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Sieren’s China: Complicated ties with India, US

  • February 28, 2020

Ahead of his India visit, Donald Trump claimed Prime Minister Narendra Modi had promised millions of cheering fans would attend his address at the world’s biggest cricket stadium in Ahmedabad. In the end, some 100,000 people turned up to hear him speak.

President Trump thanked Modi for the attention on his first state visit to India — which included posters celebrating “two strong nations, one great friendship” — and praised India as a “miracle of democracy”, saying its rise as a “prosperous, independent nation” was “inspiring.”

Read more: India protesters disappointed by Trump’s support for Modi

The two leaders, who have described each other as “friends,” have met five times over the past eight months. Not only because they are both showmen, populists and protectionists in their own way, but because they share a desire to stem the rise of China. Both countries recognize the geopolitical challenge posed by Beijing. India is threatened by Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative, and feels surrounded by China’s alliances with its neighbors Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka and archrival Pakistan.

  • Trump and Modi and welcome guards (Reuters/A. Drago)

    In pictures: Trump visits Modi in India

    Modi meets Trump in his home state

    After a 17-hour journey, US President Donald Trump touched down in Ahmedabad, marking the start of his first visit to India as president. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi welcomed the US leader and first lady Melania Trump to his home state of Gujarat. The visit is intended to jump-start ties between the world’s two biggest democracies, which have recently been strained under trade tensions.

  • Indien Unruhen in Neu Delhi (picture-alliance/Xinhua News Agency/Str)

    In pictures: Trump visits Modi in India

    Violence overshadows visit

    Seven people were killed and at least 90 injured in violent riots on the sidelines of Trump’s visit. India has experienced weeks of unrest since a controversial new citizenship law came into force in December. Critics say the law discriminates against Muslims. The latest violence erupted when hundreds of supporters and opponents of the law clashed in a Muslim-dominated area of Delhi on Sunday.

  • Trump and Modi in India (Getty Images/AFP/M. Ngan)

    In pictures: Trump visits Modi in India

    Thousands of spectators gather at new stadium

    The visit featured a mega-rally at the city’s newly-built cricket stadium — billed as the biggest in the world with its capacity to hold 100,000 people. The 22-kilometer (14-mile) stretch is lined with huge billboards featuring Modi and the Trumps.

  • Indien | Donald Trump auf Staatsbesuch in Indien: Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner neben Sicherheitsberater Robert O'Brien (Reuters/A. Drago)

    In pictures: Trump visits Modi in India

    Trump’s delegation

    Trump’s daughter Ivanka, his son-in-law Jared Kushner, and US National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien also attended the “Namaste Trump” event at Sardar Patel Gujarat Stadium.

  • Protesters hold posters criticizing Donald Trump (Getty Images/AFP/D. Dutta)

    In pictures: Trump visits Modi in India

    Left-party activists protest visit

    Activists of left-wing parties gathered in the city of Guwahati, in the northeastern state of Assam, to protest Trump’s visit to India. Assam has seen an outbreak of protests against the Modi government’s controversial citizenship bill, which some say undermine India’s secular traditions and excludes Muslim Indians.

  • Bricklayers build a wall in front of slum (picture-alliance/AP Photo/A. Solanki)

    In pictures: Trump visits Modi in India

    India builds wall to hide slums

    Trump’s three-hour visit to Ahmedabad may cost civic authorities $13 million (€12 million), according to some estimates. This includes a wall built to hide one of the slums adjacent to the road expected to be used by Trump.

  • Locals stand in front of a Trump-Modi billboard, one man carries large sack on his back (picture-alliance/AP Photo/A. Solanki)

    In pictures: Trump visits Modi in India

    Security measures tightened

    ITC Maurya, the five-star hotel where Trump will be staying, has been turned into a fortress. Located in the city’s secure Diplomatic Enclave, the hotel will not be accessible to the general public and all the 400+ rooms have been booked. Security teams from both the army and paramilitary forces will be patrolling the roads near the hotel and armed with snipers and sharp shooters.

  • Trumps tour Taj Mahal

    In pictures: Trump visits Modi in India

    Trumps tour Taj Mahal

    Trump and his wife visited the Taj Mahal in Agra, India. Ahead of their visit, the famous tombs at the iconic 17th century mausoleum were given a special clay pack treatment. The Yamuna river behind the Taj Mahal also received 17 million liters of water. On his way into the UNESCO world heritage site, Trump told reporters that it was an “incredible place.”


Delhi playing both sides

Though it’s simply a coincidence the meeting took place just as China is struggling to contain the COVID-19 disease, the situation has not made it easier for Trump. In mid-February, Chinese President Xi Jinping thanked Modi for India’s solidarity and support during the crisis.

Read more: Coronavirus: A dramatic escape from Wuhan’s lockdown

After all, India and China are neighbors, and despite everything have been cooperating more closely — and not only when it comes to fighting disease. They are currently working together with 14 other Asia-Pacific nations to complete the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), which would end up creating the world’s biggest free trade zone.

But Delhi is refusing to put all its eggs in one basket. This is where Trump comes into play. During his trip, the president said he looked forward to providing India “with some of the best and most feared military equipment on the planet.” Delhi and Washington have already signed deals for helicopters and defense systems worth billions.

A free trade deal is proving more difficult to negotiate, however. Trump has criticized the $24-billion (€22-billion) trade deficit with India, which might not be as much as the $43 billion trade deficit with China, but still gives Trump a similar means of pressure. For its part, Delhi refuses to be blackmailed by US tariffs and last year imposed retaliatory tariffs of its own on 28 US products. Only a common Asian free trade agreement would defy Trump’s capriciousness, but Delhi does not want this at any price.

One thing is clear: US-Indian relations have been shaped by the relationship with China since the 1950s. When the Sino-Indian war broke out over their disputed border in 1962, US President John F. Kennedy said: “We should defend India, and therefore we will defend India if she were attacked.” The US sent an aircraft carrier to the Bay of Bengal in a clear sign to China, which soon declared a cease-fire.

Read more: Sieren’s China: Tension over the South China Sea

Mutual distrust

The big difference between then and now is that China’s current rise not only challenges US hegemony in the Indo-Pacific region, but US hegemony in the entire world. “Together we will defend our sovereignty, security and protect a free and open Indo-Pacific region for our children and for many, many generations to come,” Trump said on his visit to India.

But Delhi does not want to be recruited as a “bastion of freedom.” During the Cold War, India refused to be part of an ideological bloc and still practices a policy of non-alignment. Today, Modi is wary of Trump’s “America First” motives. The US has not supported Delhi’s hard line toward Pakistan in the Kashmir conflict. On the contrary, it seems to be letting China have free rein in the region.

And India is not altogether displeased that China is challenging the Anglo-Saxon-dominated world order. As the country with the second-largest population in the world, India’s role will increase in a multipolar world.

India, which has been a nuclear power since 1974, also has ambitions of hegemony in Asia. With 6 to 7% economic growth and a young population — with an average age of 25 — it could become the third-largest economy in the world by 2050. For now, its economy remains much smaller than China’s.

Read more: In Duisburg, China expands trade influence in Germany

Not looking for conflict

Delhi is in a tough position. China and the US are India’s most important trade partners, so it cannot afford to take sides. The three countries are linked by conflict, competition and cooperation. The US-China trade dispute has strengthened Sino-Indian relations and created new opportunities for Indian companies on the Chinese market. But Delhi is worried Chinese products could flood the Indian market and harm local suppliers, which is why it wants to renegotiate the RCEP — much to the annoyance of Beijing.

Despite the fact that their shared Himalayan border remains a bone of contention, and that China has never forgiven India for granting political exile to the Dalai Lama, it would be in neither side’s interest to let their differences escalate into open conflict.

Both countries have enough domestic problems to resolve. Dozens have died in recent sectarian clashes in Modi’s India, while China’s Xi is facing the biggest crisis of his time in office with the coronavirus epidemic.

And if there is a major outbreak in India, the country’s medical infrastructure would not be nearly as well prepared for an outbreak as China. Delhi will surely need a lot of help from Beijing, and Beijing will surelpakistany give it.

Frank Sieren has lived in Beijing for more than 20 years.

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Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/sieren-s-china-complicated-ties-with-india-us/a-52564891?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

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