Obama's
Failure to Understand Indian Distrust of
China
by B. Raman
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)