Taj Mahal

Taj Mahal
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn India's Foreign Policy. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn India's Foreign Policy. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Chủ Nhật, 9 tháng 1, 2011

Ấn Độ xem xét lại lệnh cấm xuất khẩu bông để giữ nguồn cung cấp hành

India to revisit cotton export ban to keep onions flowing

Sujay Mehdudia
The Hindu
January 9, 2011

This January 7, 2010 photo shows tomato-laden trucks outside the Attari-Wagah border post near Amritsar after Indian exporters refused to export vegetables to Pakistan protesting its union export ban

India is understood to have told Pakistan that it is ready to lift the ban on cotton exports if the latter resumes its onion exports through rail and land routes.

Official sources in the Commerce Ministry said this was conveyed to Islamabad by the External Affairs Ministry. “The Indian side has conveyed to the Pakistani counterparts that it was ready to revisit the cotton export ban and ceiling issues, if the gesture is reciprocated by Pakistan through the removal of the ban on the movement of onion,” a senior official said.

On January 6, Pakistan banned onion exports to India by land. This pushed up onion prices once again to the Rs.60-70-a-kg range. Around 300 trucks carrying 3,000 tonnes of onion to India had reached Wagah near Amritsar, but were not allowed to cross the border.

Union Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma termed the ban shocking and said the issue would be taken up with Islamabad.

Pakistan's textile industry has been badly hit by the suspension of cotton exports by India. It sought to import nearly one million cotton bales from India to sustain its order books and cool the domestic prices. Pakistani traders hoped to tide over the shortage by importing cotton between November and January, but India's Textiles Commissioner, who controls export and import of the commodity, suspended fresh registrations for exports.

Cotton price in Pakistan has peaked to 7,600 Pakistani rupees a maund (a bale of 37.32 kg). The flash floods in August and September displaced millions of people and submerged more than one million acres of fertile land. The areas in south Punjab and interior Sindh, which together produce the largest amount of cotton, were the most affected.

India opened registration for cotton exports of up to 2.5 million bales on December 31 last. It plans to export 2.5 million bales by February 25, since prices have almost doubled in the international market within a year. Of the 5.5 million bales of surplus, 3 million bales have already been exported. An Indian bale weighs 375 pounds or 170 kg.

“Now we are waiting for a positive response from the Pakistani side, and we could have a second look at the cotton export ceiling and ban to ease the situation there,” the official said.


Source: http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article1076054.ece

The Pioneer: Mỹ-Ấn Độ nên chống lại ảnh hưởng hải quân của Trung Quốc

US- India should counter China's maritime influence

PTI | Washington
Thursday, September 2, 2010

With China increasing its military power and influence in the strategically crucial Indian Ocean, a noted American expert has urged the Obama Administration to partner India to balance and counter Beijing's increasing influence in the region.

As the Indian Ocean is becoming increasingly important to China's economic and security interests, Dean Cheng of the Heritage Foundation said that Beijing appears to be pursuing what has been widely known as a "string of pearls" strategy of cultivating India's neighbours as friendly states, both to protect its economic and security interests
and to balance a "rising India".

With Chinese influence in the region growing, it is essential that the US not fall behind in the Indian Ocean, but maintain a steady presence in the region, both to signal its resolve to stay engaged and to avoid the difficulties of reentering a region, Cheng wrote.

He said for the foreseeable future, Chinese strategic planners will need to pay increasing attention to China's Indian Ocean flank.

In the short term, Beijing is concerned about its growing dependence on the sea lanes of communications for sustaining China's economic growth.

In 2010, for the first time, China imported more than 50 per cent of its oil consumption. Chinese President Hu Jintao has already raised the issue of the Malacca Strait.

"There is little question that it is a key choke-point on China's oil supply routes. Part of China's interest in developing alternative ports and pipelines, such as in Pakistan and Burma, would seem to be motivated by a desire to reduce the criticality of the Malacca
Strait," he said.

"Even if China's oil lifeline did not have to transit the Strait of Malacca, it would nonetheless traverse significant portions of the Indian Ocean. The growth of the Indian navy means that Chinese economic development is potentially at the mercy of India, as well as the United States. The forging of Indian security links with Japan and the United States is therefore a source of concern," he noted. This is likely an essential part of what is driving

Chinese efforts to cultivate India's neighbours as friendly states, beyond the "string of pearls" strategy that China is said to entertain for the Indian Ocean region, Cheng wrote.

"That is, China is more intent on cultivating close ties, including but not limited to military ties, with the various South Asian states than necessarily focusing on surrounding and isolating India. The latter is simply a byproduct of the larger goal of ensuring that China's southern flank and the attendant oil lifeline are secure and populated by friendly states," he said.

Balancing India is likely to be a growing Chinese concern, not simply for the security of China's oil lifeline, but also because of India's overall growth.

"Just as the US is concerned about a 'rising China' and how to deal with a growing Chinese economy that provides substantially more wherewithal for a variety of purposes, so Chinese leaders are confronted with the potential of a 'rising India'," the expert added.


Source: http://www.dailypioneer.com/280387/US--India-should-counter-Chinas-maritime-influence.html

Chủ Nhật, 2 tháng 1, 2011

Robert Blake: Quan hệ Ấn-Mỹ mạnh hơn không nhằm đối trọng với Trung Quốc

Stronger Indo-US ties not to counterbalance China: US
 
PTI, Nov 16, 2010,

WASHINGTON/ NEW YORK: President Barack Obama's enthusiasm for a stronger Indo-US relationship is not to "counterbalance" China's growing influence over Asia, a top American official has said.
"I don't think you heard anybody say that in the course of the President's three-day visit (to India), we're looking to counterbalance China in any way," Robert Blake, assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asia, Robert Blake, told journalists in New York and Washington during a digital video press conference.

"The President repeatedly made clear that we want a positive, cooperative and constructive relations with China in the same way that India does," he said.

Blake asserted that Obama's trip was to support India's expanding role in global institutions and Asian institutions, but the backing is not at China's cost.
"I think this is much more about how to expand India's role in some of these global institutions and in some of the Asian institutions, and we expressed clearly our support for that. But we do not see that growing role as coming at the expense of China," he said, pointing that secretary of state Hillary Clinton had recently said that "we do not seek to contain China."
After Obama endorsed India's bid for permanent membership in the UN Security Council, US media pointed out that this was to counterbalance China.
"By endorsing India for a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council, President Obama on Monday signaled the US' intention to create a deeper partnership of the world's two largest democracies that would expand commercial ties and check the influence of an increasingly assertive China," New York Times said.

The Los Angeles Times reported "the endorsement, though of little practical value at the moment, is aimed at boosting relations with India, and is a signal of the administration's vision of Asia at a time when China's influence is growing."

Acknowledging former President George Bush's trip for the civil nuclear deal, Blake asserted New Delhi and Washington were entering into a "more mature" relationship following Obama's visit.
"It will mark the first time that we have real embarked on serious specific global cooperation," Blake said, ticking off several areas such as agriculture, cooperation in Afghanistan, women's development and maritime cooperation.
"This is really a global strategic partnership now and we've started to put the flesh on that in very concrete ways," he added.

Thứ Sáu, 31 tháng 12, 2010

Ấn Độ sẽ cấp Visa tại sân bay Ấn Độ cho thêm 4 nước ASEAN vào 1/1/2011

Visa-on-arrival facility for 4 Asean countries
TNN, Dec 31, 2010

NEW DELHI: The government on Thursday (31 Dec. 2010) extended the visa-on-arrival (VOA) facility to four Asean countries, including Laos, Vietnam, the Philippines and Cambodia. The VOA facility will be applicable from January 1, 2011. It will allow travellers single entry facility with a validity of 30 days. Initially, it will be introduced at Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata airports.

A fee of $60 will be charged for each passenger. The VOA facility will be allowed for a maximum of twice in a calendar year to a foreigner with a minimum gap of two months. The facility is non-extendable and non-convertible.

The facility is offered by several south-east Asian countries and is popular with tourists looking for a break. This is in addition to the existing five countries - Japan, Singapore, Finland, Luxembourg and New Zealand - which were extended the facility in January 2010.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Visa-on-arrival-facility-for-4-Asean-countries/articleshow/7191444.cms; accessed 1 Jan 2011

Giải pháp đối ngoại cho năm 2011 của Thủ tướng Manmohan Singh

PM's New Year resolution: Concentrate on the neighbourhood
Indrani Bagchi, TNN, Dec 30, 2010, 04.29pm IST

NEW DELHI: After entertaining almost 25 heads of state and government in 2010, the Manmohan Singh government's New Year resolution is to concentrate attention on India's immediate neighbours, Indian Ocean and Africa in 2011. Top billing will be given to Nepal and Bangladesh, interestingly, not Pakistan.

Nepal is in a politically catatonic state, with neither the political parties nor the Maoists willing to work on a compromise, leaving the country with virtually no government. With a new ambassador, Jayant Prasad, ready to drive Indian policy in Kathmandu, India will try to push for "free and fair" elections in the Himalayan nation -- where the Maoists contest elections after disarming, so that nobody has an unfair advantage. That has to be the crux of the political deal in Kathmandu, but it has to be done by the Nepalis themselves.

Sources said, India has been approached by different shades of opinion in Nepal asking for intervention, but India continues to hold aloof, because active intervention doesn't make friends among the Nepalis. The foreign minister, SM Krishna is scheduled to visit Kathmandu soon __ after the Maoist leader Baburam Bhattarai visits India next week. But the Indian message remains the same. Maoists have to disarm, following which there can be a political understanding. Bhattarai's visit will be important, for first-hand assessment of current Maoist thinking.

With Bangladesh, the news is a lot more positive. 2010 was a good year for the India-Bangladesh brief, largely due to the proactive role played by the Bangladeshis. In many respects, India has to step up to the plate in the coming year, follow through on the commitments made to Dhaka. Bangladesh wants greater economic openness by India, as well as an equitable agreement on border demarcation. All of this is doable, and at the highest level, the government has put the word out that Bangladesh gets priority. India is hoping to put high level visits by Krishna and perhaps even PM Manmohan Singh.

Pakistan prompts only dismal head shakes in the government. PM has no real maneuvering space on Pakistan, and Pakistan is not ready to play ball either. Yet India continues to get battered by the rest of the world to resume dialogue with Pakistan. Pakistan foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi is scheduled to visit India, and is likely to do so in the next couple of months. But nobody makes any promises on any substantive movement with Pakistan. Of course, another terror attack of moderate intensity will sweep all bets off the table.

Manmohan Singh plans to correct his dismal record of engagement with Africa in 2011. An India-Africa summit is on the cards, though the venue in Africa is yet to be worked out, said sources. Moreover, South Africa is expected to host the IBSA (India, Brazil South Africa) summit in the coming year, and India should be able to plan a number of visits around this event. India has hosted numerous African leaders over the past couple of years, so "now we owe everybody a visit" observed a senior official.

After the Barack Obama visit, India and the US have pledged to work together in Africa. The contours of this engagement will revolve around a couple of things __ replicating India's green revolution experience in Africa and leap-frogging Africa's industrialization to make their exports more relevant in the 21st century. As a number of African leaders have told Singh, they didn't want their countries to be merely sources of raw materials for industrialized nations (read China). So development of capacities, capabilities etc will all be part of India's Africa outreach.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/PMs-New-Year-resolution-Concentrate-on-the-neighbourhood/articleshow/7190782.cms#ixzz19oRqJOir;

accessed 1 Jan. 2011

Thứ Bảy, 11 tháng 12, 2010

The U.S. President Barack Obama's visit to India

EAM’s Suo Motu Statement in Lok Sabha on the visit to India by the President of the United States of America Hon’ble Barack H. Obama

November 19, 2010

Madam Speaker, I rise to make a statement on the visit of the United States President Barack Obama to India from 6-9 November 2010.

2. India and the United States have in the recent years built a broadbased framework of cooperation. Government attaches high importance to the India-US strategic partnership, both in the pursuit of achieving India’s national development goals and for advancing global peace, stability and progress. President Obama has characterized the India-US relationship as one of the defining partnerships of the 21st century.

3. President Obama’s wide-ranging programme in Mumbai and Delhi, included in addition to the official engagements, events that covered diverse aspects of our wide-ranging bilateral cooperation. President Obama expressed his gratitude for the honour and privilege of addressing Members of Parliament on 8 November 2010.

4. The visit was successful in strengthening mutual understanding on regional and global issues; accelerating the momentum of our bilateral cooperation; and creating a long-term framework to elevate the India-US strategic partnership to a new level.

5. I place on the table of the House a copy of the Joint Statement issued after the visit which summarises the outcomes of the visit.

6. Briefly, I draw the attention of the august House to the following:-

i) In the area of economic cooperation, we have agreed to take steps to realise the potential for trade and investment in both directions and to harness the scientific and technological capabilities in the two countries for the benefit of our two countries and the world. We welcome US investments in key sectors of our economy, including in the areas of infrastructure and nuclear energy. We also agreed to facilitate greater movement of professionals, investors and business travellers between our countries.
ii) We announced a number of new bilateral initiatives, which include agreements on establishing a Joint Clean Energy Research and Development Center in India; exploration and assessment of shale gas resources in India; Energy Cooperation Programme; establishment of Global Disease Detection India Centre in India; and an implementing arrangement for enhanced monsoon forecasting that will begin to transmit detailed forecasts to farmers beginning with the 2011 monsoon rain season. iii) To promote collaboration in the field of higher education, Prime Minister and President Obama agreed to convene an India-US Higher Education Summit in 2011.

iv) We welcome the decisions taken by the United States to ease controls on exports of dual use items and technologies to India. These measures include removing Indian entities from its so-called Entity List, realignment of India in US export control regulations, as well the intention of the United States to support India’s full membership in the multilateral export control regimes.
v) Prime Minister and President Obama have put forth a common vision of a world without nuclear weapons and decided to lead global efforts for non-proliferation and universal and non-discriminatory global nuclear disarmament. This is a historic and bold bilateral initiative which reflects the evolution of our partnership with the United States. We have decided to strengthen cooperation to tackle nuclear terrorism.

vi) We welcome President Obama’s affirmation of US support for India’s permanent membership of a reformed United Nations Security Council. This reflects the shared belief of our two sides that an efficient, effective, credible and legitimate United Nations is required to ensure a just and sustainable international order.

vii) India-US understanding and cooperation on the shared challenge of terrorism emanating from our neighbourhood continues to grow. Our two governments have decided to further strengthen counter-terrorism cooperation and to begin a Homeland Security Dialogue.

viii) India has an interest in peace, stability and prosperity in Asia, based on an open, balanced and inclusive regional architecture. We have decided to deepen our existing consultations with the United States on developments in East Asia and expand our consultations to cover regional and global issues of mutual interest, including Central and West Asia. We have also agreed to intensify our consultations on Afghanistan. President Obama appreciated India’s contribution to Afghanistan and welcomed enhanced Indian assistance to help Afghanistan achieve self-sufficiency.
7. Madam Speaker, India-US relations have matured over the years. We conduct this relationship in a spirit of mutual respect and as equal partners. This relationship stands on its own merits and is not directed against any other country. It is a relationship that is based on shared values and growing opportunities for mutually beneficial bilateral cooperation and a global partnership. It is an important factor for peace, stability and prosperity in the region and the world.

8. In this context, President Obama’s visit was a milestone in the process of strengthening the strategic partnership between the world’s two largest democracies and in bringing our two peoples closer together.

New Delhi
November 19, 2010
(Source: http://meaindia.nic.in/mystart.php?id=530116699, accessed 12 Dec. 2010)

Challenges in India's Foreign Policy

Address by Foreign Secretary at NDC on ‘Challenges in India’s Foreign Policy’

November 19, 2010

Commandant NDC Lt. General Prakash Menon
Faculty members
Ladies and Gentlemen

A topic of the nature on which I speak today should I think focus on both the challenges and opportunities before our foreign policy today. In the sixty years since its inception, our foreign policy has evolved and adjusted to meet new challenges and unprecedented crisis situations, as well as risen to meet the needs of intensified economic engagement with the world – an engagement that is designed to meet the needs of an increased inflow of capital, technology, ideas and innovation for our development and our re-emergence as one of the world’s leading economies. 63 years after her “tryst with destiny”, India is now being seen as a major power. Our democratic system, which sustains our re-emergence after three centuries of depletion of our economic strength, is based on a visionary Constitution, whose 60th anniversary we celebrate this year. It is in our enlightened self-interest to propel the peaceful advancement of India as a nation by ensuring a trouble-free, peaceful environment as we participate on an equal footing with our global partners in the process of globalization in the 21st century.
2. Against this broad perspective, we can now examine the challenges in India’s foreign policy. An article of steadfast faith in our foreign policy, has been to ensure a peaceful, secure and stable neighbourhood, so as to safeguard peace, security and development within our own borders, and it is with this perspective that India is developing a mutually beneficial relationship with her neighbours. We cannot be insulated from our neighbourhood; our growth and prosperity has a beneficial impact on the region, and increasingly, we will have to build closer connectivities in trade, communications and other networks of interaction between ourselves and our neighbours. At the same time, instability and centrifugal forces such as those arising from religious extremism and terrorism in our neighbourhood can and do threaten our own security and development.
3. I shall now focus on our relationship with our neighbours since this is the first, and perhaps the most intense, level of engagement in our foreign policy. Nepal is passing through a period of political uncertainty and the consensus required for concluding the constitution drafting is still elusive. As a close neighbour and friend, developments in Nepal are of concern to us, more so as we share an open border of around 1750 kms. Even as we engage with political parties to resolve the outstanding issues, we are continuing and expanding our economic, commercial and infrastructural linkages with Nepal which contribute to economic and social development of Nepal. Our bilateral interaction and the two-way traffic of Indo-Nepal relations has proceeded in a relatively unhindered manner. The issue of security cooperation on the open border, tackling common threats like fake currency and arms smuggling and criminal elements who operate in the border areas taking advantage of the openness of the border are concerns shared by both our governments.

4. Our relations with Bhutan are based on trust, and mutual understanding and are an example of good neighbourliness. We attach high priority to our relations with Bhutan and are happy to assist Bhutan for its development, progress and prosperity. India and Bhutan are responsive to each other’s security concerns and cooperate closely on border management. Bhutan’s democratic transition, which began with the first elections in 2008, is progressing in an exemplary manner. On our part we have happily shared our experiences as a democracy with it through exchanges between our parliamentarians.
5. The January 2010 visit of Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was a path-breaking one. We are committed to assisting Bangladesh in its developmental efforts in line with their priorities. An unprecedented US$ 1 billion Line of Credit has been extended by India to Bangladesh. But the challenge is to revive our old infrastructural links with Bangladesh as well as address more difficult issues like water sharing, land boundary demarcation, etc in an atmosphere of understanding and trust. The recent meeting of experts from our two countries on addressing outstanding issues related to the demarcation of our borders reflected the positive atmosphere in our relations.

6. So far as Sri Lanka is concerned, after the cessation of hostilities, our assistance to that country has been substantial, for the rehabilitation and reconstruction of northern and eastern parts, ravaged by the conflict. India has committed nearly US$ 1.5 billion in this direction. The challenge is to convert the cessation of hostilities in Sri Lanka into a durable peace where there would be genuine reconciliation between all the communities in Sri Lanka inclusive of the Tamil-speaking minority. In many senses, India is Sri Lanka’s closest neighbour. Our defence and security dialogue with Sri Lanka, now that the conflict within the country is behind us, requires special focus in this connection. We also need to work out creative and innovative solutions to the problems facing fishermen of both countries who stray into each other’s waters.
7. Our defence and security cooperation with Maldives has been strengthened and high-level interaction has ensured that India continues to play a prominent role in the developmental and economic activities of Maldives.

8. The State Visit of Senior General Than Shwe of Myanmar in July 2010, gave us an opportunity to further strengthen our ties with an important neighbour. Enhancing our connectivity as well as security cooperation is vital, particularly in the context of our north-eastern States and our Look East Policy. We have welcomed the release of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi as a development that can contribute to the process of national reconciliation and inclusive political change in Myanmar.

9. With Afghanistan, we are in the forefront of assistance to that country and our attempt has always been to help Afghanistan in its reconstruction efforts as a means to establish stability and improve the lives of the Afghan people. Despite persistent attacks on Indians working in that country, India has reiterated its determination to fulfill its commitment to the Afghan people and government as they build, a peaceful, democratic and pluralistic Afghanistan. The future of Afghanistan as a natural trade and transit hub in Asia, free of terrorism and extremism, where the rights of women are ensured, and civil society is strong and enduring, and the institutions of governance including police and army have the capacity to deal with threats to peace and security within the country, must be ensured. The regional countries have a definite interest in this, and India has consistently advocated the need for close consultations with Afghanistan’s neighbours as this process evolves.
10. There continue to be differences in perception between India and Pakistan on how to move forward on our bilateral relationship. We want a stable Pakistan which should act as a bulwark against terrorism and extremism, and this is in its own interest and also in the interest of the entire region. We are firmly against the use of terror-induced coercion by Pakistan as a means to force its unifocal agenda on relations with India.

11. Apart from maintaining close ties with our South Asian neighbours, we continue to substantially contribute to the strengthening of SAARC. India's profile in SAARC has changed considerably, in recent years. We have initiated almost all major proposals in SAARC. We see the SAARC process as contributing to our goal of building a peaceful and prosperous neighbourhood.

12. Given the unique historical legacy of our region, SAARC has come a long way in the 25 years of its existence. It can be said that SAARC has moved from a declaratory phase to one of implementation. With the SAARC Development Fund functional and two regional projects currently being implemented under its social window, SAARC is slowly metamorphosing into being a service provider for the development needs of the people of the region. In addition, a project like the South Asian University (SAU), envisaging the provision of world-class education opportunities and hopefully building the initial blocks of a South Asian identity, has also commenced.
13. The implementation of the South Asia Free Trade Agreement (SAFTA) in 2006 was a significant milestone. Intra-regional trade in South Asia has begun to grow and has doubled over the past 5 years to over $ 600 million in 2009. What is also significant is that intra-SAARC exports, as a proportion of total SAARC exports, have registered a steady growth. This reflects the growing importance of the region for the overall trade of its Member States. SAARC Member States have also appreciated India’s gesture to give duty free access to LDCs from January 1, 2008, one year ahead of target date and unilateral reduction of its Sensitive List with respect to LDCs from 744 to 480.

14. However, SAARC inter-regional trade still remains well below its potential and the desired cooperation in the field of security also remains lower than desired. While, there has been a positive change in the attitude of some participating countries in areas like agriculture, S&T and the environment, the challenge for us is to take other members along with us as we strive towards greater integration in South Asia. At this stage, we also need to nurture and consolidate the newly created institutions and ensure that they develop firm foundations which would serve SAARC well into the future.
15. Iran is part of what has been defined as India’s “proximate neighbourhood”. We share a historical and civilizational relationship. People-to-people and cultural relations remain vibrant and alive today. It is a major source of our energy and hydrocarbon supplies, and is thus important for our energy security. Among areas of discussion with Iran have been regional issues such as the restoration of peace and stability in Afghanistan, trade and transit to Afghanistan, Central Asia and beyond, and the common threats we face from cross-border terrorism and extremism.

16. The Iran nuclear issue however poses a challenge, because of the impact of UNSC and more particularly unilateral sanctions imposed by US, EU, Japan, and other countries, which have challenged even normal trade transactions with Iran. India’s stand on the Iran nuclear issue has been consistent. We support the right of all States to peaceful use of nuclear energy, consistent with their international obligations. We believe that the IAEA should have a central role in resolution of the issue, and favour dialogue and peaceful negotiations for settlement of the dispute.

17. China is our largest neighbour and its rise is indeed a global opportunity as well as a challenge. Neither of us has the luxury of seeing each other in antagonistic terms. There is enough space in the world for the rise of both China and India. Our task will be to remain vigilant and manage the India-China relationship despite inherent complexities and challenges, embedding it in the matrix of dialogue and diplomacy.
18. Given its continental size and dimensions, India is also a South-east Asian country – consider the ethnicities of our North-east, and our close contiguity to Asean countries like Myanmar and to Indonesia which is a close maritime neighbour. Our Look East Policy, which was originally conceived as an economic initiative, has gained political, strategic, multilateral and regional dimensions. The scope of the policy has broadened to include the Far East and Pacific island nations.

19. Economically, the Asian region to the east of India has gained tremendous significance. As many as 6 countries (Australia, China, Japan, India, Indonesia, and South Korea) from the region are part of G-20, the world’s premier economic forum. The region accounts for about one-third of India’s trade. India signed its first multilateral trade agreement in the form of India – ASEAN FTA on August 13, 2009 in Bangkok. The East Asia region including ASEAN is our largest trading partner with two way trade between India and ASEAN being over USD 47 billion in 2008. With the coming into force of India – ASEAN FTA in goods, there is an expected increase of US$ 10 bn in the very first year. The next step is conclusion of negotiations in Trade in Services and Trade in Investment agreements, which will act as a catalyst to bring down the cost of production on both sides and further increase our trade. An economically robust relationship between the two sides has enormous potential. Keeping this in view, a new and comprehensive India-ASEAN Plan of Action 2010-2015 was adopted at the 8th India-ASEAN Summit on 30 October 2010.
20. The ongoing geo-political changes in Asia have been the subject of much comment in the strategic community. These changes would need to be monitored and analysed closely but it is equally important that our responses and reactions are not knee jerk or based on distorted or exaggerated threat perceptions. India supports the evolution of an open, transparent, inclusive and balanced security architecture in the Asia Pacific region. This will involve partnership and cooperation among all stakeholders working together in recognition that the inherent heterogeneity of the region will not allow any top-down approach or domination by any single country. All countries have an equal stake in promoting maritime security and in defending the ‘Global Commons’ by strict implementation of universally accepted principles of international law, allowing freedom of navigation and unimpeded commerce and peaceful settlement of maritime territorial disputes. India has been supporting these principles in the ARF for several years. Our Defence Minister represented India in the first ADMM Plus meeting which was held in Hanoi in 12-13 October 2010. This added a new dimension to international efforts to evolve cooperative security architecture in the region.

21. The East Asia Summit (EAS) mechanism provides India the forum to engage with a larger number of countries of the region in both strategic and economic spheres. This year marked the entry of US and Russia into the EAS process as ‘guest of the host’ with formal entry scheduled for 2011. We welcome their entry which, we believe, will add to peace and stability in the region and also enhance ongoing cooperation.
22. Recent years have witnessed a significant transformation of India’s relationship with the United States. The post Cold War geopolitical environment, the shift in the centre of gravity of global opportunities and challenges to Asia and the growing challenges of terrorism and non-proliferation have created new opportunities for strategic engagement with the United States.

23. Our relationship with the United States is important for pursuing our national development goals, through trade, investment and new technology, and in seeking to build an open, rule-based and stable international order that is conducive to sustaining a high trajectory of economic growth over the next two to three decades. This relationship is also important for bringing about adjustments in the global political, security and economic architecture to pursue our interests and aspirations, and fulfill our global responsibility.

24. The United States was pivotal in re-integrating India into the global nuclear commerce. During his recent visit to India, President Obama announced his country’s support for India as a permanent member of a reformed UN Security Council, as also for India’s membership of the four international non-proliferation regimes – the NSG, MTCR, Australia Group and Wassenaar Arrangement. We have also begun to forge a new partnership in advancing our shared global non-proliferation interests.
25. Shared values provide a solid bedrock of our relationship with the United States that is now being increasingly invigorated by converging interests. At the same time, we are two independent democracies at different stages of economic development and facing varying circumstances. We will also have to deal with the inevitable divergence in our approaches on some issues, without losing sight of the broad, long-term strategic goals of this relationship and with sensitivity to each other’s vital interests.

26. The EU is our largest trading partner, biggest source of FDI, an important source of technology, and home to a large and influential Indian Diaspora. We have concluded ten rounds of negotiations on a Broad-based Trade and Investment Agreement and issues of concerns to both sides have been identified. India is keen for a successful and balanced outcome of the negotiations. Early conclusion of this agreement will also facilitate our stated goal of achieving Euro 100 billion in bilateral trade by 2013 from the present figure of Euro 60 billion. India looks at the EU for new partnerships in knowledge industries i.e. information technology, biotechnology, pharmaceutical, infrastructure development etc. and transfer of technologies particularly environment-friendly technologies and improved medical innovation. India also wants to see freer movement of its professionals and businessmen in the EU market.
27. Time tested and enduring ties with Russia form an important dimension of India’s foreign policy. Bilateral relations with Russia are based on a strong national consensus in both countries that has cut across ideologies or political conditions. Russia has been an important partner in defence and nuclear energy cooperation. Our bilateral relationship was re-energized with the declaration of a Strategic Partnership between our two countries during the visit of the then President Putin in 2000. This is nevertheless a relationship that is constantly evolving and with a huge untapped potential for increasing our bilateral engagement, especially in the areas of defence, civil nuclear energy, space, science and technology, hydrocarbons, and trade and investment.

28. India shares old historical and strong cultural links with Central Asia, which forms part of our extended neighborhood. Post USSR dissolution, India has steadily developed friendly and cooperative relations with all five Central Asian countries. Three of the 5 Central Asian countries namely Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan share borders with Afghanistan. This region has grown in importance with the shift of the strategic theatre to Afghanistan. It is also important to counter the growth of fundamentalist, terrorist and secessionist tendencies which can affect us directly. The Central Asian Republics by virtue of their geographical location and the vast natural resources, including energy reserves in the Caspian Basin, form an area of geo-strategic and geo-economic interest to India. The aim of our diplomacy is to be seen as a benign, non-threatening regional player, involved in capacity building and development. India has to be seen as a friend and partner, tapping a reservoir of traditional goodwill and deploying its soft power through instruments such as IT, Bollywood, and south-south assistance.
29. India attaches great importance to Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, most of the members of which belong to our extended neighborhood. India has played a constructive and important role in SCO as an observer and has consistently articulated its desire to play an expanded and more meaningful role on the SCO platform. We value the role of the SCO in bringing security, stability and development to our region and stand ready to contribute more to the SCO. The SCO can play a critical role in countering terrorism through collaborative efforts and a greater profile in Afghanistan.

30. Turning to West Asia, India’s consistent and unwavering record of support for the Palestinian cause since the days of our freedom struggle continues to guide our policy in the region. The Palestinian problem needs a solution which has been delayed for far too long. India supports a united, independent, viable, sovereign state of Palestine with East Jerusalem as its capital, living within secure and recognised borders side by side at peace with Israel. We are hopeful that direct talks between the Israelis and the Palestinians will resume and the talks and negotiations would lead to a comprehensive peace process for the final resolution of the conflict.
31. Africa has always been an important cornerstone of India’s Foreign Policy. Our common struggle against colonialism provides the historical underpinning to our relations. This relationship was given a new impetus during the first India-Africa Forum Summit held in New Delhi in April 2008, which resulted in a structured programme of cooperation in areas including human resources, capacity building, agriculture, SMEs sector, S&T, IT, etc. Africa is also an important source of crude oil and other natural resources. India imports about 20% of its crude oil requirements from Africa. Over the next five years, an amount of US$ 5.4 billion has been earmarked for Africa to support infrastructure and development projects as prioritized by the African nations themselves. India’s Pan-Africa e-Network Project based on satellite and optical fibre networks to share India’s expertise in education and healthcare, being implemented in 47 African countries, has been recognised for its contribution in the field of sustainable development with “the Hermes Prize for Innovation 2010” by the European Institute for Creative Studies and Innovation.
32. An important dimension of our partnership is how to coordinate our positions that have seen increasing convergence on global issues such as reform of the United Nations, climate change, WTO, food security, etc. Given that the text based expansion negotiations on United Nations reform will start in UNGA, we need to work together to ensure the stronger presence of the developing countries in the UNSC. Both India and the African Union have advocated expansion of the Security Council in both its permanent and non-permanent categories. Similarly, India and Africa need to work together to ensure that ongoing negotiations in WTO secure a proper share for the developing countries, especially the least developed countries, in the growth of international trade which is commensurate with the needs of their economic development. We also need to evolve a coordinated response for tackling the menace of piracy in the Indian Ocean in order to safeguard our sea-routes and ensure uninterrupted movement of goods and people.
33. We have been elected as a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council for a two-year period beginning in January 2011 with an overwhelming majority of support from the member states of the UN. We are fully committed to the principles and purposes of the United Nations and believe that the UN should be at the core of global governance and efforts to meet the challenges of collective peace, security and development. The UN, however, needs urgent reform to reflect contemporary realities and to effectively meet emerging global challenges. The issue of reform of the Security Council is at the core of the UN reform process. At recent inter-governmental negotiations in the UN, a majority of the Member States expressed support for expansion of both permanent and non-permanent categories of the Security Council. Structural reform of the Security Council and an improvement in its working methods need to be pursued as a priority.

34. For couple of years now, the ongoing international financial and economic crisis has drawn the world’s attention as it has impacted all of us. The crisis impacted our growth rates, slowed exports and affected investment. From a 9% growth over four years, the Indian economy slowed down to 6.7% in 2008-09. During the current financial year 2010-11, India hopes to achieve around 8.5% growth. GDP growth is expected to reach the 9% level in the next financial year 2011-12.
35. The global economic crisis of 2008 led the G-20 meetings, which were hitherto held at the level of Finance Minister and Central bank governors, to be held at Summit level. The G-20 has held an unprecedented five Summits with the last Summit held in Seoul last week. The G-20 has provided prompt and effective response in reversing recession and restarting recovery, but the global recovery remains fragile and uneven or multi-speed across countries and regions. India has been playing an important role in the G-20 deliberations.

36. The Seoul Summit outcome mandated macroeconomic policies to strengthen the ongoing recovery and stability of financial markets, in particular moving towards more market determined exchange rate systems, refraining from competitive devaluations, with reserve currency countries remaining vigilant against excessive volatility. It adopted the Seoul Action Plan including country-specific measures towards the shared objective of strong, sustainable and balanced growth.
37. An ambitious development agenda was adopted comprising Multi-Year Action Plans under nine pillars viz. Infrastructure, HRD, trade, private investment and job creation, food security, growth with resilience, domestic resource mobilization, knowledge sharing and financial inclusion. The Summit also discussed the issue of global imbalances. In this context, India has proposed leveraging imbalances of one kind to redress imbalances of the other kind. This can be done by recycling global savings through multilateral development banks into investment in developing countries to not only address the immediate demand imbalance, but to also address developmental imbalances. The Indian proposal was endorsed positively.

38. There is now very little doubt that Climate Change is taking place across the world and the cause is the cumulative accumulation of greenhouse gases (GHG) in the earth’s atmosphere due to over two centuries of industrial activities and high consumption lifestyles in the developed world. Climate change requires a global response. However, such a response must be firmly based on the principles of equity and “common but differentiated responsibility and respective capability” and take into account the overriding imperative of poverty reduction and economic progress in developing countries, as recognized and endorsed by the international community under the UNFCCC. Any long-term goal would be meaningless without concomitant and mid-term targets and GHG reduction commitments by developed countries as committed under the Kyoto Protocol.
39. Energy Security has emerged as a new cornerstone of India’s foreign policy. India has adopted a multi pronged approach to energy security, which includes import source diversification and acquisition of equity oil, the building of strategic petroleum reserves, increased domestic exploration, and production and fuel diversification. India aspires to a medium-to-long term strategy of implementing a strategic shift from fossil fuels to non-fossil fuels, from non-renewable to renewable sources of energy, and from conventional to non-conventional sources of energy. In order to meet the increased power requirement, India will need to pursue all available forms of energy. Our energy mix currently is 53% based on coal, 31% on oil, 9% on natural gas and only 6% from hydropower and 1% from nuclear energy. If this energy mix remains unchanged over the next 25 years then our dependence on imported fossil fuels will continue. It is estimated that by 2030-31, we would have to import 35-57% of our coal, 90-94% of our oil and 20-57% of our natural gas.
40. Security in the Indian Ocean region and its periphery is a key to our continuing economic growth, particularly as it is through the sea-lanes in this Ocean that most of our energy supplies reach us, and our exports are transported. The continuing security of our EEZ is also an important issue. The Indian Ocean region assumes importance because of its abundant human resources, technological capacities and harbouring of important trade routes. We have historical and civilisational ties with countries of the Indian Ocean region and there are large Indian communities in most of these countries. The broad-spectrum of our ties with these countries has a strong economic and socio-cultural dimension.
41. The maritime dimensions of our foreign policy have come to acquire increased relevance and intensive focus in recent years. Through our history, we have been a sea-faring nation, as the chronicles of our ties with South-east Asia, the Roman Empire, the East Coast of the African Continent, and the countries of the Arab Peninsula so graphically illustrate. The maritime dimension of our nation's history has moulded our identity as an outward-oriented nation rather than a country that is locked into a land-centered continental presence. After a hiatus brought about by the focus on our land borders in the initial phases of our development as an independent country, it is this dimension that we are called upon to increasingly keep in focus as our markets are increasingly integrated with the outside world, the safety of sea lanes of communication becomes a priority, in dealing with anti-piracy, ensuring coastal security, and putting in place a network of cooperation and dialogue that is open, inclusive, balanced stressing a dialogue oriented approach for security and development. The Indian Ocean is a key expanse of water that links both East and West, straddling major trading areas, centers of population, and sectors of concern from the point of view of our security. The growth of our naval capabilities enables us also to work out mechanisms of cooperation with other friendly navies to be net providers of security in the region, and also for emergency and disaster management as we saw during the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004. This aspect, as also the emphasis on building close bilateral ties with the Indian Ocean countries, in capacity building, security ties, political and people-to-people contacts, is receiving increasing attention in the decision and policy making circles of Government.
42. The problem of international terrorism has been a core foreign policy concern for India for over two decades now. There was a time when terror groups were limited in their ideology, reach and lethality and strong internal security measures and deft political handling by national governments were sufficient in dealing with them. With the emergence of the information age, terrorism is today a truly borderless menace and a technology-intensive enterprise. Nations find it difficult, if not impossible to tackle this scourge in a time when recruiting, planning, financing, and training for terror operations can all be carried out outside their borders. Recent years have also seen operational coordination between terrorist groups based across different countries. In our neighbourhood, the Al Qaeda, the LeT and the Taliban have all been found to be operationally fused. There are also increasing concerns among the international community about the nexus between fundamentalism, terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. This global scourge requires a sustained global response.

43. India has been the victim of the most vicious kind of cross-border terrorism over the last two decades. This continues to find support within Pakistan and is used against us as a political and economic weapon. For some in the international community - political expediency, short term gains, geopolitical considerations, faulty analysis, double standards - all these and other reasons unfortunately have in the past blurred the clarity and focus on how terrorism should be dealt with.
44. India is working with the international community to counter the common challenge of terrorism. Our partners have increasingly come to realize that segmented approaches to the problem of terrorism have not worked; nor has the approach of differentiating between lesser and greater evils in this context. What hits us today could well turn itself towards another nation tomorrow. Over the past couple of years, we have seen an enhanced understanding of this fact. We endeavour to cooperate bilaterally with our partners in improving sharing of information, countering terror finance, building capacity in our anti-terror mechanisms, exchanging best practices, and strengthening our mutual legal assistance and extradition regimes.

45. Multilaterally, we piloted the Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism at the UN, since we were convinced that existing sectoral conventions left wide gaps in the global anti-terror legal framework. We continue to work with our partners around the world to adopt this long overdue Convention. We have recently become members of the Financial Action Task Force, the world’s premier inter-governmental organization that sets and monitors standards in anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-financing of terrorism (CFT).
46. Despite a complex regional and global environment, India’s policies have been marked by a sense of responsibility and restraint. We have been one of the earliest proponents of nuclear disarmament. Even as a nuclear weapon state, India remains steadfast in its support for the global, universal and non-discriminatory elimination of all nuclear weapons. India has a policy of no first use of nuclear weapons and their non-use against non-nuclear weapon states and we support enshrining them into global legal arrangements. Terrorists gaining access to WMDs has emerged as a major threat for our national security as well as globally. We remain engaged with the international community through participation in initiatives like the Nuclear Security Summit and the Global Initiative in order to combat nuclear terrorism to address these challenges.

47. There is in some sense, a duality that India contends with -– one as a developing country working to sustain inclusive domestic growth with a view to eradicate poverty and enhance prosperity for its own citizens and the other as a re-emerging global power with the requisite intellectual acumen and economic weight to work out solutions to global problems in cooperation with the developed as well as the developing economies. This ability of India to literally hold the world in its hands, because of our pluralism, our diversity, and our relevance in terms of the developmental experience we have accumulated, and our responsible image in the world, has resulted in our increasingly being called upon to play an increasingly substantive role whether it is the G20 or the various fora of the United Nations, Trade deliberations or Climate Change negotiations.
48. In an increasingly complex and inter-dependent world, new challenges appear and have to be tackled. The challenge before our foreign policy is to ensure an effective management of our security challenges and dynamically evolve effective strategies to address them. For instance, there is growing realization of the importance of preserving the “Global Commons” – Space, Ocean, Air, and Cyber Space. With its size, technological capabilities, and standing as a responsible country, India is recognized as an important stakeholder and partner in these processes. We will continue to participate constructively in the furtherance and shaping of these efforts.
49. In the ultimate analysis, foreign policy is a reflection of the priorities that a nation defines for itself as it seeks to develop, to be secure, to withstand threats from across its borders, to ensure that its national and developmental interests are not diluted by actions by hostile players in the global arena, to guarantee a level playing field for its professionals and its business and industry as they increasingly access the global market, to ensure strategic autonomy, and to enable the flow of capital and technology that can build a modern nation in an inclusive, unimpeded manner. The challenges we face in the conduct of our foreign policy are dictated by the external environment and also by the dynamic created by public opinion and constituencies within the domestic arena. Foreign policy does not reside in some elite fastness but is moulded in the debates and discussion that come out of the arena of democracy. The practitioner of foreign policy therefore is networked constantly with other arms of government, particularly the security and defence apparatus, the economic ministries, and also those dealing with human development. Responses to the challenges we face are shaped and calibrated by the imperatives of the nation’s interest, first and last. At the same time, with power comes ever increasing responsibility – responsibility in weighing every move we make and positions we take with the realization that India is one of the key players on the global stage today and will be called upon increasingly to deploy its manifest strengths in the interest of global peace and development.

New Delhi
November 18, 2010

(Source: http://meaindia.nic.in/mystart.php?id=530116703; accessed 12 December 2010)

India-China Relations

Address by Foreign Secretary on “India-China relations” at ORF Conference on China

December 03, 2010

Ambassador Rasgotra,
Ambassador Raghunath,
Distinguished invitees,
Representatives of the Media, Ladies and Gentlemen,

This year saw India and China celebrating the 60th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations. A couple of weeks from now Premier Wen Jiabao will be India and will participate in the closing ceremony of the Festival of China in India which will bring to a close the calendar of activities organized in both China and India to commemorate this occasion. Sixty years is a short period of time in the relations of two countries whose ties date back many millennia. Ours has always been a broader engagement that took place between our peoples. Throughout history, scholars and pilgrims, traders and travellers, who “mortgaged their lives for pilgrimage” in the words of the renowned Chinese Indologist Ji Xianlin, engaged in a traffic of ideas between the two countries. The Buddhism that travelled from India to China was successfully Sinicised and survived in China as it found a place in the heart and soul of the people. It is in the context of our historical and popular relationship that we must always view and evaluate our contemporary relationship. Indeed, this was the vision that inspired Rabindranath Tagore during his sojourns in China in the early decades of the 20th Century.
2. The six decades of the India-China relationship behind us have record that is chequered. We became arbiters of our national destinies from the date of India’s independence and China’s liberation in the late forties of the last century, inspiring many others in Asia and Africa to independence and the fruition of national goals to end colonialism and foreign domination. This was the time when India and China in a sense, rediscovered each other, understanding the potential of the synergy between two of the largest populated nations in the world on the global stage. The vision of our founding fathers is in many ways within our reach today as we regain our place in Asia and the world as leading global economies. The awareness and the “muffled footsteps” (to use Tagore’s phrase) of historical contact between the two peoples of India and China created the basis for our well-intentioned attempt in the fifties to build a new type of relationship based on Panchasheela or the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence. It was an attempt which however faltered, telescoping into the troubled phase that enveloped our relationship in the sixties up until the mid seventies. The leadership in both our countries understood the untenability of any sustained estrangement between us. The last three decades have been marked by well-intentioned efforts of exploration towards establishing the framework of a stable, peaceful, productive, and multi-sectoral relationship between India and China. Contradictions are sought to be managed, and our differences have not prevented an expanding bilateral engagement and building on congruence. There are elements of cooperation and competition that form the warp and weft of our relationship. I propose to speak to you in some detail about the specifics of this engagement.
3. There are both challenges that the relationship confronts us with and also there are opportunities before it. As our Prime Minister has said, India and China will continue to grow, simultaneously, and our policies will have to cater to this emerging reality. For India, the situation is complex since China is not only our largest neighbour but also because China is today a major power in the world both from the traditional geo-political point of view and the more current geo-economic point of view. In the world of today, China is a factor in several equations and therefore it is intellectually satisfying to see that scholarship in India is increasingly dedicated to looking more closely at all facets of China. As a nation, we should encourage more efforts to accelerate this intellectual drive to understand China.
4. I personally have had an almost three decades-old relationship with China, both in our Foreign Office while handling relations with China and thereafter when I was privileged to represent my country as India’s Ambassador to China. In this period, I have witnessed the transformation that economic growth and development have helped to achieve in both countries. I made my first trip to China in the company of an Indian film delegation in the spring of 1986. We travelled to Beijing, Shanghai, Chongqing and Guangzhou. City streets swarmed with people on bicycles, and we flew in to the various places on our itinerary within China in planes that seemed ancient compared to what we had in India. There were no luxury hotels worth speaking of although economic reform had become the buzz-word. The countryside had begun to be magnetized by town and village enterprises which were elevating living standards among farmers and peasants. The trip had receded into the recesses of my memory until I saw a photograph in a recent publication of China Radio International which showed two young women – the actor Shabana Azmi and myself - standing outside a palace in the Forbidden City on a rather blustery spring day in 1986! That first trip was followed by many more, the most significant such visit being when I was a member of the official delegation that accompanied Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi to China in December 1988. That visit made a historic and crucially important contribution to the transformation of the India-China relationship.
5. China’s rapid economic growth over the last three decades has been spectacular and riveting. It is now the second largest economy in the world with a GDP of roughly USD 5.5 trillion. Its people, particularly the youth, seem focused on improving their living standards in the quest for a prosperous future, and politics does not define their everyday. China has begun to deal in the currency of global power, and its economic success is impacting its foreign, defence and security policies. The appellation of assertiveness is frequently applied to China’s profile in global affairs today. The question that I am always asked is whether our relationship with China will be one dominated by increasing competition for influence and for resources as our economic needs grow. I believe that neither of us has the luxury of seeing each other in antagonistic terms. The view that India and China are rivals to me is an over-generalization as well as over-simplification of a complex relationship which encompasses so many diverse issues. I believe the proposition of competition and rivalry should not be exaggerated in a manner that it overshadows our genuine attempts to manage and transact a rationally determined relationship between India and China.The reality is that India and China have worked hard over the last two decades to enhance dialogue in a number of fields and we must maintain and build on that trend.
6. It is true that divergences persist. There is no denying the fact that we have a disputed border. There are legacies as well as lessons bequeathed to us by history. This is a complex problem and the cartographies that define national identity are internalized in the minds of people in both countries. At the same time we are making a serious attempt at trying to arrive at a fair, reasonable and mutually acceptable solution to the boundary question as the recent fourteenth round of the Special Representatives talks will testify. The absence of a solution to the question is not due to lack of efforts but arises from the difficulty of the question, as any analyst in the audience can well appreciate.
7. What also needs to be appreciated is that the India-China boundary is one of the most peaceful of all borders. We have in place a well organized set of measures or what we call confidence building measures or CBMs to ensure peace and tranquility on the border. We are currently talking to each other on establishing more such mechanisms. There is maturity on both sides to understand the complexity of the issue and to insulate it from affecting our broader relationship. This policy on both sides I think has paid dividends and has contributed towards reducing the possibility of conflict. The dividend from this policy can be seen in other areas of our relationship.
8. Another issue of concern is the management of trans-border rivers. Many of the rivers nourishing the plains of Northern India and also areas in North-east India arise in the highlands of the Tibetan Autonomous Region and are a source of livelihood and sustenance for millions of our people. We are alert to reports of China damming trans-border rivers and have sought assurances from China that it will take no action to negatively affect the flow of the rivers into India, and so that our rights as the lower riparian are not adversely affected. China has assured us that the projects on the Bramhaputra are run-of-the-river projects and are not meant for storing or diverting water. We look forward to working closely with China in this critical area of environmental and livelihood security.
9. There is then the question of the China-Pakistan relationship. India firmly believes that a stable and prosperous Pakistan is in India’s interest, and we are not against Pakistan’s relations with other countries. While I agree that relationships between countries are not zero-sum games, we do not hesitate to stress our genuine concerns regarding some aspects of the China-Pakistan relationship particularly when it comes to China’s role in POK, China’s J&K policy and the Sino-Pak security and nuclear relationship. The need for mutual sensitivity to each other’s concerns cannot be denied. The issue of giving stapled visas to Indian nationals from the state of Jammu and Kashmir arises in a similar context. We believe that the India-China relationship will grow even stronger as China shows more sensitivity on core issues that impinge on our sovereignty and territorial integrity. We hope this can be realized.
10. Our trade with China is growing faster than that with any other country and China is our largest trading partner in goods with trade likely to exceed US$ 60 billion this year. There is also serious discussion between the two countries on correcting the trade imbalance and we would like to see more Indian goods and services entering the Chinese market. Many Chinese companies are now well established in India and many Indian companies are also opening up in China. We in India have also worked to resolve hurdles that have sometimes been faced by Chinese companies to ensure a level playing field for all foreign investors. We also expect similar access to Chinese markets especially in the area of pharmaceuticals, IT, engineering goods, where our companies have often faced non-tariff and opaque barriers. Our bilateral investment relationship is also steadily growing. India is one of China’s largest markets for project contracting. India needs an investment of US $ 1 trillion during the next Five-Year Plan period in infrastructure. China is well positioned to participate in this process.
11. The results of our policy of engagement are manifest in many areas and are not limited to bilateral trade and investment alone. Over 7,000 Indian students study in China, and the CBSE is set to introduce Chinese in the curriculum of schools from the next academic session. India and China cooperate in multilateral forums and on global issues. We have established a practice of regular leadership visits and meetings that has resulted in high level political understanding and impetus for the relationship. This now sets the stage for us to actively consider together the next steps in the evolution of our bilateral relations; evolve a detailed framework for the resolution of the boundary issue in a manner that is politically feasible for both countries; and, seize the opportunities for cooperation that the domestic transformations of our economies and the evolving global situation have opened up. There is also an information gap that keeps our peoples from understanding each other better and which we need to bridge by concerted public diplomacy from both sides. There is much work to be done to improve perceptions within the media in both countries. Larger numbers of tourists need to be encouraged as also students and teachers.
12. The global trend towards multi-polarity and a more even distribution of power has been accelerated by the recent global economic crisis. While the immediate financial aspects of the crisis may have been addressed, its structural causes in terms of global imbalances remain unsolved. This provides an opportunity to India and China to work together on global issues. Our participation and consultations within the G-20 have shown the way in this regard. Similarly, we have partnered well in BASIC (for the climate change negotiations), and in the BRIC grouping of Brazil, India, Russia and China. We hope such cooperation will also be strengthened on the important issue of UN Reform and that we will be able to build common ground on the issue relating to the expansion of the Security Council and India’s interest in permanent membership. The two countries share common positions and approaches on several major international issues of long-term significance such as the environment and climate change, energy security, food security, reform of the global financial institutions, etc. In the immediate region in which both countries are located, Asia, as well, there is common ground between India and China on combating terrorism and extremism, enhancing maritime security, and on the need for a peaceful environment to permit the domestic economic growth and development of the two countries. An open, balanced and inclusive architecture to enable a transparent dialogue on these issues that concern security and stability in Asia is in the interest of both our countries.
13. As India and China continue to pursue their interests, and so long as their overwhelming preoccupation remains their domestic transformation, and both understand that this goal requires a peaceful periphery, it is my firm conviction that the elements of competition in the bilateral relationship can be managed and the elements of congruence can be built upon. As our interests get progressively more complex, the costs of any withdrawal from engagement will rise. I believe this is a big relationship with the clear possibility of an ambitious agenda of mutual engagement that will be one of the most important bilateral equations of our new century.It is in our interest to view it in a more wide-angled and high definition manner than ever before.

New Delhi
December 3, 2010

(Source: http://meaindia.nic.in/mystart.php?id=530116760; accessed 12 December 2010)