logo
Shaky truce: Decoding China's double game

Shaky truce: Decoding China's double game

Deccan Herald24-07-2025
India's External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar visited China from July 13 to 15, to participate in the SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organisation) meeting, marking his first visit since the deadly Galwan Valley clash in 2020, where 20 Indian soldiers lost their lives in a confrontation with China's PLA. His visit comes at a time of heightened global disorder and complex geopolitical dynamics. 'The international situation, as we meet today, is very complex. As neighbouring nations and major economies, an open exchange of views and perspectives between India and China is very important,' Jaishankar said in Beijing..This meeting was diplomatically significant given the prolonged freeze in high-level visits and the ongoing military standoff at various friction points along the Line of Actual Control (LAC). While Jaishankar emphasised the need to maintain dialogue and respect mutual sensitivities, the context in which the visit occurred reveals the larger structural tensions between the two nations..China continues to advocate for cooperation with India, particularly in trade and economic engagement. However, it simultaneously maintains military pressure along the border and supports India's strategic rivals. India has repeatedly emphasised that border tensions cannot be delinked from the overall bilateral relationship. Despite this, China's strategy appears to keep the border issue unresolved, leveraging it as a psychological and strategic tool to constrain India's rise..Though agreements on patrolling arrangements were reached just before the Modi-Xi meeting in Kazan in 2024 and a partial disengagement occurred, Indian and Chinese troops remain face-to-face at many friction points. China's aim seems to be to keep India diplomatically stretched, focused on continental threats, and distracted from maritime, economic, and technological aspirations..Ahead of Jaishankar's visit, tensions rose over India's engagement with the Dalai Lama. Indian leaders extended birthday greetings, while the Dalai Lama asserted that his successor would be born in a 'free country' – a subtle rebuke to China's claims. In response, the Chinese embassy in New Delhi warned that India was 'shooting itself in the foot' by raising Tibet-related issues..Chinese embassy spokesperson Yu Jing criticised sections of India's strategic and academic community for making 'improper remarks' regarding the Dalai Lama's reincarnation. She reiterated that the matter is an 'internal affair' of China and demanded that India respect Beijing's sovereignty and sensitivities concerning Tibet. This reaction reflects a stark asymmetry: while China demands respect for its internal affairs, it shows little regard for India's core security interests..China's duplicity is stark in its growing support for Pakistan, providing military hardware, satellite intelligence, and diplomatic backing. Over 80% of Pakistan's major defense systems are Chinese-made. Despite deadly attacks like the April 2025 Pahalgam incident, Beijing continues to shield Pakistan-based terrorists from UN sanctions. Adding to this, China, Pakistan, and Bangladesh have informally aligned to sideline Indian-led multilateral platforms – an evident strategy of regional encirclement. Yet, China expects India to respect its internal affairs while actively undermining India's sovereignty..As the defence expert Brigadier (Retd) PK Sehgal notes, Beijing condemns terrorism in principle but blocks action against it in practice. Strategic analyst Seshadri Chari similarly highlights China's disregard for India's core security concerns, be it terrorism or territorial integrity..China's global influence stems largely from its economic might. Controlling 90% of rare earth exports and dominating manufacturing, Beijing has become indispensable to the global economy. India, too, remains reliant on China for key imports like Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs), electronics, and rare earths..Though Jaishankar raised rare earth restrictions with his Chinese counterpart, the broader issue persists: India and the world have allowed excessive economic dependence on China, giving Beijing enormous leverage. Even the US, under Donald Trump, attempted to challenge this dominance but softened its stance due to these entanglements..The Quad, despite its strategic potential, has not effectively addressed this geoeconomic imbalance. Without confronting the roots of China's economic power, the geopolitical contest remains lopsided. This unchecked dominance also shields China's internal repression from global scrutiny. In Tibet, forced boarding schools and 'Sinification' campaigns aim to erase cultural identity. China's manipulation of the Dalai Lama's reincarnation process is part of a broader control strategy. In Xinjiang, widespread abuses against Uyghur Muslims continue with little international outcry, muted by economic interests..Strategic path ahead.During the SCO meeting, Jaishankar indirectly criticised the organisation for not living up to its foundational principles of fighting terrorism, separatism, and extremism. Referring to the Pahalgam attack, he reminded the grouping of the UN Security Council's strong condemnation and pressed the SCO to take a firm stand against terrorism. He emphasised mutual respect and sensitivity as pillars for future ties, making it clear that China must also acknowledge India's concerns, not just demand deference..Despite continuing tensions, India-China trade has grown, revealing India's challenges in reducing dependence. This underscores the need for a deeper geoeconomic strategy rooted in self-reliance, supply chain diversification, and strategic partnerships focused on critical technologies and minerals. Efforts like the Quad Critical Minerals Initiative are in the right direction, but need much more follow-through..India-China relations today are not merely bilateral – they are emblematic of a deeper structural contest between two civilisational states with divergent worldviews. While China uses its economic and geopolitical clout to constrain India, it demands unreciprocated respect for its internal concerns. Unless India adopts a comprehensive strategy that addresses both the border dispute and economic dependencies, China will continue to dominate the narrative and the balance of power..(The writer is an associate research fellow at the International Centre for Peace Studies, New Delhi)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Seize this moment': Anand Mahindra advises India to do a 1991-like 'Manthan' to find economic 'Amrit' amid Trump tariffs
'Seize this moment': Anand Mahindra advises India to do a 1991-like 'Manthan' to find economic 'Amrit' amid Trump tariffs

Economic Times

time12 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

'Seize this moment': Anand Mahindra advises India to do a 1991-like 'Manthan' to find economic 'Amrit' amid Trump tariffs

Anand Mahindra suggests India should respond to US tariffs with economic reforms. He compares the situation to the 1991 crisis. Mahindra urges focus on investment and ease of business. He recommends single-window clearances and better infrastructure. Faster visa approvals are needed to boost tourism. Reforms in MSMEs and manufacturing are also essential. Mahindra emphasizes making India greater than ever. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Manthan' for 'Amrit' 'Unintended consequences' of the tariff war Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Focus on investment, ease of business, and tourism Reforms needed in MSMEs and manufacturing Amid rising global trade tensions, Anand Mahindra has called on India to seize the moment and pursue deep structural reforms instead of retaliating against the United States' decision to impose a steep 50% tariff on Indian goods. In a post on X, the Mahindra Group chairperson likened the situation to the 1991 economic crisis, which triggered liberalisation, and suggested that today's tariff standoff could serve as a similar turning point for bold domestic referred to the ongoing global trade disruptions as a kind of modern-day 'Manthan'—a churning that, if responded to wisely, could produce 'Amrit' or long-term economic benefits for India. Citing the 'law of unintended consequences,' he pointed to how the tariff war has nudged Europe into higher defence spending and fiscal flexibility, while Canada has begun dismantling internal trade barriers to strengthen its economic resilience. He urged India to respond in kind by radically improving the ease of doing business, creating a single-window investment system, and unlocking tourism as a key source of foreign exchange and Mahindra, chairperson of Mahindra Group, has called on India to respond with economic reforms instead of retaliation after US President Donald Trump announced a 50% tariff on Indian goods on a post on X, Mahindra likened the global trade tensions to India's 1991 foreign exchange crisis, which led to major economic reforms. He suggested that the current situation could also become a turning point for transformative pointed to the 'law of unintended consequences,' saying that other countries are using the disruption caused by the tariff war to push much-needed structural reforms. He said Europe and Canada are adapting in ways that could have long-term global benefits.'The 'law of unintended consequences' seems to be operating stealthily in the prevailing tariff war unleashed by the U.S. Two examples: The EU may appear to have accepted the evolving global tariff regime, responding with its own strategic adjustments. Yet the friction has…'He said France and Germany have increased defence spending, while Germany has started to move away from strict fiscal discipline, which may support economic revival. In Canada, he noted that the country is removing internal trade barriers that have held back economic integration.'These 'unintended consequences' could become long-term positives for global growth,' Mahindra wrote, urging India to create its own version of a virtuous consequence instead of merely reacting to external attract global investors looking for stable and predictable policies, Mahindra said India must make it easier to do business. He recommended the creation of a single-window clearance system, better infrastructure, and globally benchmarked tourism also called for faster visa approvals to unlock the full potential of tourism, which he said can become a major driver of employment and foreign listed several areas for immediate reforms. These include improved liquidity for MSMEs, faster rollout of infrastructure projects, expanding the production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme, and rationalising import duties on manufacturing inputs.'We cannot fault others for putting their nations first. But we should be moved to make our own nation greater than ever,' he wrote.

PM to visit China for SCO Summit
PM to visit China for SCO Summit

Hans India

time14 minutes ago

  • Hans India

PM to visit China for SCO Summit

New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi will visit China to attend the regional summit SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organisation) in Tianjin city from August 31 to September 1 - signalling another step towards normalising ties between the two nations that had frayed after the Galwan clash of 2020. Modi's last visit to China was in 2019. But he had met Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the BRICS Summit in Kazan in October 2024. The visit comes amid the imposition of stiff tariffs from US president Donald Trump and increasing pressure on India regarding oil purchase from Russia. There is expectation that under the circumstances, India's recalibration of ties with China is expected to act as a balancing factor for the US. India's participation would also be in the backdrop of Chinese support for Pakistan and the shadow of Pahalgam attack. In June, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh had refused to sign a joint statement at a defence minister's meet under SCO because it skipped any mention of the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack that claimed 26 lives and instead, mentioned Balochistan, tacitly accusing India of creating unrest there. Pahalgam's exclusion from the document appeared to have been done at the behest of Pakistan. The next month, though, China issued a strong statement against terror as the US designated The Resistance Front, a proxy of Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba, as a foreign terrorist organisation for its involvement in the Pahalgam attack. "China firmly opposes all forms of terrorism and strongly condemns the terrorist attack that occurred on April 22... China calls on regional countries to enhance counterterrorism cooperation and jointly maintain regional security and stability," said Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian. This time at the SCO, discussions with 10 member countries is expected to cover terrorism and regional security along with trade. Efforts will be made to restore stability and dialogue in India-China relations. There is a possibility that PM Modi will have bilateral meetings with Russian President Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the summit. In October 2024, PM Modi and Xi Jinping had met at the BRICS summit in Kazan. Following that, efforts to reduce border tensions between the two countries had gained momentum and the resumption of the Kailash-Mansarovar yatra had helped normalise ties to a great extent. Established in 2001, SCO aims to promote regional stability through cooperation. The bloc currently has 10 member states -- Belarus, China, India, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

India, Russia vow to enhance defence ties
India, Russia vow to enhance defence ties

Hans India

time14 minutes ago

  • Hans India

India, Russia vow to enhance defence ties

Moscow: Russia's Deputy Defence Minister Colonel General Aleksandr Fomin on Wednesday held a meeting with Vinay Kumar, India's Ambassador to Russia, as both sides discussed ways to further intensify the multifaceted India-Russia Special Privileged Strategic Partnership. 'During the talks, the sides discussed topical issues of bilateral cooperation in the defence sphere, confirmed the focus on further strengthening the specialised cooperation in the form of a particularly privileged strategic partnership,' read a statement issued by the Russian Defence Ministry. 'The meeting took place in a warm and friendly atmosphere, which is traditional for the Russian-Indian relations,' it added. India has a longstanding and wide-ranging cooperation with Russia in the field of defence, which is guided by the India-Russia Inter-Governmental Commission on Military and Military Technical Cooperation (IRIGC-MMTC) headed by the Defence Ministers of both countries. As time-tested partners, both countries have been involved in several bilateral projects, including the supply of S-400, licensed production of T-90 tanks and Su-30 MKI, supply of MiG-29 and Kamov helicopters, INS Vikramaditya (formerly Admiral Gorshkov), production of AK-203 rifles in India and BrahMos missiles. New Delhi and Moscow acknowledge that the military technical cooperation has evolved over time from a buyer-seller framework to one involving joint research and development, co-development and joint production of advanced defence technology and systems. As the Indian Armed Forces successfully retaliated and also inflicted significant losses on Pakistan during the decisive Operation Sindoor in May this year, the S-400 air defence system was credited with shooting down several incoming missiles from across the border. Considering the strategic planning and military preparedness, New Delhi is set to procure more S-400 air defence systems soon. Meanwhile, National Security Advisor (NSA) Ajit Doval is also in Moscow, holding meetings with senior Russian officials to discuss India-Russia defence and security cooperation.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store