By Shahbaz Rana
ISLAMABAD: India’s
opposition to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) stems from its fear
of internationalisation of the Kashmir dispute and the growing influence of
China in the Indian Ocean, says a new report by one of the most influential
global think tanks.
“There is
considerable concern within India that China, which has been neutral on Kashmir
since 1963, can no longer be so now that its economic and security interests in
these territories are growing in stake,” says a report by the Stockholm
International Peace Research Institute (Sipri) — a Sweden-based think tank.
Lt Gen Aamir invites India to join CPEC
The report —
titled “Silk Road Economic Belt – considering security implications and the
EU-China cooperation prospects” — argues that India does not want a mediating
role for China in these disputes.
It is the first
report by any global think tank that has discussed in detail the Indian
concerns on CPEC. The report has also shed light on implications of the ‘One
Belt One Road’ initiative on security dynamics and its compatibility with the
EU interests.
The Sipri report
says CPEC has raised political temperatures between India and Pakistan. “India
strictly opposes CPEC, and while the Economic Belt is not a harbinger of a new
conflict, it has so far intensified historic competition over influence in
South Asia,” note authors of the report.
The report
argues that there is a factual and conceptual objection to CPEC in India. The
factual objection is that India does not want to internationalise the Kashmir
dispute it has with Pakistan. Chinese activity in the disputed areas
automatically makes it a stakeholder in these disputes.
At the
conceptual level, CPEC allows China to gain a toehold in the Indian Ocean
through direct access to the Arabian Sea. There remain concerns that this might
develop a military dimension at some stage, according to the report.
Modi spoke India’s mind over CPEC
Since
territorial compromise from either India or Pakistan is a political suicide for
any of the ruling parties, it remains to be seen whether CPEC will contribute
to a resolution of this dispute or further fan the flames. There is also a
concern in India that China will use Gwadar port to observe Indian naval
activity and possibly even exploit it for an expansion of China’s own naval presence.
There is also
concern in India that while CPEC in the short and medium term could be an
opportunity to generate jobs and growth in Pakistan, over the longer term its
strategic consequences could reshape the regional balance of power in favour of
China and limit India’s geopolitical reach.
The
assertiveness and swiftness of Chinese actions in the South China Sea have
implanted a preoccupation among China’s critics in India that if China gains a
foothold in the Arabian Sea and, as an extension, in the Indian Ocean through
Gwadar, it might make national interest claims in India’s maritime sphere too.
“After all, if Gwadar grows to be the immense port China envisions it to
become, China will need to take on a bigger direct or indirect security role,”
it says.
The Sipri report
noted that unlike in India, CPEC has not raised concerns in Afghanistan.
Afghanistan is open to all regional initiatives that could reactivate its
ailing formal economy, whether that is by way of CPEC or India-led efforts to
connect with the Afghan economy through the Chabahar Port in Iran. Iran has not
opposed CPEC and has expressed strong interest in the Belt and Road Initiative.
However, the
report argues that Afghanistan is unlikely to benefit from CPEC unless
Kabul-Islamabad relations improve. For this to happen, Pakistan’s security
concerns with regard to Afghanistan need to be assuaged. The authors note that
CPEC has the potential to exacerbate three fault lines in South Asian security.
Four reasons why CPEC will not be another East India Company
The first is between
China and India themselves. The second is between China-Pakistan on the one
side and India on the other. The third is between China and India and its
partners – the US, Japan and, to a lesser degree, Vietnam. The region of
Balochistan is being geopolitically instrumentalised by these various players,
they added.
It says that
this is an evidence that CPEC has contributed to political and security bloc
formation, but the bloc rivalry between the US-India and China-Pakistan exists
regardless of CPEC. CPEC has merely strengthened the strategic
Chinese-Pakistani alliance.
China’s reliance
on CPEC means that it needs a stable and amicable Pakistan, underlines the
report. “The Silk Road Economic Belt initiative may become one of the
cornerstones of Asian economic growth and integration, and eventually of closer
political and security cooperation among states, but the pathway to this
scenario is long and fraught with obstacles,” it says.
Published in The Express Tribune,
February 3rd, 2017.
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