India keeping up with the neighbor


By Sudha Ramachandran
Asia Times
Dec 24, 2009


BANGALORE - China and India engaged in a heated war of words in October and November, when India permitted the Dalai Lama to visit Tawang - territory in India's northeast over which China lays claim. A little over a month later, the two were coordinating their strategies at the Copenhagen climate summit, signaling there are areas where they can join together.

Will conflict or cooperation define the Sino-Indian relationship in the coming decades?

While obstacles strew the path to cooperation across the board, the fact that China and India are rising powers in an interdependent world rules out the possibility of all-out conflict. Relations in the past have been far from smooth. Frosty interactions resulting from the 1962 war over their disputed frontier only began to thaw in the 1980s.

Delhi and Beijing have come a long way since. The two have signed agreements to maintain peace along their frontier and on guiding principles for current negotiations to settle the dispute. Their armies have even engaged in joint exercises on Chinese and Indian soil. Although tension along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) erupts from time to time, the chances of all-out war have receded.

Bilateral exchanges at the political, economic, military and cultural level have developed to the extent that China and India can expect the coming decades to be defined by a competitive-cooperative relationship.

Expanding trade ties have given the two sides a huge stake in keeping co-operation alive. The value of trade between the nations is poised to reach $60 billion in 2010, from $13.6 billion in 2004 and $338 million in 1992. Cooperation between the two economies holds potential for creating what is called ‘Chindia', the largest economic powerhouse in the world. As a senior Chinese official once put it, "Chinese manufacturing plus Indian services, Chinese hardware plus Indian software, will create an ideal win-win situation for both countries."

While all this bodes well for a future that is cooperative, problems abound.

Trade is booming but tilted heavily in China's favor. While India exports raw materials to China, value-added Chinese manufactured goods are flooding India. For all the talk of collaboration in Information Technology, efforts have borne little fruit. With India making forays into hardware and China into software, both fear being dislodged by the other.

To expect the bilateral relationship to be cooperative when the border dispute is still alive is unrealistic.

Tension on the border has eased, but has not gone away. After 13 rounds of talks, the issue remains unresolved and the border has neither been demarcated in maps nor delineated on the ground. Even as China recognized India's sovereignty over the state of Sikkim in 2003, incursions still persist to this day.

Both sides continue to claim chunks of territory under the other's control. India accuses China of occupying 38,000 square kilometers in Aksai Chin in the northeastern corner of Jammu and Kashmir and of illegally holding 5,180 sq km of land in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir that Pakistan ceded to China in 1963. China lays claim to around 90,000 sq km of territory in India's northeast.
There is little reason to believe that the border dispute will be settled anytime soon. It is widely believed in India that China is loath to resolve the issue because that would enable Delhi to reduce military deployment along its China frontier. An uncertain border keeps India under pressure, unsure over China's moves. It provides China with enormous leverage it can exercise to ensure good behavior from India. What is more, with the dispute so closely linked to China's control over Tibet, a settlement will be complicated.

With the issue unlikely to be resolved anytime soon, tension along the frontier will persist. A fuzzy frontier provides room for incursion, which carries the potential of escalating into military confrontation.

Several other obstacles stand in the way of China and India engaging in real cooperation, the most important being their similar ambitions. Both see themselves as great civilizations and share a sense of having been denied their rightful place in the world order that they are determined to correct.

Delhi feels that China is uneasy with India’s growing stature and that this manifests in Beijing seeking to deny India a permanent seat on the UN Security Council and a place in regional forums like the East Asia Summit and the Asia-Pacific Economic Community (APEC). China last year also sought to block a consensus from emerging in the Nuclear Suppliers' Group (NSG) over the lifting of restrictions on global nuclear trade with India.

Each resents the other entering what they believe are spheres of influence. India is therefore suspicious of China's entry into South Asia and the Indian Ocean and its cultivation of a deeper relationship with its neighbors through economic and military aid. Many in India feel China is trying to encircle it. On its part, Beijing resents India hobnobbing with its neighbors such as Vietnam and Japan. India's joint naval exercises with Japan and the US off the Japanese coast in April, 2007 and widening to include Singapore and Australia in the Bay of Bengal five months later raised hackles in China, as did the India, Japan, US and Australia effort to form a "Quadrilateral of Democracies".

Perceived intrusions are inevitable given the overlap in the areas over which the two have historically played roles and continue to regard as their own spheres of influence.

"Chinese policymakers' preference for a balance-of-power approach in interstate relations has led them to provide military and political support to those countries that can serve as counterweights to Beijing's perceived enemies and rivals," J. Mohan Malik, an expert on Sino-Indian relations, has argued. This has pushed China to cultivate closer ties with Pakistan and provide economic and military aid, especially nuclear and missile technology. China's robust support to Pakistan is aimed at containing India.

Just as China's ties with Pakistan irk India, so Delhi's growing closeness with the Americans worries the Chinese. Chinese analysts see the US courting of India as aimed at containing China.

It is not just in their immediate neighborhood that China and India tread on each other's toes. They do so in Africa and South America, hunting for energy to fuel economic growth. Competition for oil will increase in the coming decades as their thirst for oil grows.

There have been attempts to work together in the field of energy. In 2005, for instance, China and India, along with Japan, were among nations that tried to create a loose Organization for Oil Importing Countries to enable Asian powers to cut better price deals with oil producers. But such efforts have proved non-starters.

If territorial tensions scarred the Sino-Indian relationship in the 20th century, maritime rivalry could color their relationship in the present one.

"Perhaps the most visible realm of aggressive Chinese and Indian rivalry would be in the maritime space of the Indian Ocean as India builds its naval capabilities and China determinedly invests in access and basing in the region,â€