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India's Modi heads to China as rivals seek common ground
By Trudy HARRIS
New Delhi (AFP) May 12, 2015


China media laud Russia ties, naval exercises
Beijing (AFP) May 12, 2015 - Chinese state-run media lauded Beijing and Moscow's increasing closeness Tuesday, dismissing Western suspicion over the relationship as the two countries began their first joint naval exercises in European waters.

The drills, involving nine Russian and Chinese warships and set to last 11 days, were launched at a Russian naval base near the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk, Moscow's defence ministry said late Monday.

It is the People's Liberation Army's farthest naval exercise from China's home waters.

The vessels will sail for the Mediterranean on Tuesday, China's official Xinhua news agency said, adding that the drills "clearly demonstrate that both countries will work with each other to safeguard peace and post-war international order".

The commentary hit out at the West, saying that the exercises show "those suspicious of such cooperation" that "closer China-Russia relations can contribute to a better world".

Chinese President Xi Jinping was in Moscow last week to attend a massive military parade marking the 70th anniversary of the surrender of Nazi Germany.

But the event was snubbed by many Western leaders, who blame Russian President Vladimir Putin for the current crisis in Ukraine.

The Russian defence ministry statement said the naval exercise was "not directed against a third party and has nothing to do with the political situation in the region", adding it would "further deepen the friendly and practical cooperation between the two countries".

The West may have cold shouldered Russia, but relations between Moscow and Beijing have become increasingly warm in recent months and years.

Xi and Putin have developed strong personal ties and their countries, both permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, often take similar stances there on divisive issues such as the conflict in Syria.

"The West should ask themselves whether they did something irksome to both Russia and China, whose close relationship is disturbing them so much," China's Global Times, affiliated with the official Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily, wrote in an editorial.

"Despite cultural differences, both nations, unlike the US and Japan's 'master and servant' ties, are on an equal footing."

But the paper also cautioned against any type of formal military pact between the two countries, which were allies and then rivals during the Cold War.

"History keeps reminding China and Russia that an alliance is not in the best interest of both sides," the editorial said.

Beijing and Moscow's joint exercises came as two Japanese destroyers and one of the Philippines' newest warships began historic naval exercises in the flashpoint South China Sea on Tuesday, showcasing a deepening alliance in an area where China has been increasingly assertive.

The day-long war games are the first bilateral naval exercises between the former World War II enemies.

Beijing is planning a huge military parade later this year to commemorate victory over Japanese forces as well as the broader defeat of the Axis powers, with Russian troops expected to participate for the first time.

A final date for the parade has not been set.

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi will take his global investment push to China this week, as Asia's rival superpowers look to put aside a festering border dispute and identify areas of economic cooperation.

Modi will fly out for his first visit as premier to China before heading to South Korea where he will also seek help to upgrade India's creaking infrastructure.

After Modi hosted China's President Xi Jingping last year in his home state of Gujarat, Xi will return the favour by giving him a tour of his ancestral home province of Shaanxi before they head to Beijing.

Modi will also meet business chiefs in the financial hub of Shanghai, seeking to deliver on election promises for foreign investment in India's crumbling rail and other infrastructure.

"I firmly believe this visit to China will strengthen the stability, development and prosperity of Asia," Modi wrote on Sina Weibo, China's version of Twitter, of the three-day visit that begins Thursday.

Despite a reputation as a hardline nationalist, Modi moved quickly to engage with Beijing after winning power last May. His main focus in his first year in office has been to revive India's stuttering economy, courting other economic powerhouses such as the United States, Japan and Germany.

Ties between China and India have long been strained over the border dispute and Beijing's recent push to forge closer ties with countries in India's backyard has caused some alarm in New Delhi.

- Border 'tranquility' -

But in a sign of Modi's pragmatic approach towards Beijing, he has appeared relaxed about China's ambitions, saying it has a "right" to seek greater influence.

During Xi's visit to India last September -- the first visit by a Chinese president in eight years -- the two men spoke of their desire to place cooperation above competition and ensure "tranquility" along their border.

The two countries fought a brief but bloody border war in 1962 over the northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, areas of which Beijing claims as South Tibet.

However, in an interview with Time magazine last week, Modi said the two countries have shown "great maturity" in recent decades over the border issue and were committed to "economic cooperation".

For his part, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said the "boundary question is a problem left over from history", albeit a "difficult" one for the two countries.

Phunchok Stobdan, a China expert at Delhi's Institute of Defence Studies and Analysis, said mutual "mistrust" remained below the surface but Modi knows there is little point in being confrontational.

- Pragmatism prevails -

"China is our immediate neighbour so there are compelling reasons for India to be mellow with Beijing," Stobdan told AFP.

"It's a very pragmatic thing to understand and recognise China's strength rather than try and compete with them. Cooperation with China is the need of the hour as far as India is concerned."

Li told India Today magazine that China stands ready to "deepen our strategic and cooperative partnership" as well as economic ties that include two Chinese industrial parks in India.

"Cooperation between China and India is a huge treasure house waiting to be discovered," the premier said.

Analysts said Modi would be seeking greater access to China's markets for its vast pharmaceuticals industry, and progress on funding for Indian infrastructure projects.

"There will clearly be a focus on trade and on infrastructure, such as the development of high speed rail," Shi Yinhong, professor of international relations at Beijing's Renmin University, told AFP.

China is India's biggest trading partner with two-way commerce totalling $71 billion in 2014. But India's trade deficit with China has soared from just $1 billion in 2001-02 to more than $38 billion last year, Indian figures show.

Trade will also be the main focus of Modi's two-day visit to South Korea which begins on Monday after a stopover in Mongolia.

As well as talks with President Park Geun-Hye, Modi is also expected to meet business leaders.

Oh Hwa-Suk of the Seoul-based India Economy Research Institute said Korean firms such as Samsung, Hyundai and LG have become major players since India opened its doors to foreign investors two decades ago and others were hoping to reap similar benefits.

"South Korea has made far less investment in India than other Asian rivals like China or Japan despite the country's vast growth potential," he told AFP.

"And India, given its rocky relations with the regional rival China, is more likely to be keen on attracting investment from South Korea."

burs-tha/co/fa/as


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