HomeNewsOpinionPolitics | Informal dialogues cannot resolve structural problems between India and China

Politics | Informal dialogues cannot resolve structural problems between India and China

The most charitable explanation for the informal summits between India and China is that these are merely holding exercise for the two sides — to maintain the impression that all is well in the relationship while each concentrates on other priorities.

October 11, 2019 / 08:22 IST
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The two leaders are holding delegation level talks. (File photo: Reuters)
The two leaders are holding delegation level talks. (File photo: Reuters)

Jabin T Jacob

Following the Doklam stand-off between India and China in mid-2017, the Wuhan ‘informal summit’ between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping the following April was seen as some sort of a tension-busting exercise and hosannas were sung to a new kind of diplomacy with talk of a ‘reset’ in the relationship. In the run-up to the second informal summit to be held at Mamallapuram (or Mahabalipuram), near Chennai starting October 11, however, the shallowness of the exercise is now evident, especially in the security and political realms.

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Even if one were to ignore the fact that it was not until October 9 that the Ministry of External Affairs finally confirmed that the summit was even on, the level of mutual suspicion appears to be no less than was the case following Doklam. In the meantime, the Chinese have handed India a Pyrrhic victory in supporting the sanctioning of terrorist Masood Azhar at the United Nations and even this with great reluctance, but it also promptly found an excuse to get back in the Pakistani corner by loudly and repeatedly criticising New Delhi for effecting a change in the status of the state of Jammu & Kashmir.

On Doklam, itself, the Committee on External Affairs of the 16th Lok Sabha in a report released late last year noted that ‘[t]hough the Government has categorically denied any Chinese activities near the actual face-off site, an ambivalent view has been expressed while confirming such activities for other areas in the Doklam plateau’. It also expressed concerns about ‘[r]eports suggesting that significant road-building towards the Indian border has already occurred’.