India-China relationship going through a 'bad patch': Jaishankar
Singapore, Nov 19: External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Friday that India and China are going through a "particularly bad patch" in their ties because Beijing has taken a set of actions in violation of agreements for which it still doesn't have a "credible explanation" and it is for the Chinese leadership to answer where they want to take the bilateral relationship.
"I don't think the Chinese have any doubt on where we stand on our relationship and what's not gone right with it. I've been meeting my counterpart Wang Yi a number of times. As you would've experienced, I speak fairly clear, reasonably understandably (and) there is no lack of clarity so if they want to hear it, I am sure they would have heard it," Jaishankar said in response to a question at a panel "Greater Power Competition:
The Emerging World Order" at the Bloomberg New Economic Forum here. "We are going through a particularly bad patch in our relationship because they have taken a set of actions in violation of agreements for which they still don't have a credible explanation and that indicates some rethink about where they want to take our relationship, but that's for them to answer," he further said, in an apparent reference to the eastern Ladakh border clash with China.
The eastern Ladakh border standoff between the Indian and Chinese militaries erupted on May 5 last year following a violent clash in the Pangong lake areas and both sides gradually enhanced their deployment by rushing in tens of thousands of soldiers as well as heavy weaponry. The tension escalated following a deadly clash in Galwan Valley on June 15 last year. As a result of a series of military and diplomatic talks, the two sides completed the disengagement process in the north and south banks of the Pangong lake in February and in the Gogra area in August. The last round of military talks on October 10 ended in a stalemate.
Meanwhile,
on
Thursday
the
two
sides
agreed
to
hold
the
14th
round
of
military
talks
at
an
early
date
to
achieve
the
objective
of
complete
disengagement
in
remaining
friction
points
along
the
Line
of
Actual
Control
(LAC)
in
eastern
Ladakh.
Jaishankar
also
dismissed
as
"ridiculous"
the
notion
that
the
United
States
has
been
strategically
contracting
and
yielding
space
to
others
amidst
a
global
rebalancing
of
power.
He
said
that
the
US
is
today,
a
much
more
flexible
partner,
much
more
open
to
ideas,
suggestions,
and
working
arrangements
than
in
the
past.
"Don't
confuse
it
with
the
decline
of
the
United
States.
I
think
that's
ridiculous,"
he
said
in
response
to
a
question
from
the
moderator
at
the
session,
also
attended
by
former
US
Secretary
of
State
Hillary
Clinton
and
former
British
Prime
Minister
Tony
Blair.
"It's
clear
China
has
been
expanding.
But
the
nature
of
China,
the
manner
of
its
growing
influence
is
very
different.
And
we
don't
have
a
situation
where
China
necessarily
replaces
the
United
States.
Well,
it's
natural
to
think
of
China,
US
(and)
China
as
the
overarching
happening.
The
fact
is,
there
are
also
a
lot
of
other
countries
including
India,
which
have
come
much
more
into
play.
There's
been
a
rebalancing
in
the
world,"
he
said.
Citing QUAD as an example, he pointed out that some countries are coming together on a certain set of concerns and issues or interests. The Quad comprising India, Japan, the US and Australia was formed to develop a new strategy to keep the critical sea routes in the resource-rich Indo-Pacific free of any influence. He said the United States is today, a much more flexible partner, much more open to ideas, suggestions, and working arrangements than in the past. "I think this reflects a very different kind of world. We are moving into a world in a sense, you could say, the real transitions after 1992 are now occurring."
The minister also elaborated on a question about how the world is changing. "It is certainly not unipolar and it is not really really bipolar either. There are many more players. A lot of what we are doing in terms of repositioning, working with countries, (it) is multipolar work," he said. "In a sense, it is partly a hedging strategy, partly autonomous partnership, often very issue based (as) we work with different countries on different sets of issues," said Jaishankar.
Noting that the COVID has called into question the old model of globalisation, he said, "we are actually at multiple levels in a very, very complex transition." He pointed out that countries are willing to pay additional costs for a greater sense of security. "We all want more reliable, more resilient supply chains. We want more options. Many of us were in touch during that period and went through very difficult issues. It could have been on health, even in some cases on food. So we are actually at multiple levels in a very, very complex transition. The transition, some of it is with the rise and fall and the rebalancing of powers," he said.
"The transition some of it is with the rise and fall and the rebalancing of powers. Some of it is many more players. Some of it is that our concept of what is national security has changed. We think much more of economic security, much more of health security, much more of digital security," he said. He said that in the old days, it didn't matter beyond a point what the neighbour's domestic system was.
"Today, issues of trust and transparency are much more relevant in a data driven world. So it does matter to me what the character of my partner is, who they are partners with. So these are all new factors, which I would suggest is really taking the world in a very, very different direction," he said. Obviously, India would like to see how its interests are best served and those interests today are definitely served with a much closer relationship with the United States, with a much stronger relationship with Europe, and the UK as well as re-energising the relationships with the ASEAN and especially Singapore, he said. PTI