Japan has persuaded India to abandon the
artificial constraints of nonalignment.
Like every news event that shared last
week with the U.S. presidential elections, Indian prime minister Narendra
Modi’s visit to Japan was swallowed up by American electoral headlines. What
attention his summit with Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe did attract
centered on the consummation of a long-pending nuclear cooperation deal. For a
host of reasons covered extensively elsewhere,
the deal is symbolically and practically significant for both countries.
This article is more concerned with what
the Modi-Abe summit tells us about the increasingly robust strategic and
defense partnership being forged by Asia’s democratic heavyweights, and how the
summit advanced that partnership in several key areas.
Trade and Investment
Beyond the nuclear deal, the big-ticket
takeaway from Modi’s visit was a deal to finance and construct a $15 billion
Mumbai-Ahmedabad high speed rail project. Japan, which funded the lion’s share
of the famed Delhi Metro, will finance 80 percent of the
project with a soft loan at interest rates below 1 percent.
Japan has long been one of India’s largest
aid donors and sources of foreign direct investment (FDI). Japanese FDI in
India topped $17.5 billion
between 2000 and 2014, with over 1,200 Japanese firms operating in India. “No
nation has contributed so much to India's modernization and progress like
Japan . . . And, no partner is likely to play as big a role in
India's transformation as Japan,” Modi declared last year.
Bilateral trade, on the other hand,
continues to underperform. In 2015–16 it reached a modest $14.51 billion, as
compared with over $70 billion in India-China trade and $350 billion in
Japan-China trade. As Pallavi Aiyar notes, Japan and India account for less than 2 percent
of each other’s external trade, and “over the past three years Japanese firms
have invested more in countries like Vietnam and Indonesia rather than India.”
Strategic Economic Cooperation
Despite this, India-Japan economic
cooperation has begun to assume more overtly strategic dimensions. Consider
their growing collaboration on Rare Earth Elements (REEs), a set of materials
“used in high-tech gizmos from missiles to smartphones, wind turbines and
electric cars.” REEs garnered global attention in 2010 following Japan’s
detention of a Chinese fishing boat captain off the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu
islands. China, then responsible for 95 percent of global REE production, cut
export quotas by 40 percent and halted supplies to Japan, sending prices
soaring.
Tokyo, the world’s second-largest importer
of REEs, panicked. India, with only modest REE deposits of its own, is also
dependent on China for at least half of the dozen REEs
it has designated as “critical” for its manufacturing sector.
Japanese firms have since partnered with
India on a mineral separation plant in Odisha and an REE processing plant in
Andhra Pradesh. In November 2012, the two signed a trade pact allowing India to export REEs to Japan.
Under a follow-up deal reached in 2014,
production is expected reach two thousand tons per year, or 15 percent of
Japanese demand. This year, India’s first REE exports arrived
in Japan.
Earlier this year, Japan also reportedly
struck a deal to construct a fifteen-megawatt diesel power
plant in India’s Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Delhi has
traditionally “not previously accepted offers of foreign investment” on the
distant island chain strategically positioned at the mouth of the Strait of
Malacca. It’s been similarly averse to foreign investment in its
underdeveloped, conflict-prone northeast, which is claimed in part by China as
“South Tibet.” An exception has been made for Japan, however, which is
currently funding a $744 million road-building
project there.
Challenging OBOR?
Perhaps the greatest
potential for India-Japan strategic economic collaboration lies in
collaborating on infrastructure and regional connectivity projects further
abroad.
Through its “One Belt, One Road” (OBOR)
initiative, China has begun showering Eurasian capitals in billions of dollars
in infrastructure aid and development projects. The initiative has earned
Beijing a windfall of political capital, leverage and goodwill—but it’s also
raised concerns about the threat of the Chinese “debt
trap” and questions about hidden strategic ambitions behind
ostensibly economic projects.
Notably, India is the only South Asian country yet to officially endorse OBOR.
Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar has articulated Indian concerns about a lack of
clarity and coordination from Beijing, and raised questions about the
“strategic connotations” of its investments. In September, he argued “the
yardstick to judge their viability should essentially be a commercial one.”
I’ve long argued that any viable
alternative to OBOR would require greater policy commitment and collaboration
between the United States, India and Japan, the latter of which has amassed an impressive track record wielding
Official Development Assistance (ODA) abroad.
Tentative steps toward such collaboration
were taken at last year’s first-ever U.S.-India-Japan trilateral
ministerial-level dialogue. There the three parties endorsed a new “expert-level group” to “identify
collaborative efforts that can help strengthen regional connectivity, including
between South and Southeast Asia.”
Last week, Modi and Abe’s joint statement
advanced the vision further, noting “synergy between India's ‘Act East’ Policy
and Japan’s ‘Expanded Partnership for Quality Infrastructure’. . .
for better regional integration and improved connectivity.” More important, Abe
proposed a new initiative “combining the human, financial and technological
resources of the two countries to advance these objectives including through
Japanese ODA projects.”
During a trip to Tokyo this September, I
was told of a push for infrastructure development in Africa, and that Tokyo saw
India—with its established political ties on the continent—as an ideal partner
and conduit for realizing that vision. Notably, the joint statement last week
singled out the “importance of India-Japan dialogue to promote cooperation and
collaboration in Africa.”
A Shared and Principled Regional Vision
“Japan and India share fundamental values
such as freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law and strategic
interests,” Abe argued last year.
While India and Japan have long been bound by core democratic values, their
shared commitment to specific “rule of law and strategic interests” is a more
recent phenomenon. These include:
Principles: Freedom of navigation, peaceful dispute settlement and the rule of law,
specifically as reflected in the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
Regional Institutions: The centrality of ASEAN and the East Asia Summit (EAS).
Concepts: The Indo-Pacific as an interconnected geopolitical and economic space.
Abe was one of the earliest and most vocal
proponents of the “Indo-Pacific” construct, which envisions the two oceans as
an interconnected economic and geopolitical space. In December 2012, he
famously called for the formation
of a Democratic Security Diamond, “whereby Australia, India, Japan, and the
U.S. state of Hawaii form a diamond to safeguard the maritime commons
stretching from the Indian Ocean region to the western Pacific.”
Since then the Indo-Pacific concept has
entered the Indian (and American) strategic lexicon with greater frequency.
Last week’s joint statement explicitly “underscored the rising importance of
the Indo-Pacific region as the key driver for the prosperity of the world.”
It also underscored India and Japan’s
shared vision for the regional architecture. Last year’s inaugural India-Australia-Japan
(IAJ) trilateral dialogue stressed the importance of “ASEAN
centrality” as well as the East Asia Summit. Similarly, Modi and Abe emphasized
“the importance of enhancing maritime cooperation and regional connectivity
within the EAS framework” and “enhanced cooperation in ASEAN-led fora such as
ASEAN Regional Forum, ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting Plus, Expanded ASEAN
Maritime Forum.”
Finally, the statement noted Japan’s
support for India’s membership in the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum
(APEC). And it called for expeditious reform of the UN security Council, where
India and Japan are both seeking permanent seats, to make the body more
“legitimate, effective, and representative.”
Freedom of Navigation and the South China Sea
Recent years have
witnessed growing alignment between India and Japan on South China Sea issues,
the concept of freedom of navigation, the protection of Sea Lines of
Communication (SLOCs) and the importance of the UN Convention on the Law of the
Sea.
Delhi and Tokyo are both highly dependent
on seaborne trade, including for energy imports. At last year’s Modi-Abe
summit, the two noted the
“critical importance of the [SLOCs] in the South China Sea for regional energy
security and trade.” Last December’s Japan and India Vision 2025 Special
Strategic and Global Partnership committed both sides to “hold regular close
consultations on the issues related to maritime safety and security of sea
lanes of communication.” The Japan Times argues SLOC security
“constitutes a key driver of this Indo-Japanese nexus in the maritime domain.”
The corollary to SLOC protection is freedom of navigation, for some thinly
veiled code for opposing Chinese hegemony in the South China Sea. While China
insists it would never challenge commercial freedom of navigation there, it has
also been clear the principle does not apply to military vessels.
Last week’s joint statement reaffirmed
India and Japan’s support for freedom of navigation “as reflected notably in
the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.”
The explicit mention of UNCLOS assumed
greater significance after a July 2016 ruling by an UNCLOS Arbitral Tribunal
that, among other things, invalidated Beijing’s nebulous nine-dash-line claim
over nearly the entire South China Sea. As Devirupa Mitra notes:
The difference in this year’s statement
was not just the number of times UNCLOS was mentioned – four, compared to once
last year. The contrast is also that in this year’s joint statement, UNCLOS is
explicitly mentioned in the context of resolving the South China Sea dispute.
In September, Foreign Secretary S.
Jaishankar staked out a bolder position in support of
the Tribunal ruling than even Europe has. In the process, he subtly
reminded China of India’s record complying with a 2014 tribunal ruling on a
maritime dispute with Bangladesh.
India urges all parties to show utmost
respect for the UNCLOS, which establishes the international legal order of the
seas and oceans. In that connection, the authority of the Annex VII Tribunal
and its awards is recognized in Part XV of the UNCLOS itself. India’s own
record in this regard is also well known.
In an unusual move for Delhi, reports
suggest India quietly lobbied Singapore
to assume a firmer stance on the tribunal ruling, and was just as quietly
rebuffed.
China
With both countries embroiled in
territorial disputes with China, it’s no secret that shared concerns about the
latter’s rise have served as a binding agent in India-Japan ties.
While the two are often loath to publicly
admit as much, over time they’ve grown more candid with their concerns. “Japan
and India have to work with China to ensure that the peaceful rise of China
takes place in a manner which will be conducive to Asian security, Asian
prosperity,” former Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh reportedly told the Japanese
press in 2012. “Japanese and Indian forces might not be operating
together, but they share the same goal: to maintain the balance of power in the
region,” argued Narushige Michishita,
a senior defense expert and former Japanese official, in 2015.
It should come as no surprise, then, that
Modi chose Tokyo as the platform to launch his first broadside against China as
prime minister. At a speech in September 2014 Modi declared:
“everywhere around us, we see an 18th century expansionist mind-set:
encroaching in other countries, intruding in others’ waters, invading other
countries and capturing territory.”
The first India-Australia-Japan trilateral
dialogue last year involved “a full day
discussion on China,” according to Japanese Vice Foreign Minister Akitaka
Saiki. “We confirmed with each other we are on the same page.”
None of which went
unnoticed by Beijing. The mouthpiece for Chinese nationalists, the Global
Times, has warned that “Tokyo is trying to contain and
besiege Beijing by every possible means, and Abe will not miss any chance to
draw Modi over to his side to counter China.” During Modi’s visit to Tokyo this
month, the hawkish outlet criticized India as a
“an outsider that has no traditional influence in the region,” and warned India
that with further involvement in the South China Sea it could “suffer great
losses, especially in terms of business and trade.”
Just as China has chafed at India’s South
China Sea policies, so too has Japan riled Beijing with a bolder approach to
Tibet-related issues. In an era when China is waging an increasingly successful
global crusade to demonize and isolate the India-based Dalai Lama and Tibetan
Government in Exile (TGIE), Japan’s activism has assumed greater significance.
In 2012, between stints as prime minister, Abe met the Dalai Lama in Tokyo
and declared: “We want to help the suffering Tibetan people and help create a
Tibet in which people do not have to kill themselves in a quest for freedom.”
More recently, Japan welcomed TGIE prime minister Lobsang Sangay to Tokyo,
where Sangay condemned China
for destroying “98% of monasteries in Tibet and burn[ing] Tibetan Buddhist
scriptures.” He compared China to North Korea and Apartheid South Africa and
warned India that China’s “invasion of Tibet will pose a serious threat to
India for a long time.”
Modi, it’s worth noting, has also assumed
a bolder stance on Tibet issues. After breaking with precedent and inviting
Sangay to his inauguration, this year Delhi hosted a conference
gathering Chinese minority and dissident activists, approved a request by
the Dalai Lama to visit the Chinese-claimed district of Tawang in 2017, and facilitated the first-ever visit of a U.S.
ambassador to Tawang.
Defense
If there were any disappointments from
Modi’s trip to Tokyo, they arose from their failure to seal a long-pending deal
for India to purchase twelve Japanese US-2 Turbo-prop aircraft. Eager to seal
its first major defense-export deal after revising its constitution, a recent
push by Tokyo to adjust the price and terms of the deal was insufficient to
secure an approval from India’s Defence Acquisitions Council.
Nevertheless, the trend in defense
cooperation has been overwhelmingly positive. This was evident in the myriad
defense initiatives praised in last week’s joint statement. They include:
• “the Joint Working Group on Defence
Equipment and Technology Cooperation,”
• “successful Annual Defence Ministerial
Dialogue held in New Delhi, Japan's regular participation in the Malabar
Exercise and [India’s] International Fleet Review,”
• “the ‘2+2’ Dialogue, Defence Policy
Dialogue, Military-to-Military Talks and Coast Guard-to-Coast Guard
co-operation,”
• “inaugural air force staff talks held
earlier this year,” and
• “two Defence Framework Agreements
concerning the Transfer of Defence Equipment and Technology and concerning
Security Measures for the Protection of Classified Military Information.”
Defense Minister Manohar Parrikar’s first
visit abroad was to Japan. Under a new counterterrorism partnership, Japanese
officers in a newly created intelligence unit
are training in Delhi. And, as analyst Dhruva Jaishankar notes, cooperation has improved
on “sensitive space and defence issues” as India has “publicly welcomed Japan’s
constitutional reinterpretation on collective self-defence.”
Significantly, the United States and India
have invited Japan to
be a permanent participant in their annual Malabar naval exercises,
complementing the JIMEX bilateral joint naval exercises India and Japan began
in 2012.
Conclusion
Since 2011, America has been encouraging
India to “not just look east, but engage east and act east.” Modi’s
own instincts led him to conceptually embrace that vision shortly after taking
office, and his deepening partnership with Japan demonstrates the commitment is
not merely rhetorical.
With the possible
exception of the United States, no country has been as successful as Japan in
persuading India to abandon the artificial constraints of nonalignment. And no
relationship is likely to prove of greater consequence to the regional and
global order that the three countries seek to defend and uphold. From “soft
power” to “hard power,” and from the South China Sea to Africa, India and Japan
are constructing the framework for a transformative twenty-first-century
partnership.
Jeff M. Smith is the Director of Asian
Security Programs at the American Foreign Policy Council
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