The great Game Folio: China in Bandung

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C.Raja Mohan
The Indian Express
April 21, 2015

China in Bandung

If Chinese President Xi Jinping’s two-day visit to Pakistan was about celebrating Beijing’s all-weather friendship, his presence at Bandung, Indonesia this week is likely to see a definitive assertion of the Chinese claim to leadership in Asia. From Pakistan, Xi heads to Indonesia to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Bandung conference of Asian and African nations.

At Bandung in April 1955, China’s prime minister, Zhou Enlai, made an enormous impression on Asia that was deeply suspicious of the newcommunist rulers in Beijing. Zhou, who set out to win newfriends in the region, certainly succeeded with Pakistan. Bandung was also where the Hindi-Chini Bhai-Bhai began to fade, as Zhou ran rings around Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, who was viewed as overbearing and condescending by the Chineseleader.

Bandung was also where the Hindi-Chini Bhai-Bhai began to fade, as Zhou ran rings around Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, who was viewed as overbearing and condescending by the Chinese leader.

Bandung was also where the Hindi-Chini Bhai-Bhai began to fade, as Zhou ran rings around Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, who was viewed as overbearing and condescending by the Chinese leader.

The personality clash was only part of the problem. Nehru presumed he was speaking for the whole of Asia and denounced the US-led militaryblocs that many Asian nations had joined voluntarily. Zhou, in contrast, refused to talk down to the rest of Asia and focused on probing the weaknesses of Americanalliances in the region, including that between the US and Pakistan. Zhou told the Bandung conference that communist China posed no threat to the region and was eager to develop goodrelations with its Asian neighbours. Pakistan seized the moment at Bandung to lay the foundation for a practical partnership with Beijing in two very productive meetings between Zhou and Pakistan’s PM, Mohammad Ali Bogra.

Bogra assured Zhou that Pakistan’s membership of US alliances — the Southeast Asia Treaty Organisation (Seato) and the CentralTreaty Organisation (Cento) was about securing its interests vis-a-vis India and not directed against China. Addressing the political committee of the Bandung conference, Zhou said he had reached an understanding with Pakistan on matters of “collective peace and cooperation”. He also said Bogra had assured him that Pakistan would not support any aggressive American action against Beijing.

As Sino-Pak relations entered a positive phase, NewDelhi and Beijing began to drift apart at Bandung. Trouble broke out in Tibet soon after and culminated in the 1962 war between Indiaand China. The unresolved political and territorial contradictions between Indiaand China could no longer be obfuscated with the rhetoric of Asian solidarity. By the early 1960s, Indian diplomats had to work hard to scuttle the second Afro-Asian summit that China and Pakistan sought to convene in 1964.

Asia for Asians?

China has come a long way in Asia since 1955. At Bandung, Zhou was the charming underdog. Xi will arrive in Bandung 60 years later as the topdog of Asia — the continent’s largest economy and biggest militarypower. But Xi shares an important objective with Zhou: to undermine the US alliances in Asia and prevent the emergence of any regional coalition against China.

Xi has begun to appropriate the anti-colonial rhetoric inherited from Bandung and turn it into an appealing newframework for the construction of a China-centred Asian order. UnderXi, China has promised to invest billions of dollars to accelerate economicgrowth in the region, underhis SilkRoad initiative. He has established the Asian InfrastructureInvestment Bankand has also called for a comprehensive free tradeagreement across the Asia-Pacific. Xi’s main political slogan is “Asia for Asians”. He makes no attempt to hide the implication that outside powers like Americahave no businessmeddling in the region. At Bandung, Xi is likely to make the case that Asian nations must develop a “community of common destiny” underChinese leadership.

But as in Bandung 60 years ago, there is little consensus in Asia on how to builda newregional order. Prickly nationalism and persistent territorial disputes are making Asia into a geopolitical tinderbox. China’s growing powerhas made it an attractive economicpartner as well as the prospective political hegemon. Many of its frightened neighbours, including communist Vietnam, are seeking closer military ties with America and Japan.

Indian Romance

Over the decades, Bandung has acquired an ideological resonance in Delhi that has little connection to reality. In fact, Bandung marked the end of Nehru’s hopes for leading Asia. Indiasoon turned its backon Asia to focus on the non-aligned movement. It took nearly another four decades before India returned to Asia with its “Look East” policy of the early 1990s. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has promised to inject a new momentum into India’s Asian relations with an “Act East” policy.

External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj, who will represent Indiaat Bandung this week, will hopefully cut the ringing rhetoric and focus, like Zhou did 60 years ago, on understanding the multiple contradictions that are unfolding todayin Asia. Swaraj also needs to convince her regional interlocutors that the Modi governmentcan bridge the continuing gap between India’s promise and performance in Asia.

The writer is a distinguished fellow at the Observer Research Foundation, Delhi​ ​and a contributing editor​ ​for ‘The Indian​ ​Express’.

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