It is a smart diplomatic move to
invite all the 10 Asean leaders as chief guests to India’s 70th Republic Day celebrations.
* * *
Ever since the ‘Look East Policy’ was unveiled by the former
Prime Minister PV Narasimha Rao in the early 1990s, India, realizing that it
has to “go beyond the confines of SAARC if it had to reap the benefits out of
the economic potential of the South East Asian region and establish itself as a
regional power”, shedding its earlier reservations, slowly moved closer to it.
As a result, it acquired the status of full dialog partner of Asean in 1995.
As India continued its efforts at cultivating multifaceted
relationship with Asean, it became a summit-level partner of Asean from 2002
onwards. For their part, Asean, besides fostering closer economic cooperation,
had also exhibited eagerness to engage India in discussions on political and
security issues as well. This mutual interest ultimately led the two to sign
the landmark agreement, the ‘ASEAN-India Partnership for Peace, Progress and
Shared Prosperity Agreement’ in November 2004.
Economics had indeed played a key role in fuelling India’s
relations with Asean. After India became a full dialog partner in 1995, the
ASEAN-India Joint Cooperation Committee and ASEAN-India Working Group on Trade
and Investment was set up. This led to Asean to emerge as India’s fourth
largest trading partner. Currently, trade between India and Asean stands almost
at the same level of $70 bn as that of China, but with a deficit of only $14
bn. In the areas of investment too, significant achievements have been
recorded, with Singapore emerging as the largest investor in India. This
relationship has also benefitted the infrastructural development in India, with
India becoming the largest market for Malaysian construction industry. India
too is involved in the oil and gas sector in Myanmar, Malaysia, Vietnam and
Indonesia.
Culturally too, India and Asean countries are close to each
other, for the cultural bonds in terms of Hindu, Buddhist and Muslim
inheritances pull them close. The visit of the dance troupes from the 10 Asean
nations to present Ramayana in its picturesque beauty “as a prelude to
the Asean-India commemorative Summit on January 25th” is one such example of deep
cultural bonds of India with Asean countries. Indeed, looking at the historical
link—“Hindu ideas of kingshipand Sanskrit as the sacred language of court and
religious rituals could be … found across Southeast Asia…with rituals and great
temples and palaces …the symbolism and names and texts were Indian”—the authors
of the book, ‘The Asean Miracle’, Kishore
Mahbubani and Jeffery Sng recommend strengthening tourism cooperation between
Indiaand Asean countries.
It is against this backdrop that at the dawn of 2018, India
celebrated the 25th anniversary of its association with the Asean
as a dialog-partner by hosting the ‘Asean-India commemorative Summit’ on
January 25th in New Delhi under the theme of “shared
values, common destiny”. And in a smart diplomatic move, India invited all the
10 leaders of Asean—Thailand, Myanmar, Singapore, Cambodia, Indonesia, the
Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei Darussalam, Vietnam and Laos—as the chief guests
to the Republic Day celebrations.
It is obvious that the trigger for the “historic and
unprecedented” participation of 10 Asean leaders as chief guests in India’s
Republic day celebrations is China. It is evident that realizing the Asean
countries’ expectation that India should serve as a balance to China’s heft,
India wants to deepen its strategic relations with Asean countries to blunt the
influence of China in the region. This can be gauged from what Prime Minister
Modi said at the summit, of course, without any direct reference to China’s
aggression in the South China Sea: “India shares the Asean vision for
rule-based societies and values of peace. We are committed to working with
Asean nations to enhance collaboration in the maritime domain. It highlights
the importance of our strategic partnership placing Asean at the center of
India’s Act East Policy. Our friendship has been nurtured by our shared culture
and civilization linkages.”
With the
US under Trump showing signs of disengaging not only from multilateral economic
engagements across Indo-Pacific but also militarily and China, with its
willingness to provide credit support for infrastructure and other projects in
the region, becoming increasingly assertive, Asean countries are obviously
looking to India to counter China’s hegemony and maintain balanced equations in
the region. Indeed some of them privately fear or loathe China’s heavy-handed
military and economic clout. A senior fellow at Washington-based Council on
Foreign Relations observes, “In India they see a global giant—a huge country
that is not as big as China on trade, but one that is willing to say to Vietnam
and the Philippines, ‘We are with you on this question’. They are ready to
stand up to China.” Even Japan, Australia and the US endorse the idea of India
playing a more active strategic role in the Indo-Pacific region.
So, now that the celebrations are over, it is time for India
to act hard but swiftly: it must
imaginatively navigate through the complex contours—if required even going for
bilateral partnerships with specific Asean members—and work for positioning
itself as a stable balance of power in Asia.
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