[A more realistic assessment of China's OBOR/BRI initiative, from an
"Indian" viewpoint, unilke the much wilder ones.

(For a sample of the other variety, may look up:
<http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/toi-edit-page/wahhabism-meet-han-ism-cpec-betokens-chinas-search-for-lebensraum-in-pakistan-and-pakistan-occupied-kashmir/>.)]

http://indianexpress.com/article/explained/to-be-in-step-with-chinas-ambition-south-asian-nations-walk-tightrope-4651726/

To be in step with China’s ambition, South Asian nations walk tightrope
The diplomatic close shave in Sri Lanka is emblematic of South Asia’s
dilemma when it comes to pursuing closer ties with China.

Written by Jyoti Malhotra | Published:May 12, 2017 12:57 am

Prime Minister Narendra Modi being received by Sri Lankan Prime
Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and other dignitaries upon his arrival
at Bandaranaike International Airport, in Colombo on Thursday.
(Source: PTI)

Until a few weeks ago, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Colombo
and Kandy was in jeopardy because Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil
Wickeramasinghe was intent on flying to Beijing on Friday — so he
could be well in time for the May 14-15 One Belt, One Road (OBOR)
Summit in the Chinese capital. As many as 29 Heads of State and 110
countries, including several South Asian nations, are expected to
attend.

Wickeramasinghe was ultimately persuaded to stay back until Modi had
prayed at the Temple of the Tooth in Kandy and flown back home on
Friday evening. Certainly, it would have been terrible optics if the
leader of one of India’s closest friends in the region was absent when
the Prime Minister came visiting.

The diplomatic close shave in Sri Lanka is emblematic of South Asia’s
dilemma when it comes to pursuing closer ties with China. Pakistan,
with its self-avowed and decades-old “special relationship that is
higher than the mountains and deeper than the oceans”, has it the
easiest. Its powerful Army cushioned by Chinese assistance, especially
in the nuclear and missile arenas, Islamabad can ask Beijing for
infrastructure aid without compunction. That is why, at last count,
the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), which begins at the
Karakoram and ends at the Gwadar port on the Indian Ocean, was worth a
cool $ 57 billion.

Nepal’s Prime Minister Prachanda aims at balancing India and China —
which is why he allowed his country’s first military exercise with
China a few weeks ago. According to the 1950 Treaty of Friendship
between India and Nepal, such an idea would have been anathema as
Kathmandu was honour-bound to recognise India’s strategic concerns
about another country looming at New Delhi’s doorstep.

But Prachanda knows that Nepal’s population would prefer closer ties
with India; besides, New Delhi had backed the Nepalese people’s lead
in overthrowing the monarchy in 2006, which enabled Prachanda and his
fellow Maoists to come to power.

The Bangladesh story is more complicated. In mid-October 2016, China’s
President Xi Jinping travelled to Bangladesh and cut a cheque of $ 29
billion, sending a frisson of excitement across the country. India now
wants to push infrastructure projects into Bangladesh, alongside $ 5
billion of credit and $ 9.24 billion worth agreements, to fund power
plants and supply liquified natural gas.

Meanwhile, the Maldives is happy to accept large Chinese investments
in building Male’s new airport (which was taken away from India’s
GMR), as well as a housing estate.

It is important to note that Sri Lanka’s Wickeramasinghe is not
thrilled with the high cost of Chinese loans that Colombo must now
begin to repay for the port expansion in the capital and the
Hambantota port in the south — all this, as India funds a $ 350
million refurbishment of an 84-tank oil farm in Trincomalee.

And yet, the alacrity with which Wickeramasinghe wanted to fly to
Beijing is reflection of the fact that he — like the other South Asian
leaders — will not allow his affection for India to come in the way of
his country’s need for China.

With over $ 3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves, China is
liberally using its spare cash to promote influence. In an article in
the Global Times, Ding Gang, a senior editor with People’s Daily,
wrote, “…With the wheels of history turning into the 21st century,
China has reinstated itself as the global economic centre.”

OBOR, or as the Chinese now call it, the Belt and Road Initiative
(BRI), is the linchpin of President Xi’s strategy to make China the
world’s richest and most powerful nation again.
The monarchs of the Middle Kingdom were used to vassals kowtowing to
their superior presence. Xi believes the BRI and the Maritime Silk
Road (MSR) — just like Marco Polo’s ancient Silk Road, but much bigger
and better connected — will unfold across the heartland of Central
Asia down to the Indian Ocean, as well as across the Mediterranean and
onwards into Europe. Trade and investment, which generates wealth,
will be followed by influence.

In 2013, while formally naming the project, Xi had allotted a mere $
40 billion to it. But as the President’s and his country’s incredible
ambition began to take shape, its scope increased exponentially.

The China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), established
in late 2015 as a regional financing mechanism for OBOR, has an
initial total capital of $ 100 billion. As many as 50 Chinese
state-owned undertakings are already part of 1,700 projects to develop
ports, roads, railway lines and industrial parks. China’s
manufacturing machine will move both surplus goods and low-paying jobs
to less affluent nations, while pulling up its own economy to enter a
higher-income bracket such as Europe. Over the next decade, Ding Gang
wrote, the annual trade volume along the BRI route will exceed $ 2.5
trillion and enrich about 1 billion people, the equivalent of the
total population of Europe and the US.

Ding also made a point about the uniqueness of China’s growth explosion:
“Different from the globalisation which began in Europe 500 years ago,
the BRI is by no means a one-way flow of wealth enabled by the
exploitation of the empires. It aims to build an active economic and
trade corridor and an interconnectivity network in Asia, Europe and
Africa, via stimulating the potential of these regions, creating an
unprecedented convergence effect.”

Indeed, Xinhua, the official Chinese press agency, has declared, “This
is the China solution for global economic revival.”

Certainly, the BRI is not a done deal — yet. At an ADB meeting in
Japan last week, the Deputy Governor of the central bank of the
Phillippines, Diwa Guinigundo, pointed out that BRI was “still a
vision, (and you) have to translate that into some working parts”.

India, of course, remains the most put off by the summit in Beijing,
not only because the CPEC, a key element of BRI, passes through
Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir, but also probably because the summit is an
accurate reflection of the widening chasm between the two Asian
powers.

Chinese government officials, who say they have tried to alleviate
India’s apprehensions, point out that more than 50 MoUs, plans,
cooperation letters and projects will be signed during the summit in
the transportation, energy and communications sectors — besides a
joint consultative document reflecting the “shared consensus” by all
parties.

Xinhua invoked Confucius: “He who wants success should enable others
to succeed.”

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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