Posted on 06/01/2002 10:11:55 AM PDT by lyonesse
Under President Vladimir Putin, ties between India and Russia have recovered the closeness that was a geo-political given until the Yeltsin years, when the Mafia ruled in Moscow and was manipulated by external interests into compromising national interests in exchange for protection abroad. Today, Indias best friend has recovered from the chaos of those years and is on track to restoring its superpower status and responsibilities. New Delhi and Moscow come as a package. An alliance with the one implies an accommodation with the other.
While the US is a bi-continental (in fact, quadric-continental) power thanks to its superb cultural amalgam of Europe and Asia, Russia is equally so because of geography. Unfortunately, thus far the hidden opposition of France and Germany - eager to retain their shared domination over Europe, a control that would dissolve in the event of Russias entry - has prevented Moscow from being offered terms for integration into European structures that are commensurate with its potential. Similarly, China has worked with success to prevent India from playing the formal role in Asia that the countrys location and strengths entitle it to. Since 1962, Beijing has reinforced the countries around India in an alliance designed to contain New Delhi. It is only the economic modernisation begun in the 1990s - in the teeth of opposition from Chinas political allies in India, the Left and what may be termed the Buffalo Belt - that has enabled New Delhi to escape from such restraints and begin flexing continental muscle.
After a delay of three decades caused by adherence to Nehruvian foreign policy nostrums, India has begun expanding its ties with the necklace of nations beginning with Japan, South Korea, the territory of Taiwan, Viet Nam, Indonesia and Singapore. The holdout is Australia, which for commercial reasons is enthusiastically playing the Beijing game of trying to keep India confined to the South Asia box. It is not accidental that the shrillest condemnation of each Indian nuclear and missile test has come from Canberra, a capital in angst over its self-declared goal of carrying the White Mans Burden in a sea of brown. Where India goes, Russia can follow. Were Moscow to reinforce the potential alliance between New Delhi and the littoral states of the China Sea and the Indian Ocean, the strategic benefits both to itself and to the other partners would be immense.
Fortunately, there is no Paris or Berlin in Asia blocking the integration on acceptable terms of Russias strategic interests with the necklace of alliances that is emerging with Japan as the northern prong and India as its southern counterpart. However, there is a rival vision, one promoted by the emerging superpower, the Peoples Republic of China. While it had been courted in the 1970s and for the subsequent two decades by the US, today Washington is rediscovering the strategic tensions that underline the competing interests of itself and Beijing. After a period of belief (inspired by fantasies of racial superiority?) that Australia was a sufficient southern jaw to the emerging Asian network of alliances designed to keep China in check, US policy circles appear to have accepted that only India has the depth needed to fulfill such a task. Today, despite the hostility of a State Department mired in the Cold War past, the US Defence Department is pushing for engagement with India. Clearly, shared traditions of democracy and a common language virtually mandate that India and the US will be partners within the decade. This implies an accommodation of Moscows interests, in view of the Siamese twin relationship between the two old friends.
Worried about the US diplomatic push to isolate it, Beijing is attempting to play the card of a tripartite alliance between itself and the New Delhi-Moscow duo. However, this is less out of conviction than necessity. Within the Chinese Communist Party, where numerous senior cadres have illegally acquired properties in Europe and the US, a significant faction still believes that the deal nearly consummated with an obliging Bill Clinton - of China being the US strategic partner in Asia the way the EU is in Europe - can yet be reached. To such optimists, Taiwan would be a small price for the US to pay to ensure the goodwill of China.
The problem in such logic is that it confuses China with the Communist Party of China. While the former is welcome in a future security calculus, that will apply only after the Communist Party gets removed from office the way the CPSU was by 1991. Under the straight-talking George Bush, the irreconcilability between continued Communist rule in China and US national security interests has become overt. Unless Beijing were to agree to a much-diminished role in Asia, essentially subsidiary to the US-led necklace of allies, tensions with Washington are likely to intensify.
India and Russia face a choice. Should it be a linkup with Washington or with Beijing? In both countries, there are those who favour one or the other option. In large part, the answer will lie in the US ability to escape from the restraints of its Cold War past and offer the New Delhi-Moscow duo terms that acknowledge the India-Russia alliance to be the cornerstone of strategic dominance for whichever is its partner in the world of the new century.
Copyright © Bharat Rakshak 2002
India is still pretty much an an "IF", overall, and China....well....I'm not willing to catagorize China yet.
In your dreams, Sahib. Firstly, don't think
your attempt to switch your Cold War ally
from Communist to Mafia is successful. India's
willingness to sell out the West for rubles is
not forgotten. Secondly, Russia's economic strength
is about that of the Netherlands. Superpower
she ain't, and won't be for decades, if ever again.
But, hey, you hitched your wagon to the wrong
star before, so be my guest.
The US would be foolish to involve itself in the game these three are playing. We could never field a military that would make much of a dent there. Instead, the US will remain a periphery player. It will tip the balance from one to another and will attempt to keep all three occupied with regional interests while the US remains a global power.
Individually, the three countries are all on the verge of internal collapse. Russia is still fragmenting after the Soviet collapse. It will likely split into a European country west of the Urals and at least two countries to the east of the Urals. India has never been a stable country since independence from Britain. It is an imaginary country created by the British. Unresolved are the problems between Hindu and Muslim and ethnic groups. The caste system is also causing problems. It will likely split at least into north and south with a minor country east of Bangladesh. China over extended by absorbing Tibet and the Muslim Xinjiang in the West. Ironically, it is likely to lose these as it improves its standard of living. It will also experience massive illegal immigration as the standard of living improves beyond that of its immediate neighbors. China is unlikely to survive the 21st century intact.
There are no threats in this area for the US to worry over.
Only nuclear arms make them even a consideration at this point. That threat will fade as their stockpiles age. Nuclear weapons face the radioactive equivalence of rust. The weapons grade power of the material lessens over time. It will drop from high power to low yield then from low yield to useful in "dirty bombs" then to a nuisance. The majority of their arsenal is probably at the low yield stage now.
India is also relevant because of nuclear weapons. It can cause a great deal of damage on account of that threat and the fact that it is a large nation with a large economy. It is however a poor nation per capita and the population continues to grow faster than the economy. India will be at war (either internal or external) during the 21st century. India will be relevant as a regional security concern for the US but will have no ability to seriously threaten the security of the US.
China will not be a war enemy in the 21st century. It will not be ready. Instead it will focus on building regional power. It will probably pick fights with smaller nations to train its military and may even increase border skirmishes with Russia and India. The US and China may even fight proxy wars reminiscent of the US vs USSR world. China will seek to increase ties with other countries around it while destabilizing its main competitors Russia and India. It will battle the US politically and economically in East Asia and the Pacific. The US will find Chinese spreading influence and power everywhere. China is patient. When they are the equal of the US in technology, economy, and military they will seek to openly push us out of "greater China" but not until then.
If the US wishes to avoid that 22nd century war, it can (1) withdraw from the region (2) attempt to share power in the region (3) destabilize China and prevent its rise. The first choice is abdication to a new power and will create the next centuries conflict. The second choice will acknowledge the new regional power and lead to future conflict. The third choice will preserve the power of the US and prevent a large scale war with China.
It will indeed be interesting to see what the final allignment will be.
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