China's recent provocations in Ladakh mark the latest manifestation of Beijing바카라s growing clout in India바카라s backyard. The current border crisis, which has plunged India-China relations to their lowest point in decades, will sharpen New Delhi바카라s desire to push back against Beijing바카라s deepening footprint in South Asia. Mustering the capacity to do so, however, will not be easy.
The main accelerant of Beijing바카라s growing presence in South Asia is its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI)바카라a mammoth transport corridor project that uses infrastructure investments to gain influence and access to markets and strategic spaces. In South Asia, BRI is most visible in Pakistan, where the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) has become the project바카라s most operationalised component. New Delhi opposes CPEC because it entrenches one bitter rival on the soil of another, but also because it is envisioned to pass through territory India claims as its own. And yet, BRI바카라s tentacles extend far beyond Pakistan. Last year, a Chinese thinktank released a report that identifies three additional South Asia-focused parts: the Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar Economic Corridor (an admittedly ambitious component, given its inclusion of a BRI-resistant India), the Trans-Himalaya Corridor (involving investments in Nepal), and a Maritime Silk Road initiative enveloping Bangladesh, Maldives, and Sri Lanka. Each part has made ample progress, though India has unsurprisingly not participated in BCIM.
All but two SAARC countries바카라Afghanistan and Bhutan바카라explicitly figure in China바카라s BRI plans. China hopes to expand CPEC into Afghanistan if that nation ends its long-running war. It has invited Bhutan to join BRI.
Factors aside from BRI further strengthen China바카라s prospects in South Asia. The coronavirus pandemic has assailed many South Asian economies, which affords Beijing opportunities to step up financial assistance and gain more influence. Its recent announcement to grant tariff exemptions to 97 per cent of Bangladesh바카라s China-bound exports is instructive. Political transitions have also been helpful; the Sri Lankan leadership that took office in November 2019 enjoys strong ties with Beijing.
Not surprisingly, China is leveraging its foothold in South Asia to pressure and test India바카라including in areas where New Delhi has traditionally held sway. Witness the Doklam standoff, at the India-China-Bhutan tri-junction. Or, more recently, Nepal바카라where Beijing may well be leveraging its growing ties with Kathmandu to push it to take a hard line in its current border spat with India. Ladakh is just the latest바카라but arguably the boldest바카라attempt by Beijing to provoke New Delhi in its broader backyard.
The good news for India is that China does face vulnerabilities. Prior to the pandemic, BRI states enmeshed in Beijing바카라s 바카라debt-trap바카라 diplomacy faced considerable economic risks from China바카라s largesse. A 2018 Center for Global Development study found that five SAARC states바카라Afghanistan, Bhutan, Maldives, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka바카라faced a 바카라quite high바카라 risk of debt distress from new BRI-related funding. The catastrophic economic consequences of COVID-19 may make them more uneasy about taking on loans they will struggle to repay.
Additionally, the Ladakh crisis, with its multiple Chinese incursions and brutal violence by PLA forces, reminds South Asian states Beijing바카라s increasingly aggressive steps. Because of this and its poor initial handling of COVID-19, Beijing is suffering a major image problem. This may make some SAARC states wary about deeper cooperation with Beijing, given the reputational costs.
So there바카라s an opportunity for New Delhi to push back against China in South Asia. It already has something to build on. Indeed, for all the talk of New Delhi바카라s struggles in its neighbourhood, it could be a lot worse. Nepal remains a key partner (India is its largest aggregate investor, with robust collaborations on infrastructure). Despite recent tensions with Dhaka over India바카라s new citizenship law, India-Bangladesh ties are stronger than they were a decade ago. Afghanistan and Bhutan remain close friends. The relationship with Male has improved markedly since Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, a China critic, was elected president in April 2019. And Sri Lanka바카라s new administration, despite past affinities with Beijing, has signalled its unwillingness to be overly dependent on China.
In effect, contrary to the claims of detractors in Islamabad, India is far from isolated in its neighbourhood. And yet, slowing China바카라s march into India바카라s backyard amounts to a tall order바카라and not just because of the depth of Beijing바카라s clout and resources.
Consider just how favourable the geopolitical dynamics of South Asia are for China. It is one of the world바카라s most disconnected and poorly integrated regions. Its infrastructure is notoriously poor and its main regional institution, SAARC, is ineffective. Thus, intraregional trade is modest. Enter China, which can mobilise quickly to deploy huge infrastructural assistance in short order. This isn바카라t just something Beijing can do; because of BRI, it바카라s a top strategic priority. Additionally, a disconnected region with a hobbled regional organisation and limited trade is not hardwired for robust diplomacy and cooperation. Rather, it complicates efforts by New Delhi to build goodwill and confidence with its neighbours, and deprives it of forums to push back against the perception of some of its smaller neighbors that it acts like a bully.
To this end, India바카라s best bet, at least initially, is to hold off on regional charm offensives and other diplomatic blitzes. There바카라s no need to reinvent the wheel. Instead, it should continue its longstanding military modernisation efforts, build on existing agreements and plans with its neighbours, and embrace newer regional institutions that don바카라t suffer from the problems of SAARC. Energy and connectivity projects, under the aegis of BIMSTEC and its member states, offer a useful start. In recent years, India has concluded energy deals with Bangladesh, Myanmar, Nepal, and Sri Lanka. There have also been discussions on an electricity-sharing arrangement with Bangladesh, Bhutan, and Nepal.
Indian efforts to push back against China바카라s deepening influence in South Asia would benefit from US support. And from a strategic standpoint, Washington is certainly game. The Trump administration바카라s Indo-Pacific strategy is all about balancing out China바카라s power. Washington바카라s free-falling relationship with Beijing, coupled with its rapidly growing partnership with New Delhi, give it added incentive to offer cooperation.
It바카라s no coincidence that US leaders have been unusually public in their messaging on Ladakh바카라including comments from an influential Congressman and a senior State Department official that were deeply critical of China, as well as a tweet from Secretary of State Mike Pompeo offering condolences to India for its fallen soldiers.
However, tactically speaking, one can바카라t count on US assistance to counter China in South Asia. The Trump administration is focused laser-like on the pandemic, the sputtering US economy, and the election in November. Additionally, US attention to China바카라s activities in Asia tends to be focused more on East and Southeast Asia바카라areas that are home to American treaty allies. Furthermore, outside of its partnership with New Delhi and its military presence in Afghanistan, Washington바카라s track record and footprint in South Asia are relatively modest. And it can바카라t hold a candle to the Chinese infrastructure projects that account for much of Beijing바카라s imprint there. There바카라s been talk in Washington in recent years about developing 바카라a new Silk Road바카라 in South Asia and other vague aspirations, but relatively little to show for it on the ground other than some rare concrete achievements like the US-backed Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India pipeline.
Still, with the Ladakh crisis generating more talk of how India should more openly side with America, it바카라s the right time to push for more US-India cooperation in South Asia. Indeed, South Asia now fits into Washington바카라s geographic conception of the Indo-Pacific. Recall the comment made at this year바카라s Raisina Dialogue by Matthew Pottinger, a senior White House official, that the Indo-Pacific stretches from 바카라California to Kilimanjaro바카라. Additionally, new US institutions can help hasten collaborations with India in the western Indo-Pacific. The BUILD Act, signed into law by President Trump in 2018, facilitates America바카라s ability to deploy resources for overseas development projects through the formation of a new development agency known as the US International Development Finance Corporation.
India-China rivalry is entering a potentially destabilising stage that will likely become an extended new normal. India will need to draw on domestic, regional, and international resources alike to reassert its clout against an emboldened nemesis that is increasingly projecting power in areas too close for New Delhi바카라s comfort.
(Michael Kugelman is senior associate for South Asia at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, DC. Views are personal.)