STRATFOR
Global Intelligence
 
 
 
The India-China Rivalry  

April 25, 2012 





 
 
 
 
By Robert D. Kaplan 
As the world moves into the second decade of the 21st century, a new power  
rivalry is taking shape between India and China, Asia's two behemoths in 
terms  of territory, population and richness of civilization. India's recent 
successful  launch of a long-range missile able to hit Beijing and Shanghai 
with nuclear  weapons is the latest sign of this development. 
This is a rivalry born completely of high-tech geopolitics, creating a core 
 dichotomy between two powers whose own geographical expansion patterns  
throughout history have rarely overlapped or interacted with each other. 
Despite  the limited war fought between the two countries on their Himalayan 
border 50  years ago, this competition has relatively little long-standing 
historical or  ethnic animosity behind it. 
The signal geographical fact about Indians and Chinese is that the 
impassable  wall of the Himalayas separates them. Buddhism spread in varying 
forms 
from  India, via Sri Lanka and Myanmar, to Yunnan in southern China in the 
third  century B.C., but this kind of profound cultural interaction was the 
exception  more than the rule. 
Moreover, the dispute over the demarcation of their common frontier in the  
Himalayan foothills, from Kashmir in the west to Arunachal Pradesh in the 
east,  while a source of serious tension in its own right, is not especially 
the cause  of the new rivalry. The cause of the new rivalry is the collapse 
of distance  brought about by the advance of military technology. 
Indeed, the theoretical arc of operations of Chinese fighter jets at 
Tibetan  airfields includes India. Indian space satellites are able to do 
surveillance on  China. In addition, India is able to send warships into the 
South 
China Sea,  even as China helps develop state-of-the-art ports in the Indian 
Ocean. And so,  India and China are eyeing each other warily. The whole map 
of Asia now spreads  out in front of defense planners in New Delhi and 
Beijing, as it becomes  apparent that the two nations with the largest 
populations in the world (even as  both are undergoing rapid military buildups) 
are 
encroaching upon each other's  spheres of influence -- spheres of influence 
that exist in concrete  terms today in a way they did not in an earlier era of 
technology. 
And this is to say nothing of China's expanding economic reach, which  
projects Chinese influence throughout the Indian Ocean world, as evinced by  
Beijing's port-enhancement projects in Kenya, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh  
and Myanmar. This, too, makes India nervous. 
Because this rivalry is geopolitical -- based, that is, on the positions of 
 India and China, with their huge populations, on the map of Eurasia -- 
there is  little emotion behind it. In that sense, it is comparable to the Cold 
War  ideological contest between the United States and the Soviet Union, 
which were  not especially geographically proximate and had little emotional 
baggage  dividing them. 
The best way to gauge the relatively restrained atmosphere of the 
India-China  rivalry is to compare it to the rivalry between India and 
Pakistan. 
India and  Pakistan abut one another. India's highly populated Ganges River 
Valley is  within 480 kilometers (300 miles) of Pakistan's highly populated 
Indus River  Valley. There is an intimacy to India-Pakistan tensions that 
simply 
does not  apply to those between India and China. That intimacy is inflamed 
by a religious  element: Pakistan is the modern incarnation of all of the 
Muslim invasions that  have assaulted Hindu northern India throughout 
history. And then there is the  tangled story of the partition of the Asian 
subcontinent itself to consider --  India and Pakistan were both born in blood 
together. 
Partly because the India-China rivalry carries nothing like this degree of  
long-standing passion, it serves the interests of the elite policy 
community in  New Delhi very well. A rivalry with China in and of itself raises 
the 
stature of  India because China is a great power with which India can now be 
compared.  Indian elites hate when India is hyphenated with Pakistan, a 
poor and  semi-chaotic state; they much prefer to be hyphenated with China. 
Indian elites  can be obsessed with China, even as Chinese elites think much 
less about India.  This is normal. In an unequal rivalry, it is the lesser 
power that always  demonstrates the greater degree of obsession. For instance, 
Greeks have always  been more worried about Turks than Turks have been about 
Greeks. 
China's inherent strength in relation to India is more than just a matter 
of  its greater economic capacity, or its more efficient governmental 
authority. It  is also a matter of its geography. True, ethnic-Han Chinese are 
virtually  surrounded by non-Han minorities -- Inner Mongolians, Uighur Turks 
and Tibetans  -- in China's drier uplands. Nevertheless, Beijing has 
incorporated these  minorities into the Chinese state so that internal security 
is 
manageable, even  as China has in recent years been resolving its frontier 
disputes with  neighboring countries, few of which present a threat to China. 
India, on the other hand, is bedeviled by long and insecure borders not 
only  with troubled Pakistan, but also with Nepal and Bangladesh, both of which 
are  weak states that create refugee problems for India. Then there is the 
Maoist  Naxalite insurgency in eastern and central India. The result is that 
while the  Indian navy can contemplate the projection of power in the 
Indian Ocean -- and  thus hedge against China -- the Indian army is constrained 
with problems inside  the subcontinent itself. 
India and China do play a great game of sorts, competing for economic and  
military influence in Nepal, Bangladesh, Myanmar and Sri Lanka. But these 
places  are generally within the Greater Indian subcontinent, so that China is 
taking  the struggle to India's backyard. 
Just as a crucial test for India remains the future of Afghanistan, a 
crucial  test for China remains the fate of North Korea. Both Afghanistan and 
North Korea  have the capacity to drain energy and resources away from India 
and China,  though here India may have the upper hand because India has no 
land border with  Afghanistan, whereas China has a land border with North 
Korea. Thus, a chaotic,  post-American Afghanistan is less troublesome for 
India 
than an unraveling  regime in North Korea would be for China, which faces 
the possibility of  millions of refugees streaming into Chinese Manchuria. 
Because India's population will surpass that of China in 2030 or so, even 
as  India's population will get gray at a slower rate than that of China, 
India may in relative terms have a brighter future. As inefficient as India's 
democratic  system is, it does not face a fundamental problem of legitimacy 
like China's  authoritarian system very well might. 
Then there is Tibet. Tibet abuts the Indian subcontinent where India and  
China are at odds over the Himalayan borderlands. The less control China has  
over Tibet, the more advantageous the geopolitical situation is for India. 
The  Indians provide a refuge for the Tibetan Dalai Lama. Anti-Chinese 
manifestations  in Tibet inconvenience China and are therefore convenient to 
India. Were China  ever to face a serious insurrection in Tibet, India's shadow 
zone of influence  would grow measurably. Thus, while China is clearly the 
greater power, there are  favorable possibilities for India in this rivalry. 
India and the United States are not formal allies. The Indian political  
establishment, with its nationalistic and leftist characteristics, would never 
 allow for that. Yet, merely because of its location astride the Indian 
Ocean in  the heart of maritime Eurasia, the growth of Indian military and 
economic power  benefits the United States since it acts as a counter-balance 
to 
a rising  Chinese power; the United States never wants to see a power as 
dominant in the  Eastern Hemisphere as it itself is in the Western Hemisphere. 
That is the silver  lining of the India-China rivalry: India balancing 
against China, and thus  relieving the United States of some of the burden of 
being the world's dominant  power.




-- 
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