SINO-INDIAN RELATIONS
The Big ChillTwo months after Pokhran, there is no thaw in strained ties.
By Manoj Joshi
Earlier this month, when some newspapers
reported, erroneously as it turned out, that Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission
Jaswant Singh was to visit Beijing on a fence-mending visit, the Chinese foreign office
spokesman beat his Indian counterpart by several hours in issuing a denial. Such alacrity
coming from the normally cautious Chinese is a mark of the persisting tension between
China and India, a situation that is unlikely to change in the coming months, say Indian
diplomats. Tough words from Beijing and even tougher action indicate that the road to
normalisation has become rocky. In the early '80s, Deng Xiaoping used to say that China
did not pose a threat to India and conversely did not view India as a threat. Now reports
from Beijing and from American sources claim that the Chinese concerns over India's
nuclear capability may compel it to target India with nuclear weapons.
In Manila last month, Jaswant Singh and Chinese
Foreign Minister Tang Jiaxuan confirmed that the two countries would continue
official-level consultations. There are no signs as of now that the Joint Working Group on
resolving the border issue will meet this year as it had been meeting for the past 10
years since Rajiv Gandhi's historic Beijing visit in 1988.
Conventional wisdom has it that Beijing's wrath is a
consequence of the verbal bombardment begun by Defence Minister George Fernandes last
April, culminating in India citing China's 1962 attack on India as one of the reasons for
its nuclear tests. V.P. Dutt, the doyen of India's Sinologists, says, "Ten years'
effort in normalising Sino-Indian relations has been wasted by these statements."
Sino-Indian relations are no longer something that can be
viewed in a bilateral framework. China piloted the June 5 resolution of the UN Security
Council calling on India to stop testing, stop weapons' development programmes,
"cease development of ballistic missiles", sign the CTBT and the NPT. On July 2,
US President Bill Clinton and his Chinese counterpart Jiang Zemin issued a statement
calling for "close coordination" between China and the US in achieving the
benchmarks set by the resolution. China is now seeking similar endorsements from Japan and
Russia.
A senior Indian diplomat in Beijing says that the Chinese are
watching to see how the situation develops. The key watershed will be the annual session
of the UN General Assembly which will begin next month. This could see a condemnation of
India and Pakistan's nuclear tests as well as moves to expand the permanent membership of
the Security Council minus India. But, the diplomat notes, "despite their success
with the joint statements, the Chinese have some reasons to pause. In the Asean Regional
Forum (ARF) meeting, they were isolated when they sought to get an endorsement of their UN
Security Council resolution."
While both sides maintain a facade of wanting good relations,
facts seem to indicate that China may be taking a lead role in trying to punish India for
its May nuclear tests. "The US is asking India to sign the CTBT and not deploy its
weapons," says a senior official, "but China is systematically campaigning for
India to sign the NPT as well." In essence, demanding that India dismantle its
nuclear-weapons capability.
The hard-line against India has its roots in China's security
establishment. "Tang Jiaxuan and the Chinese Foreign Ministry do not make Chinese
foreign policy," says an Indian diplomat in Beijing. "Qian Qichen, the previous
foreign minister who is now vice-premier, the People's Liberation Army and the security
apparatus play the major role." In this view, the Chinese reaction is not merely a
matter of hurt feelings over Fernandes' statements or Prime Minister A.B. Vajpayee's
leaked letter to Clinton. "There is a straightforward calculus of security that has
come into play," he adds.
Chinese officials like to portray their country as a
"victim" of India's aggressive intentions. As Chinese Ambassador to Delhi Zhou
Gang puts it, "It is up to the doer to undo the knot." However, as a senior
Indian minister countered, "It takes two hands to untie a knot." China, say
officials, cannot talk peace to India and, at the same time, aid Pakistan's nuclear and
missile ambitions. Beijing's policy of blandly denying any role in aiding Pakistan and its
efforts to fashion a global coalition to contain India are not the stuff out of which good
neighbourly relations are built. |