India’s ‘Look East Policy’ targets China, says commentator
October 28th, 2010 - 7:39 pm ICT by IANS
Beijing, Oct 28 (IANS) India must take into count China’s reaction if it attempts to use its ‘Look East Policy’ to try encircle Beijing, a Chinese commentator said in People’s Daily Thursday.
Li Hongmei wrote that although Indian hawks were intoxicated that India was starting to face China’s rising regional clout, with its `Look East Policy’, “India cannot relax its spasm of worries about China nor can it brush aside the fear that China might nip its ambitions in the bud”.
Li’s column, headlined “India’s `Look East Policy’ means `Look to encircle China’?”, appeared on the day Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh flew into Vietnam on the final leg of a three-nation tour that also took him to Japan and Malaysia.
The ‘Look East policy’, said Li, “was born out of failure - the failure of India’s Cold War strategy of `playing both ends against the middle’… Today, India is harping on the same string but should wisely skip the out-of-tune piece.
“The savvy Indian leadership will never rashly board the ship of Japan without giving a glance at China’s expression. After all, it is not Japan, but China that acts as India’s largest trade partner, with the overall volume in 2010 to exceed $ 60 billion.”
Manmohan Singh’s trip to Japan, his first halt, came at a time when Sino-Japanese ties have hit a new low. Vietnam, like India, has border disputes and has gone to war with China.
The columnist referred to what she said was the Indian media hype over Manmohan Singh’s Asian journey, “…to pursue the geopolitical and economic goals and achieve a ‘Big Power’ status in the region, if not the leading power”.
Commenting on Manmohan Singh’s visit to Japan, where the two countries signed a sweeping economic pact, the columnist wrote that the Indian media hoped it would help Tokyo prevent “China’s expansion”.
“Japan and India have both placed high expectations upon each other in combining strengths to counterbalance China,” Li said.
She, however, quoted some Japanese military observers as saying that it would be risky for Tokyo to get too close to New Delhi.
They also felt that a new alliance among Japan, India and Vietnam “might seem a logical response to China’s ambitions in the South China Sea.
“The logic goes like this - India cannot protect Vietnam against China but its presence in Vietnam (if Hanoi gives Delhi access to a naval base) would raise tensions with China, and Japan would get drawn into the conflict.”
–Indo-Asian News service
rd/mr
- China wary of India's Look-East diplomacy (Lead) - Oct 28, 2010
- India, China PMs' begin meeting, stapled visa, economic and strategic ties in focus - Oct 29, 2010
- `First US-Japan-India trilateral not aimed at China' (Lead) - Dec 20, 2011
- First US-Japan-India trilateral, say not aimed at China - Dec 20, 2011
- With China on mind, Obama for larger Indian role in East Asia - Oct 29, 2010
- India-Japan relations vital for Asian stability, says PM - Oct 24, 2010
- Manmohan Singh to undertake three-nation Asia tour - Oct 21, 2010
- PM heads East this Sunday to bolster economic ties - Oct 22, 2010
- Manmohan Singh arrives in Tokyo - Oct 24, 2010
- Amid China trouble, India, Japan to firm up economic pact - Sep 04, 2010
- PM leaves for three-nation Asia tour - Oct 24, 2010
- India flags maritime troubles with China at meet with Japan - Nov 03, 2011
- With China on mind, India, US, Japan to hold trilateral meet - Dec 06, 2011
- Manmohan to visit Japan, nuclear deal on way - Aug 12, 2010
- Manmohan-Wen meeting will be 'cordial' - Oct 28, 2010
Tags: asian journey, border disputes, chinese commentator, cold war strategy, economic goals, high expectations, hongmei, indian leadership, indian prime minister, indian prime minister manmohan singh, japanese ties, manmohan, manmohan singh, media hype, nation tour, policy targets, prime minister manmohan, prime minister manmohan singh, spasm, trade partner