Vietnam and Burma’s opening towards India dovetails with India’s Look East Policy
China’s growing power and muscle-flexing vis-à-vis its neighbors have
now resulted in a regional balancing effort. Earlier this month the
presidents of China’s southern neighbors, Burma and Vietnam, made
official visits to India – as much recognition of India’s growing
economic and political heft as acknowledgement that India is a good bet
as they seek strategic balance in a region transformed by China’s rapid
ascent.
This is a time of great turmoil in the Asian strategic landscape, and
India is trying to make itself relevant to the regional states. With its
political and economic rise, Beijing has started dictating the
boundaries of acceptable behavior to its neighbors, thereby laying bare
the costs of great-power politics.
In July, an Indian warship on a friendly visit to Vietnam reported an
unidentified Chinese radio warning when it was about 45 nautical miles
off the Vietnamese coast. Tensions are rising between China and smaller
states in East Asia and Southeast Asia over territorial issues as well.
The US and its allies have already started reassessing their regional
strategies, and a loose anti-China balancing coalition is emerging.
India’s role becomes critical in such an evolving balance of power. As
Singapore’s elder-statesman Lee Kuan Yew has argued, he would like India
to be “part of the Southeast Asia balance of forces” and “a
counterweight [to China] in the Indian Ocean.”
Other regional states, too, are keen on a more pro-active Indian role in
the region. And the visits of Vietnamese President Truong Tan Sang and
Burmese President Thein Sein to India should be viewed in this broader
context. Both Vietnam and Burma have hit a rough patch in their ties
with China. China has sparred with regional states including the
Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan, asserting its
“indisputable sovereignty” over the South China Sea.
Some, like the Philippines and Vietnam, have pushed back. Philippines
President Benigno Aquino Jr. told his nation: “We do not wish to
increase tensions with anyone, but we must let the world know that we
are ready to protect what is ours.” Ever mindful of not provoking China,
Vietnam has sent its top party leader to China and the president to
India, but has made it clear that it wants the US and India to
counterbalance Chinese power.
In September, when Beijing told New Delhi that its permission was needed
for India’s state-owned oil and gas firm to explore energy on two
Vietnamese blocks in the South China Sea, Vietnam quickly cited the 1982
United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea to claim that blocks
127 and 128 were in Vietnamese territorial waters.
New Delhi supported Hanoi’s claims and has made it clear that its
state-owned firm would continue to explore in the South China Sea. This
rare display of spine has helped India strengthen its profile in the
region and its relationship with Vietnam in particular.
The two nations also have high stakes in ensuring sea-lane security in
the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea. Given that Vietnam and India
use similar Russian and erstwhile Soviet weapons systems – from
submarines to jet fighters – Hanoi has been seeking collaboration with
New Delhi on defense. Talks are ongoing for India to sell the BrahMos
supersonic cruise missile, developed by an Indo-Russian joint venture.
Such collaboration could allow Vietnam to acquire military muscle and
improve deterrence against China.
Naval cooperation between Vietnam and India remains the focus with
Vietnam giving India the right to use its port in the south, Nha Trang,
situated close to the strategically significant Cam Ranh Bay. During
Sang’s visit to India, the two sides reiterated the need to enhance
cooperation in ensuring safety and security of the region’s sea lanes
and launched a security dialogue. To give strong economic foundation to
the bilateral ties, it was also decided to increase the trade target to
US$7 billion by 2015 from the present US$2.7 billion.
Burma too has made its own overtures to India. President Then Sein has
pursued a range of reforms in the domestic realm that include opening
substantive talks with opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, declaration
of amnesty for political prisoners and cancellation of the
Chinese-funded Myitsone Dam project.
These efforts could be viewed as an attempt to seek a rapprochement with
the democratic world, and that may be why for his first visit abroad as
president of a nominal civilian government, Thein Sein chose India.
During his visit, Then Sein sought greater Indian investment in Burma’s
energy sector even as the two nations agreed to expand cooperation in
oil and gas exploration, open border trade, and speed up construction of
natural gas pipelines. India, which is investing in the Kaladan
multimodal transport system, connecting India’s eastern seaboard to its
northeastern states through Myanmar, further offered US$500 million in
credits for infrastructure projects.
While India is under pressure from the West to demonstrate democratic
credentials, its strategic interests have been winning out in relations
with Burma in recent years. Due to such strategic interests, New Delhi
has only gently nudged the Burmese junta on the issue of democracy,
gradually gaining a sense of trust at the highest echelons of Burma’s
ruling elite. India would be loath to lose this relationship.
As such, India remains opposed to Western sanctions on the country.
Burma’s recent moves towards democratic transition will give India a
larger strategic space to maneuver, and compared to Beijing, New Delhi
will be a more attractive partner for Naypyidaw as it tries to find a
modus vivendi with the West.
India is also emerging as a serious player in the Asian strategic
landscape as smaller states in East Asia reach out to it for trade,
diplomacy and, potentially, as a key regional balancer. The “Look East”
policy initiated by one of the most visionary prime ministers India has
ever had, P.V. Narasimha Rao, is now the cornerstone of India’s
engagement with the world’s most economically dynamic region. India’s
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has made it clear that his government’s
foreign-policy priority will be East and Southeast Asia, poised for
sustained growth in the 21st century.
China is too big and too powerful to be ignored by the regional states.
But the states in China’s vicinity are now seeking to expand their
strategic space by reaching out to other regional and global powers.
Smaller states in the region are now looking to India to act as a
balancer in view of China’s growing influence and America’s anticipated
retrenchment from the region in the near future, while larger states see
India as an attractive engine for regional growth.
To live up to its full potential and meet the region’s expectations,
India must do a more convincing job of emerging as a credible strategic
partner of the region. Neither India nor the regional states in East
Asia have incentive to define their relationship in opposition to China.
But they are certainly interested in leveraging their ties with other
states to gain benefits from China and bring a semblance of equality in
their relationships. Great power politics in the region have only just
begun.
(Harsh V. Pant is a Reader in International Relations at King’s
College London in the Department of Defense Studies. This is reprinted
with permission from the Yale Center for the Study of Globalization.)

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