
Trump is pushing India back toward China
(You can now subscribe to our
(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel
It may be another case of the adage: The enemy of my enemy is my friend.Either way, it has come as a welcome surprise for China to see its top global rival, the United States, pick a fight with Beijing's biggest Asian competitor, India Relations between Washington and New Delhi are on the fritz after the Trump administration threatened this month to double tariffs on Indian goods to a whopping 50%, citing India's imports of Russian oil.The sudden rift threatens to undermine years of growing cooperation between the United States and India in areas like security and technology that had been fueled in large part by a shared desire to keep China's global ambitions in check.It has also injected new momentum into an easing of tensions between China and India, which had ramped up in recent years. The thaw started in earnest in October when President Xi Jinping of China met with Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India at a summit of emerging economies in Kazan, Russia. Since then, the two countries have increased official visits and discussed easing trade barriers and the movement of people."I assume that there is a certain amount of schadenfreude among some folks in Beijing when they look at the trade issues between India and the United States," said Manoj Kewalramani, head of Indo-Pacific studies at the Takshashila Institution in Bangalore, India. "A breakdown of political trust between New Delhi and Washington works in Beijing's favor."To be sure, there is still much that divides the two Asian giants. That includes control of a 2,100-mile shared border; China's coziness with India's adversary, Pakistan; and India's ambition to attract the multinational manufacturers that have been trying to reduce their dependence on China.The October meeting between Modi and Xi was the first time the two leaders had spoken in person since a 2019 summit in India, a year before relations cratered following a deadly Himalayan border fight between Chinese and Indian troops.Since the Russia talks, the two countries have eased travel visa restrictions and are working to restore direct flights. In June, Beijing allowed pilgrims from India to visit holy sites in Tibet. China and India are also in discussions to reopen three trading posts along their mountainous boundary, Randhir Jaiswal, the spokesperson for India's foreign ministry, said last week.China's top diplomat, Wang Yi, is scheduled to arrive in India on Monday for the latest round of talks on border issues. It would be the first time Wang has visited India in more than three years.This month, Modi will visit China for the first time in seven years to attend a regional security summit meeting in the northeastern city of Tianjin. Xi and President Vladimir Putin of Russia will also attend, bringing together three leaders at odds, to varying degrees, with the United States.The Modi government has also been careful not to raise the Indian public's ire over the way China helped Pakistan's military during a clash with Indian forces in May -- a sign of New Delhi's commitment to smoother relations with Beijing.Vijay Gokhale, a former Indian ambassador to Beijing, said in an opinion piece in The Times of India published Tuesday that China and India still had many diverging interests. But he wrote that China provided India and other developing countries a crucial counterbalance to "Trumpian disorder" as a source of capital and technology and as a partner in fighting climate change."China is beginning to look better than at any time in the previous five years," Gokhale wrote.Beijing has responded to India's friendlier posture with cautious optimism, taking into account the chance that the reorientation could simply be a play to hedge against the Trump administration, analysts said.Xi called this year for relations to resemble a harmonious "dragon-elephant tango" in a nod to the two countries' symbolic creatures. Despite the gesture, China continues to fortify its border with India by building new roads, rail networks and villages that can also serve the Chinese military.The two powers are also vying for influence across the Indian Ocean, the crucial waterway for Beijing's Belt and Road Initiative, a global infrastructure project intended to deepen China's supply chain networks.One of the biggest drivers of tension with India from China's perspective is the suspicion that New Delhi was abandoning its historically nonaligned foreign policy to move further into Washington's sphere. Beijing points to the Quad defense group, which brings together four large democracies -- India, the United States, Japan and Australia -- to counter China's military rise.Whether the next meeting of Quad leaders, expected later this year in India, goes ahead will depend on whether the Trump administration and New Delhi are able to mend their trade spat and rebuild trust, an Indian official said.Still, if Indian officials want to improve ties with China, they will have to do it on Beijing's terms, analysts said.That means opening up India more to Chinese firms and investment and continuing to loosen restrictions on visas for Chinese businesspeople. India has blocked Chinese carmaker BYD from setting up factories and has banned Chinese apps including TikTok "If India seeks to improve its relations with China, China welcomes that," said Lin Minwang, an expert on China's relations with South Asia at Fudan University in Shanghai. "However, China will not make significant concessions or sacrifices to accommodate India's so-called diplomatic posture."Lin said China will not budge on its national interests, even those that irk New Delhi the most, such as Beijing's close support for Pakistan.India is also wary, Modi having been bitten once before after trusting Xi too readily, other analysts have said."India's current approach is primarily driven by strategic calculations," Lin said. "Given its deteriorating relations with the United States, it has adopted some China-friendly gestures. I believe the Chinese side will at least assess these developments cautiously."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hans India
a few seconds ago
- Hans India
'India is proud of your feat', says PM Modi to IAF Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla
IAF Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla on Monday met with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, after his successful mission to the International Space Station -- a first ever by an Indian. The meeting, which took place at the PM's official residence in New Delhi, saw Shukla apprising the Prime Minister of his mission, in which the Indian astronaut played a key role as part of the crew. Shukla also shared photos clicked from space and also discussed experience with the Prime Minister -- crucial for India's future space endeavours, especially the Gaganyaan mission -- the country's first human spaceflight mission. "Had a great interaction with Shubhanshu Shukla. We discussed a wide range of subjects, including his experiences in space, progress in science and technology, as well as India's ambitious Gaganyaan mission," PM Modi shared in a post on social media platform X. "India is proud of his feat," he added. In June, Shukla became the first Indian to reach the International Space Station (ISS). He returned on July 15, after an 18-day mission, which was packed with several experiments led by ISRO and other activities on the orbital lab. Since then, he has been undergoing rehabilitation in the US. He returned to India early on Sunday morning. During his Independence Day address to the nation, PM Modi hailed Shukla's mission to the orbital post, stating that Shukla has inspired a billion dreams and taken a significant step in advancing India's space ambitions. 'IAF Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla is back from the International Space Station (ISS). Soon he will return to India. We are working on becoming self-reliant in the space sector, preparing for the launch of Gaganyaan, which is India's flagship human spaceflight programme. We will make our own space station,' the Prime Minister said in his address. Earlier in the day, Parliament honoured the Indian Air Force pilot. The discussion was filled with praise and a strong sense of national pride, even as opposition parties staged a boycott. Union Minister of State for Science and Technology Jitendra Singh led the session, highlighting Shukla's accomplishments and their importance for India's space ambitions. Parliament described Group Captain Shukla's achievement as a new chapter in India's space exploration, noting that it not only advanced homegrown science but also inspired a generation of young Indians to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering, and space. Shukla's Ax-4 mission, carried out with international partners, was hailed for providing vital experience and strengthening India's ambitions for its upcoming human spaceflight programme, Gaganyaan.


Hindustan Times
a few seconds ago
- Hindustan Times
Firewalling the poll process from politics
An unusually combative press conference addressed by chief election commissioner (CEC) Gyanesh Kumar on Sunday underlined the trust deficit between the poll watchdog and the Opposition that can cast a shadow on the poll process. At the press conference, the first by CEC Kumar since he took over and the first since the controversial special intensive revision (SIR) drive in Bihar, the poll body termed the Opposition's allegations of 'vote theft' false and baseless, calling upon Congress leader Rahul Gandhi to provide proof of his claims or withdraw his remarks. Instead of resorting to examples involving mothers and daughters to grandstand on privacy, the poll body should consider issuing objective rebuttals of the allegations made, like it did when charges were made against electronic voting machines earlier. (ANI) As the custodian of the world's largest democracy, the Election Commission of India (ECI) has a right to defend itself and the sanctity of the poll process. And it is also true that some of the purported issues alleged with the voter roll — such as that of duplicate names or dodgy addresses — are legacy issues that lingered for decades and across multiple governments. But turning this exchange into a political showdown will serve neither ECI nor Indian democracy well. It should instead consider the principles of transparency and inclusiveness, upheld by the Supreme Court, which ordered ECI to publish details of all 6.5 million deletions from the rolls in Bihar and accept Aadhaar as a valid document in SIR despite the poll body's apparent reluctance. Instead of resorting to examples involving mothers and daughters to grandstand on privacy, the poll body should consider issuing objective rebuttals of the allegations made (like it did when charges were made against electronic voting machines earlier) and accept lacunae in the process if any exist. CEC Kumar has already conceded the risks of a hurried clean-up of voter rolls. ECI should now attempt to address lingering concerns over the poll process by exercising maximum transparency within the bounds of the law.
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
a few seconds ago
- First Post
‘Russia's war is made possible by crucial Chinese support': Germany demolishes Trump's India tariff logic
German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul accused China of enabling Russia's war in Ukraine by supplying vital goods and buying Russian oil and gas. His remarks in Tokyo came ahead of Trump, Zelenskyy, and EU leaders' talks on Russia's war against Ukraine. On Monday, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul blasted China for giving Russia substantial support for its war against Ukraine. His comments preceded a scheduled meeting between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, US President Donald Trump, and European leaders to address Moscow's ongoing war against Kyiv. 'Russia's war is made possible by crucial Chinese support,' Wadephul said during a speech at the Sasakawa Peace Foundation in Tokyo, where he is visiting Japan. According to the minister, '80 percent of the dual-use goods that Russia uses come from China. And at the same time, China is the largest buyer of Russian oil and gas. And this is a development that of course not only runs massively counter to our European security interests, but also those of our partners in the Indo-Pacific.' STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Trump has threatened secondary sanctions against countries that buy Russian energy before, and he has also put a 25 percent tariff on India for buying Russian oil, along with another 25 percent tariff because of trade disputes. But China hasn't seen any of the same actions taken against it. Wadephul said that Beijing's actions 'show that China preaches the principles of non-interference and territorial integrity, but in reality undermines them.' His comments show that the current German government is critical of China. This is in line with the harder line taken by former foreign minister Annalena Baerbock, who called Chinese President Xi Jinping a dictator, and different from the more cautious approach taken by former chancellor Angela Merkel. The minister also drew attention to reports of North Korea sending ammunition and troops to Russia, claiming such support would not be possible without China's involvement. 'If Russia is firing North Korean artillery shells on Ukraine today, then this undermines the security order in Europe, but it also upsets the balance of power in Asia. Because it is clear that Russia is showing its gratitude to North Korea for this assistance by transferring technology and expertise,' Wadephul said. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Speaking to reporters in Tokyo earlier, he also raised concerns about rising tensions in the Taiwan Strait and the South China Sea, warning that Beijing 'repeatedly threatens, more or less openly, to unilaterally change the status quo and shift its borders.' 'However, one thing is clear,' he added. 'The prohibition of violence enshrined in the United Nations Charter applies, and any escalation at this sensitive hub of international trade would have serious consequences for global security and the world economy.'