Explaining India’s View of China’s Military Relations with Other South Asian Countries

被引:0
作者
Hindu Sanskriti Karki
机构
[1] Fudan University,School of International Relations and Public Affairs
来源
Chinese Political Science Review | 2022年 / 7卷
关键词
Regional influence; Identity creation; Offensive power; Economic security; Security dilemma;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
China’s rising power status has guided scholars and experts to draw an ambiguous conclusion about its military relations with the countries in South Asia. Placing India at the center, the scholarly debates allege that China is strengthening the military capacity of the countries in India’s neighborhood to encircle and challenge its position in the region. However, these discourses are descriptive and lack scientific validity. In this regard, the paper examines China’s military engagement with the other states in the region to assess the authenticity of the debates. Thus, given the limitation of the research, the paper analyzes the data published by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) on domestic and international arms and weapons transfer to the region between 2009 and 2019. The findings contradict the conclusion the discourses draw regarding the military ties between China and South Asia. A thorough analysis of the military composite shows that other than Pakistan, China’s arms and weapons transfers to the rest of the states are minimal. Since the actual situation undermines the claims, India’s view of the military relations between China and other states in the region is puzzling. Therefore, the paper applies a constructive approach to provide a theoretical understanding of the factors that contribute to India’s view. Adhering to the theory, the intersubjective meaning that India attaches to its interaction with China, Pakistan, and other states in the region explains the source of the debates. Further, the theoretical analysis demonstrates that the allegations are merely a socially constructed idea and a consequence of perceiving China as an offensive strategic competitor, Pakistan as an enemy, and other states in the region as subordinates that lack objective reality. Finally, the paper departs from such literature, grounded on skewed rhetoric, and provides alternative reasoning to China’s military engagement in the region. Indeed, China’s economic interest, particularly in the Indian Ocean Region, promotes this military engagement.
引用
收藏
页码:524 / 549
页数:25
相关论文
共 51 条
[1]  
Akram Qudsia(2019)China’s Malacca dilemma: Power politics in Indian Ocean Journal of Politics and International Studies 5 29-44
[2]  
Fareed Munaza(2020)The changing dynamics and new developments of China-Pakistan relations India Quarterly 76 73-88
[3]  
Allauddin Hongsong Liu(2017)Narendra Modi’s Pakistan and China policy: assertive bilateral diplomacy, active coalition diplomacy International Affairs 93 69-91
[4]  
Ahmed Raja Qaiser(2007)South-Western extension of Greater China Global Security 60 83-98
[5]  
Bajpai Kanti(1994)Sino-Pak relations in the emerging new world order Indian Journal of Asian Affairs 7 11-27
[6]  
Belokrenitsky Vyacheslav Ya(1993)From international system to international society: Structural realism and regime theory meet the english school International Organization 47 327-352
[7]  
Bhola PL(2002)Road to Chagai: Pakistan’s nuclear programme, its sources and motivations Modern Asian Studies 36 871-912
[8]  
Buzan Barry(2010)Indian ocean maritime security: Energy, environmental and climate challenges Journal of the Indian Ocean Region 6 155-168
[9]  
Chakma Bhumitra(2018)What are the strategic and economic implications for south Asia of China’s maritime silk road initiative? The Pacific Review 31 315-332
[10]  
Chellaney Brahma(2000)The constructivist challenge to structural realism: A review essay International Security 25 187-212