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Sailing close to the wind in a choppy sea

As India readies to welcome Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi, tensions are rising in Asia as China takes steps to assert its control over the waters of the South

Published on: Aug 12, 2016 11:36 AM IST
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As India readies to welcome Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi, tensions are rising in Asia as China takes steps to assert its control over the waters of the South China Sea after its claims were rejected by an international tribunal at The Hague last month. China’s defence minister Chang Wanquan has called for a “people’s war at sea” to push back against threats to Chinese claims.

HT Image
HT Image

More significantly, China is also changing its laws to arrest and jail anyone caught fishing in waters Beijing considers its own, even though those bits are disputed among China’s neighbours in the South China Sea.

Over the past week, all three Chinese naval fleets have taken to the sea to practise for a “sudden, cruel, and short” conflict. Beijing has begun to fly bomber and fighter aircraft near disputed islands in the South China Sea. It has also announced that it would hold joint naval “routine” drills in the waters with Russia in September. A group of new photographs have revealed the construction of several reinforced aircraft hangars at Fiery Cross, Subi and Mischief Reefs, all land formations built by China in recent months.

South Korea is now willing to share the US Terminal High Altitude Air Defense system’s radar data on North Korean missile launches with Japan. It would also be a culmination of some of China’s worst fears, as the move would bring South Korea closer into a trilateral alliance involving the US and Japan. The US is also responding at both diplomatic and military levels.

Ahead of Wang’s visit, Chinese State media is warning India to avoid “unnecessary entanglement with China over the South China Sea debate” if New Delhi “wishes to create a good atmosphere for economic cooperation.” His visit will be the first high-level visit between the two countries after China blocked India’s Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) membership bid at the plenary meeting of the 48-nation grouping in June on the grounds that it was not a signatory to the NPT. Next month, Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be in China to attend the G20 summit in Hangzhou.

India will have to carefully assess the implications of an evolving maritime order in Asia for its own interests and engage with Beijing accordingly. The stakes of what happens in the South China Sea are as high for India as they are for the regional states.

Harsh V Pant is professor of international relations at King’s College, London. The views expressed are personal.

 
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