Rise, India, for the World’s Sake
India’s emergence as a powerful nation is the necessary and sufficient condition to keep China’s rise peaceful
Rise, India, for the World's Sake
(This article is behind a paywall)
Two recent developments abroad have a significant bearing on India's prospects. No, Rishi Sunak's emergence as the next British prime minister is not one of them. In the second week of October, the US government released its National Security Strategy 2022 (NSS22). And, last week, the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) gave Xi Jinping unchecked power to lead China to glory as he defines it.
The NSS22 document identifies China as the US' systemic rival, and Russia as a power to be constrained but lacking China's ability to compete with the US across the board on every count of national power. The CPC Congress underlines China's readiness to recast the world to end the former colonial powers' dominance of the world order and their keenness to breach national sovereignty and meddle in the internal affairs of countries such as China, in the name of the 'duty to protect' human rights.
If History is Any Guide
China sees India as a country from which it has to wrest territory. The prominence given at the 20th Party Congress to the Galwan clash between Chinese and Indian forces in 2020 shows China's attitude towards India. Xi Jinping is determined to restore the Middle Kingdom's erstwhile glory, of which reclaiming deemed Chinese territory lost to imperial pressure and internal weakness is an integral part.
Washington designated India a 'major defence partner' in 2016, permitting the sale of sophisticated arms to India. NSS22 sees a role for India as a member of the Indo-Pacific Quad, which includes Australia and Japan, apart from the US and India, as part of the West Asian grouping I2U2 (India, Israel, the United Arab Emirates and the US), and as a member of emerging economies, such as Argentina, Indonesia, Senegal and South Africa, with interests aligned with the US', whose leaders can be admitted to the antechamber of the watering hole where the great and the good of the G7, the Western alliance's core steering group, gather.
What NSS22 does not do is to recognise a powerful India as the necessary and sufficient condition for keeping China's rise peaceful. That China will continue to grow, qualitatively (it is already one of the world's largest publishers of original scientific research) and quantitatively (overtaking the US as the largest economy) is not in doubt. Denying China access to advanced US technology, as the Biden administration has done, will only delay that process, not thwart it. And the global order would have to reconfigure, to allow a greater say for China in the assorted nodes of global governance and coordination that enable globalised growth.
The question, really, is how to prevent this process turning violent and/or chaotic. The answer should be obvious, but unfortunately is not: by India's emergence as a global power that can countervail China in strategic capability, economic heft and technological prowess.
Does India have what it takes to become such a bulwark against an unruly China? The largest 16-64 age group of workers; the largest cohort of young people who can be trained in science, technology, engineering, mathematics, the social sciences and humanities; historical goodwill across large swathes of the world; entrepreneurial dynamism that makes India home to the third-largest herd of native-bred unicorns; a long-ingrained culture that allows multiple faiths, languages and ethnicities to not just tolerate one another and coexist, but also to positively cohere and thrive; a market economy capable of decentralised decision-making vital for creative destruction - these are strengths that qualify India to emerge as a countervailing power.
Stand Up for Your Place
Few in India take this global role seriously. Peddlers of hatred who sow the seeds of social schism certainly do not. Political patronage of sectarianism encourages opportunists in the media, police, civil service and judiciary to amplify the harm. The education system works only in patches and, even there, valorises pre- existing knowledge and authority, curbing innovation. Segments of Indian business damage India's reputation by exporting shoddy goods, even toxic cough syrup that kills babies. External observers develop doubts about India's potential.
Apart from collective awareness of and commitment to realising India's geopolitical potential, India needs shared clarity on external dynamics. A world in which Russia is a constrained minor power would be dominated by the US and China. China has hostile designs on Indian territory and sound reason to stunt India's strategic growth. In the absence of a powerful Russia, India has to turn to the US and its allies, to resist China, giving the US leverage that would smother India's long-cherished strategic autonomy.
It is in India's interest for Russia to continue as a centre of global power, and for Europe to emerge as a power centre in its own right. Why would China help Russia retain critical geopolitical salience? In order to avoid becoming the sole focus of tender American ministrations.
India has animus towards none. Its rise is good for itself and for the world, including China. A powerful India strips the menace from China's further rise.
Views expressed are author's own
The article provides an insightful perspective. In the last week or so the one video that went viral across the world is that of former Chinese premier Hu Jintao being escorted out of a CPC meeting. The circulation of the footage seems to be an attempt by Xi Jinping to show the world that he is in full command and holds immense power. Considering his attitude towards India and stand-on border clashes, the footage seems to suggest that China would continue with its aggressive approach. This should be seen as a concern by not only India but the world powers. This warrants a strong India to balance a world order that benefits all. The article would certainly draw the attention of world leaders to the much-needed action on their part for a peaceful world.
As mentioned in the article, two issues -- producing good quality products and containing hatred need immediate action on part of Indian leaders and policy-makers. They appear to be two major threats that could damage India's reputation.
Look forward to many more such enlightening pieces.
Two big Communist Country given the complete powers to their leaders which is not healthy for the Global economy. India becomes neutral for Russia and otherside China declares biggest enemy to us. Other countries are attending NATO. The entire strategy is confused,who is favouring us or not. We should independent and face the music. A lot of problems are coming,inflation, unemployment, food crisis, oil crises,war etc.we must be strong.