Japan and China in India’s Foreign Policy

  • Arpita Mathur
Chapter

Abstract

In chapter fourteen, Arpita Mathur observes that India’s relations with Japan have grown warmer in recent years. She explains: “To hedge against a more powerful and assertive China, Japan and India have drawn closer to each other.” However, Arpita Mathur notes that China is not “the exclusive driver behind the augmented India–Japan relationship.” Indeed, functional needs, interdependence, and expanding arenas of possible mutual gains have come together to enhance their bilateral ties. She also cautions that given India’s strategic culture of maintaining an autonomous and non-aligned posture in international affairs, “it has no desire to be sucked into an anti-China coalition.” Arpita Mathur elaborates: “India’s foreign policies towards Japan and China would be guided not by alliance politics but its own foreign policy considerations, especially economic development, protection of national security and interest, quest for energy security, and maintaining and enhancing its weight in regional and global affairs.” Nevertheless, New Delhi is worried by Beijing’s lack of transparency, military build-up, close ties with Pakistan, and China’s growing maritime ambitions in the Indian Ocean region . She reminds the reader that the power transition in Asia is also about India’s rise and its quest for partners, including Japan. Arpita Mathur concludes: “However, India’s ‘multi-alignment’ with all great powers and Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in East Asia will be less threatening and offensive to China if it augments an equilibrium among powers (rather than against China) which will underpin regional stability—a condition necessary for India’s peaceful rise in the twenty-first century.”

References

  1. Athwal, A. (2008). China–India relations: Contemporary dynamics. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
  2. Bajoria, J., & Pan, E. (2010, November 5). Backgrounder: The US–India nuclear deal. Council on Foreign Relations, 5. https://cfr.org/india/us-india-nuclear-deal/p9663.
  3. Baru, S. (2008, November 14). India and the World: Economics and Politics of the Manmohan Singh Doctrine in Foreign Policy. ISAS Working Paper No. 53.Google Scholar
  4. Brewster, D. (2010). The Australia–India security declaration: The quadrilateral redux. Security Challenges, 6(1).Google Scholar
  5. Chellaney, B., & Juggernaut, Asian. (2010). The Rise of India, China and Japan. New York: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
  6. Clinton, H. (2011, November). America’s pacific century, Foreign Affairs.Google Scholar
  7. Cohen, S. (2002). India: Emerging power. Washington: The Brookings Institution.Google Scholar
  8. Dutta, S. (2012). Managing and engaging rising China: India’s evolving posture. The Washington Quarterly, 34(2), 127–144.Google Scholar
  9. Frankel, F. R., & Harding, H. (Eds.). (2004). The India-China Relationship: Rivalry and Engagement. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
  10. Fujita, M., & Hamaguchi, N. (2006, February 18). The coming age of China-plus-one: The Japanese perspective on East Asian production networks. Second Draft got the World Bank–IPS Research project on the Rise of China and India.Google Scholar
  11. Green, M. J. (2009). Asia in the debate on American grand strategy. Naval War College Review, 62(1), 14–29. Winter 2009.Google Scholar
  12. Hibbs, M. (2010, April 27). Pakistan deal signals China’s growing nuclear assertiveness. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Nuclear Energy Brief.Google Scholar
  13. Hoffman, S. A. (2004). Perception and China policy in India. In F. R. Frankel, & H. Harding, (Eds.), The IndiaChina relationship: Rivalry and engagement (pp. 33–74). Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
  14. Holmes, J. R. (2009). Andrew C Vinner and Toshi Yoshihara, Indian naval strategy in the 21st century. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
  15. Holslag, J. (2009). Progress, perceptions and peace in the Sino–Indian Relationship. East Asia, 26(1), 41–56. March 2009.Google Scholar
  16. Jain, P. (2008). Australia’s Asia dilemma. Global Asia, 3(3), 86–93.Google Scholar
  17. Japan–India Joint Statement: Intensifying the Strategic and Global Partnership, January 2014 available at http://www.mofa.go.jp/files/000025064.pdf.
  18. Khilnani, S., Kumar, R., et al. (2012). Non-Alignment 2.0: A foreign and strategic policy for India in the twenty-first century. New Delhi: Center for Policy Research.Google Scholar
  19. Lal, N. (2009, September 1). India, China warm up to each other on climate change. World Politics Review.Google Scholar
  20. Mandhana, N. (2014, September 18). China’s President talks trade in India as troops face-off at border. Wall Street Journal.Google Scholar
  21. Manyin, M. E., et al. (2012, March 28). Pivot to the Pacific? The Obama Administration’s ‘Rebalancing’ Towards Asia. Congressional Research Service, CRS Report for Congress.Google Scholar
  22. Mattoo, A. (2014, June 12). A doctrine of economic levers, soft power. The Hindu.Google Scholar
  23. Nanda, P. (2014). Indian Foreign Policy under Modi, Australia India Institute. Fearless Nadia Occasional Papers on IndiaAustralia Relations, vol. 3.Google Scholar
  24. Newland, S., & Govella, K. (2010, September 1). Hot Economics, Cold Politics? Re-examining Economic Linkages and Political Tensions in Sino–Japanese Relations. Social Science Research Network, APSA Annual Meeting Paper. Google Scholar
  25. Sahgal, A. (2012). China’s Military Challenges: Responses from India. In A. J. Tellis, & T. Tanner (Eds.)‚ China’s Military Challenge, (p. 282). Washington, DC: The National Bureau of Asian Research. http://indianstrategicknowledgeonline.com/web/Ch%20mil%20mod%20impln%20India.pdf.
  26. Scott, D. (2009). India’s ‘extended neighborhood’concept: Power projection for a rising power. India Review, 8(2), 107–143.Google Scholar
  27. Scott, D. (2013). India’s aspirations and Strategy for the Indian ocean: Securing the waves? Journal of Strategic Studies, 36(4), 484–511.Google Scholar
  28. Sidhu, W. P. S., & Yuan, J. D. (2003). China and India: Cooperation or conflict? New Delhi: India Research Press.Google Scholar
  29. SIPRI Yearbook 2016. Armaments, Disarmament and International Security, “Summary”, p. 20. Retrieved November 8, 2016, fromhttps://www.sipri.org/sites/default/files/YB16-Summary-ENG.pdf.
  30. Sumit, G. (2008). The Rise of India in Asia. In D. Shambaugh, & M. Yahuda, (Eds.), International Relations of Asia (pp. 154–155). Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers Inc.Google Scholar
  31. Swaine, M. D. et al. (2013). China’s Military and the U.S.—Japan Alliance in 2030: A Strategic net assessment. Summary Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.Google Scholar
  32. Tellis, A. J., & Tanner, T. (Eds.). (2012). China’s military challenge. Washington, DC: The National Bureau of Asian Research.Google Scholar
  33. The National Security Strategy of the United States of America. 2002. Washington, DC: White House.Google Scholar
  34. Twining, D. (2007). America’s grand strategy in Asia. The Washington Quarterly, 30(3).Google Scholar
  35. World Energy Outlook Factsheet 2013: How Will Global Energy Markets Evolve to 2015?Google Scholar

Copyright information

© The Author(s) 2017

Authors and Affiliations

  • Arpita Mathur
    • 1
  1. 1.Independent Researcher and Former Research Fellow RSISNanyang Technological UniversitySingaporeSingapore

Personalised recommendations