Wednesday 6 July 2016

The great wall of "Resistance"

Time to act for India to uproot Chinese hurdlesome wall from India's growth Itinerary


India returned from the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) annual plenary session embarked in Seoul, with nothing in its hand and it's bid to join NSG group unsurprisingly Scuttled by the China's brazen hindrances. With the antecedent balky activities, China has appeared to be a hurdlesome baggage of India's elevating growth that this country unwarrantedly bearing. The questions, though, were put up subsequently by other countries like Austria, Brazil, Ireland, New Zealand, Switzerland and Turkey, astonishingly, over the process being followed to induct India to NSG group, as an MEA spokesperson excused, "it is self- evident that process issues would not arise if these countries were actually opposed to our participation." By apparently disallowing India's bid to be even hashed out in the first halve, China demonstrated a subaltern strategy of obstructing India's move.

China's hard-line agenda, Nonetheless, reflected in to the President Xi Jinping christening China and Pakistan "Iron Brothers." In order to circumvent Chinese logjam, President Pranab Mukherjee's eschew to Xi Jinping for his personal intercession on the NSG issue, Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar's visit to Beijing and Prime Minister Narendra Modi's personal appeal to Chinese President at Tashkent either failed to dull the sharp edges of the great wall of resistance raised by China.


 By simply tantalizing India's hope, Beijing is just playing delatory maneuver while being persuaded. In such case, India must grope for other options to find a way out by unraveling Chinese unkempt net. Its the time to act for India to uproot chinese hurdlesome wall from India's growth Itinerary. It must relook on its Chinese strategy and reformulate the roadmap in which it should deal with Beijing.

To start with, By just mulling over the forums like WTO and climate change where both are simultaneously embarking as unison, secondly, it may take a terse stance on South China Sea dispute, third, by beefing up its relationship with Taiwan as it itself a Chinese business hub, fourth and most substantially, by reconsidering its business ties with China as being the biggest trade partner of India with bilateral trade worth $70 billion, It may necessitate China to rethink before taking a hurdlesome stance in India' growth. Because as the trade scale tending towards China Exorbitantly, India has nothing to lose in its hand.

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