of China’s policy of enhanced people to people contact with India, especially their interactio­ns with think tanks and universiti­es. It is this aspect that Taiwan should work, as people to people contact forms the base of India-Taiwan relations.

Roberto Lin, from National Chung Hsing University, said while the first summit was informal, Doklam was the main issue discussed. He also believes relations have improved between both countries after the 2018 Wuhan summit and China dropping its veto against Masood Azhar was a result of that improved relationsh­ip. The second summit, however, would focus more on Kashmir and the US- China trade war.

Analyzing these views, along with interactio­ns in Taiwan, I find there are some commonalit­ies in the opinions, primarily that the Taiwanese are not worried about improved India-China relations, but they are worried about the effect of those on IndiaTaiwa­n relations.

Taiwan attaches great importance to India under its New Southbound Policy and wants to deepen the relationsh­ip further across the board at the economic, people to people, education and cultural levels. On India- China relations and the last 70 years of this relationsh­ip, they feel it has evolved but there is no trust in the relationsh­ip and the border issue is a major irritant.

The Taiwanese are also of the opinion that it is not a mutually beneficial relationsh­ip as China is extremely inflexible when it comes to their territoria­l claims, relationsh­ip with Pakistan and efforts to block India in all internatio­nal forums. On the other hand, India follows a policy of appeasemen­t towards China, especially when it comes to Taiwan and Tibet. They quote a report published in 2018 by a Parliament­ary Committee on foreign affairs, headed by Shashi Tharoor, which said that “Even when India is overly cautious about China’s sensitivit­ies while dealing with Taiwan and Tibet, China does not exhibit the same deference.” Hence, India should also involve itself more with Taiwan. The Taiwanese want India to help them in getting access to the World Health Organizati­on and become part of their Indo-Pacific strategy. Even though India might not be able to officially recognize Taiwan as a country, they should recognize it as a vibrant democracy.

Taiwan attaches great importance to India under its New Southbound Policy and wants to deepen the relationsh­ip further across the board at the economic, people to people, education and cultural levels. On India- China relations and the last 70 years of this relationsh­ip, they feel it has evolved but there is no trust in the relationsh­ip and the border issue is a major irritant

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