The Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi
was in Delhi on 13 August 2016 for talks with his counterpart EAM Sushma
Swaraj. As is customary, FM Wang Yi also had an audience with PM Modi. The main purpose of Wang’s visit, according to the
Xinhua, was to “conduct strategic communications with India”. In other
words, what did the Chinese FM wish to convey, what did he seek from India and
eventually did he succeed in his mission?
Conversations between PM Modi, Sushma Swaraj and Wang Yi are, of course,
not in the public domain and neither have these conversations been spelt out in
greater detail by either side, but reading between the lines the contours are
ever so slightly visible. This must also be placed alongside the current state
of the overall relationship between the two countries for a better
appreciation. There is no doubt that after the NSG
episode and the earlier “technical hold” that China had placed on India’s
application to include JeM Chief Masood Azar in UN Sanctions list, bilateral
relations are indeed under some considerable stress. Needlessly, the Chinese
have brought themselves to this pass, when they looked the other way when their
“iron friend” indulged in thoughtless adventurism by encouraging terrorist
attacks against mainland India.
The Chinese press [Xinhua] maintains that at the end of Wang Yi’s visit that
a “consensus” was reached that the “two sides
agreed to strengthen mutual support over the successful organization of the
upcoming G20 and BRICS Summits” and that China is willing to “boost
mutual support with India towards this end”. The Chinese have also made it
clear that the South China Sea [SCS] issue was of vital national concern and
that India should “fully comprehend Beijing’s concerns”. In other words, a warning for India: do not take any stand that hurts
China’s vital national interests! Probably what Wang Yi had in mind was
that a repeat of phrase used in the joint communique issued at the end of the FMs
trilateral meeting [Russia, China and India] in Moscow earlier this year, could
be used once again. According to the Chinese, India had agreed that the SCS
issue be addressed through talks between the parties concerned. Has India agreed
to this formulation for the G20 and BRICS summits?
As for India’s concerns regarding Masood Azar; these were airily
dismissed by advising India not to let “individual
problems obstruct the course of co-operation”, but curiously Xinhua also
suggested that both sides had reached a consensus that “individual problems [Masood Azar] will eventually be solved through strengthening
of mutual trust and reduction of unnecessary misunderstandings”. How is
this “trust” to be achieved and will China take the first step to remove these “unnecessary
misunderstandings”? From the look of things, it hardly seems likely; given the
state of relations that exist between China and Pakistan at present. So a
stalemate on this issue between India and China is very likely to continue.
On the NSG issue the Chinese who are adept at obfuscating facts, denied
that they were the prime movers in blocking India’s attempt to gain entry. While
loudly proclaiming that India has “wrongly” blamed China for blocking its entry
into the NSG, the Chinese tried to morph Indian public opinion in their favor by
stating that the door for entry was “not tightly shut”. However, Wang Yi
appears only to have conceded the need for further talks by offering to let the
chief Chinese negotiator meet his Indian counter-part. But there is a catch
here too. According to Xinhua, “future discussions
between India and China can only proceed on the basis of safeguarding an
International non-proliferation mechanism”. So will the Chinese lift
their objections to India’s entry to the NSG? Again hardly likely! All the spin
about talks is designed to lull opposition till the G20 summit is over; the successful
holding of which is a prime Chinese political requirement, particularly as
President Xi Jinping is himself personally committed and his prestige is
involved.
It seems that during Wang Yi’s visit the Sino-Indian boundary issue was
also touched upon and the need to strengthen border management. As regards the
Sino-Indian boundary issue, the eastern sector is the most important and
sensitive from India’s point of view. Sometimes it
remains problematical as to why we do not press the Chinese harder in this
sector for clarification of the LAC. On 4 November 1962, PM Zhou Enlai
wrote an official letter to Nehru and confirmed that “in
the east the LAC coincides with the McMahon Line”. Zhou also
sarcastically noted that “I believe the Indian government must be having in its
possession the original McMahon map”. Quite rightly so, it does. And the
Chinese government also has in its possession a copy of the original McMahon
map, which they inherited from the Tibetan authorities when they occupied
Lhasa. So with both the Indian and the Chinese authorities having in their
possession the original McMahon map, it should be easy to read off the co-ordinates
and settle the LAC and to demarcate it. But the Chinese realize that if they were to
do that, they in other words, would be confirming the McMahon Line and its
demarcation.
It is this commitment that the Chinese try to avoid when they obfuscate
the whole process of LAC clarification. We should not let them get away with
it.
No comments:
Post a Comment