Sunday, November 22, 2009

b raman: Obama's failure to understand India's distrust of China by B Raman

nov 21st, 2009

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sanjeev Nayyar

Obama's Failure to Understand Indian Distrust of China

by B. Raman http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/papers36/paper3511.html

The failure of President Barack Obama to understand the distrust of China in large sections of the Indian civil society has landed the US in a situation in which the considerable goodwill between India and the US created during the administration of his predecessor George Bush stands in danger of being diluted by his unthinking words and actions.

2. The distrust of China in the Indian civil society is much deeper than even the distrust of Pakistan. Even today, despite Pakistan's continued use of terrorism against India, there is some goodwill for the people of Pakistan in many sections of the Indian civil society. As against this, outside the traditional communist and other leftist circles, one would hardly find any section which trusts China ---its Government as well as its people.

3. The Indian distrust of China arises  mainly from three factors. First, the Sino-Indian war of 1962. Second, China's role in giving Pakistan a military nuclear and missile capability for use against India. Third, the Chinese blockage of the pre 26/11 efforts in the sanctions committee of the UN Security Council to declare the Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JUD), the parent organisation of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET), as a terrorist organisation and its subsequent opposition for a similar declaration against the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JED).

4. The dubious Chinese stand on the issue of Pakistani use of terrorism against India is viewed by many in India as amounting to collusion.

5. The Indian suspicions of China have been magnified in recent years by Beijing's Look South policy. China is not a South Asian power, but it has sought to create for itself a large South Asian presence by developing a military supply relationship with the countries of the region, by helping India's neighbours in the development of their infrastructure of strategic importance such as ports and by supporting the Maoists of Nepal.

6. At a time when concerns in India over the increasing Chinese strategic presence and influence in India's neigbourhood have been increasing, it is an amazingly shocking act of insensitivity on the part of Obama and his policy advisers to project China as a benign power with a benevolent role in South Asia---- whether for promoting understanding between India and Pakistan or for influencing developments in other countries of the region.

7. It is politically naive on the part of Obama to expect that Indian political and public opinion will accept any role for China in South Asia in matters which impact on India's core interests. Bush's China policy had favourable vibrations in India by highlighting the threats that are likely to be posed by its military modernisation made possible by its economic power. A convergence of concerns over China between Washington and New Delhi laid the foundation for the strategic relationship between the countries.

8. Obama's projection of China as a trustworthy partner of the US in jointly tackling long-standing contentious issues in South Asia shows a shocking ignorance of the fact that China was one of the causes of the persistence of these issues. Its effort has always been not to promote mutual understanding and harmony in South Asia, but to keep India isolated by keeping alive the old distrusts and animosities and creating new ones.

9. At a time when Indian public opinion was looking forward to fruitful results from the forthcoming visit of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to the US, reports from Beijing on Obama's visit to China would strengthen the impression that Obama is not India's cup of tea.

(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also associated with the Chennai Centre For China Studies. E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com)


4 comments:

CVSMurty said...

China is the biggest risk to the world economy. Read the following story:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/6575883/China-has-now-become-the-biggest-risk-to-the-world-economy.html

-Satya

witan said...

Is Obamamania being whipped up in Amreeka? It appears to be so. There are indications that schoolchildren are being brainwashed to look upon Obama as a sort of superman. It is even reminiscent of the tactics used by Hitler.

The ‘Fourth Graders For Obama’ YouTube Channel; by John Nolte

Feeling the Obama Love -- Posted By Bethany Stotts On November 6, 2009

Nine of the eleven videos have been "removed by the user", but the transcripts of all are available at: ELEMENTARY EPIDEMIC: 11 Uncovered Videos Show School Children Performing Praises to Obama -- by John Nolte

Links to the surviving two videos are:
http://v7.lscache4.c.youtube.com/videoplayback?ip=0.0.0.0&sparams=id%2Cexpire%2Cip%2Cipbits%2Citag%2Calgorithm%2Cburst%2Cfactor&algorithm=throttle-factor&itag=34&ipbits=0&burst=40&sver=3&expire=1258970400&key=yt1&signature=9A35A95D0C8E46E185C0198730169D9CA1768BE7.6387C7230AC90BF36DE13924F96348B031191E4B&factor=1.25&id=0de291d1e5364ab3 and
http://www.youtube.com/get_video?video_id=755vrFw4vSo&t=vjVQa1PpcFOqllEd5dYTvLKh-EMFa1zbHliSlUOdOBE%3D

witan said...

"India's “distrust” of China"? What about the following: Chinese go home, power projects hit
"A shortage of 3,000 Chinese professionals could derail the addition of 30,000 mega watts to India’s power capacity, the ministry of power has warned. The reason: new visa norms imposed by the ministry of home affairs and the new labour norms by the ministry of labour and employment.

“A large number of power projects of 30,000 mw capacity are being constructed through Chinese companies,” said a November 17 letter to Cabinet Secretary K.M. Chandrasekhar by Power Secretary H.S. Brahma. “Chinese personnel working at these projects with business visas were repatriated. This has affected the construction and commissioning activities.”

Of these, projects of 4,000 mw “urgently require services of Chinese engineers for commissioning activities”, the letter said.

The Indian Embassy at Beijing is not issuing employment visas to Chinese engineers despite clearance from ministry of home affairs, Brahma said.

“More than 3,000 Chinese engineers and semi-skilled professionals working on business visas at various power project sites have been sent back,” a power ministry official said."


In the first place, how did so many thousand Chinese "workers" get into India to work in crucial and sensitive projects like those in power production? Does it show any distrust of the Chinese?

asd123 said...

@Murty

China is just a scapegoat for westerners and their ponzi schemes.

Literally, in nominal terms China is still only about 1/10th the size of the EU+US economy put together. The Westerners are destroying themselves in reality, no one forced them (specifically the UK+US) to turn into financial hot money centers.