widely covered ‘selfie’ picture with his Chinese counterpart, Li Keqiang.
The Indian leader was intent on securing maximum economic benefits from the trip. For long, India has complained about bilateral trade imbalances, which have been exacerbated by Chinese restrictions on imports of value-added Indian goods and services such as pharmaceuticals and IT expertise. India suffers a massive trade deficit with China, which increased by about 34 percent in 2014-15 and reached as high as $48bn.
Modi sought China to leverage its vast financial resources to help India address its$1 trillion infrastructure spending needs. The creation of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, which includes India among its key founding members, was largely motivated by China’s interest in playing a more decisive role in revamping the region’s economic landscape. The two sides signed 21 trade and investment deals worth up to $22bn during Modi’s visit. So Modi isn’t going home empty-handed, though India surely expects even greater economic commitment from China.
The elephant in the room, however, is the Sino-Indian 4,000km-long disputed border in the Himalayas, the Line of Actual Control (LAC), which sparked a brief and bitter war back in 1962 – and has since embittered bilateral relations.
During his trip, Modi bluntly reminded his counterpart about “the need for China to reconsider its approach” on their territorial disputes and emphasised how they “should take a strategic and long-term view of our relations”. For optimists, however, there are two reasons to look forward to a potential thaw in bilateral territorial disputes.
First, Modi’s strong nationalist credentials and extensive control over India’s foreign policy apparatus provide him with significant political capital to make necessary compromises for a lasting de-escalation in Sino-Indian border disputes. Modi enjoys unparalleled popularity at home, and hardly anyone can accuse the charismatic Indian leader of lacking patriotism and foreign policy vigour.
Second, China’s festering maritime disputes with its neighbours along the East and South China Seas, which has drawn US naval muscle in, may encourage Beijing to dial down border tensions with India in order to avoid full encirclement.
The short-term prospects for a qualitative improvement in Sino-Indian border disputes, however, are dim. While India has pushed ahead with fortifying its position in disputed borders, China has also shown little appetite for compromise.
Last year, Xi’s visit to India coincided with a dangerous escalation along the LAC, as People’s Liberation Army forces reasserted China’s claim in the area. It is highly doubtful that Modi and Xi will agree on any workable mechanism for managing their border disputes in the foreseeable future.
Beijing has also been irked by Modi’s decision to move closer to Washington and Tokyo, with India more explicitly and consistently criticising China’s maritime assertiveness in South China Sea in recent years.
Overall, Modi’s trip to China paved the way for sufficient diplomatic rapport and economic interdependence to avoid a full estrangement between the two giant neighbours. But there was just so much that smiles and a single state visit could do.
Excerpted from: ‘Modi’s tricky trip to China’.
Courtesy: Aljazeera.com
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