Even before Narendra Modi became prime minister, he has had 2 visits to Japan in his capacity as Chief Minister. Of all its investments in India, Japan has highest investment in Gujarat. The new smart city plan in Dholera, Gujarat is going to be a home for all Japanese investments in the state. I remember having a very casual discussion with one of my managers at Oracle in early 2014, about what would be diplomatic ramifications of Narendra Modi as prime minister; and I had then told that the biggest beneficiary of his foreign policy would be Japan. Having said that, his recent trip to Japan has been a phenomenal success which even his staunchest critics have had to agree. If he gets the same momentum going, then I think India shall rise and the LION will gain enough strength to stand up to the DRAGON.
Below is one of the article which I recently read on The Diplomat, on Indo Japan relations and its ramifications on Indo-Sino relations and how he needs to do a balancing act, keeping "MindPeace" ..... :)
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If photo-ops are
considered to be vital part of conveying messages in diplomacy then the image
of India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe
hugging each other last week should go down as a defining moment in India-Japan
relations. Traditionally, the Japanese are not known to be demonstrative or
even to encourage physical contact but if the enthusiastic reception accorded
to Modi during his five-day trip to Japan – his first bilateral trip outside
the Indian sub-continent – is any indication, New Delhi and Tokyo are all set
to transform geo-politics in Asia.
The two prime ministers,
also close personal friends, not only discussed a wide range of bilateral
issues during an unusually long trip but also worked towards building a
counterweight to an increasingly assertive China. Although the only reference –
and an oblique one at that – to China came from Modi, the joint statement was
dominated by plans to cooperate on security issues that will have far-reaching
implications in Asia. “Everywhere around us, we see an 18th-century
expansionist mind-set: encroaching on another country, intruding in others’
waters, invading other countries and capturing territory,” Modi told his
Japanese audience without mentioning China.
Even the joint statement
by the two countries spoke about regional tensions and steps that they intend
to take to control the situation. It said, in parts: “The two Prime Ministers
affirmed their shared belief that at a time of growing turmoil, tensions and
transitions in the world, a closer and stronger strategic partnership between
India and Japan is indispensable for a prosperous future for their two
countries and for advancing peace, stability and prosperity in the world, in
particular, in the inter-connected Asia, Pacific and Indian Ocean Regions.
Prime Minister Abe briefed Prime Minister Modi on Japan’s policy of ‘Proactive
Contribution to Peace’ and Japan’s Cabinet Decision on development of seamless
security legislation. Prime Minister Modi supported Japan’s initiative to
contribute to peace and stability of the region and the world.”
The joint statement was
labeled “Tokyo Declaration for India – Japan Special Strategic and Global
Partnership,” a fact that would not have gone unnoticed in Beijing. While the
fine print of various agreements will be known in due course, the larger
message of Modi’s visit is loud and clear: For the first time India is willing
to throw its lot in with Japan, a known U.S. ally. So far, New Delhi has
refrained from an overt alliance with the U.S. but it has accepted a need to
have closer defense cooperation with both Tokyo and Washington. One early
manifestation of this was the recent trilateral naval cooperation Exercise
Malabar held off the Japan coast in June. This was a significant departure from
the recent past. Since 2007, Japan had kept away from Exercise Malabar after
Beijing had protested in the wake of a five-nation exercise in the Indian
Ocean. But under Abe’s leadership, Japan is turning many of its defensive
policies on their head. The easing of Japan’s defense exports rules will allow
Japanese defense firms to participate in India’s huge weapons market. An
amphibious military aircraft is likely to be one of the first exports to India.
A civil nuclear deal is also progressing well, although much against Modi’s
wishes it could not be clinched during his visit. However, Japan’s commitment
to invest around $34 billion in India’s key infrastructure projects over the
next five years will boost the India-Japan partnership further.
Officially, there was no
reaction by China but Modi’s breakthrough visit was certainly keenly watched in
Chinese official media, where it drew some pointed comment. Global Times, the
hardline voice of the Chinese establishment in China had two strident back-to-back
editorials on the Modi-Abe tango. In the first, the paper commented: “The
increasing intimacy between Tokyo and New Delhi will bring at most
psychological comfort to the two countries. What is involved in China-India
relations denotes much more than the display of the blossoming personal
friendship between Modi and Abe. After all, Japan is located far from India.
Abe’s harangue on the Indo-Pacific concept makes Indians comfortable. It is
South Asia where New Delhi has to make its presence felt. However, China is a
neighbour it can’t move away from. Sino-Indian ties can in no way be
counterbalanced by the Japan-India friendship.” The second one attacked Japan
directly in an editorial titled, ‘Tokyo lost the war, and must accept defeat,’
threatening Japan openly: “What we need is a rational Japan that behaves itself
and stops serving as a pawn of the US to sabotage China’s strategic interests.
We need to crush Japan’s will to constrain a rising Beijing and only in this
way can Sino-Japanese friendship garner a fresh, solid foundation.”
It is instructive to note
that Chinese criticism so far is muted as far as India is concerned. The reason
is clear. In less than a fortnight after Modi ended his successful Japan trip,
Chinese President Xi Jingping is expected in India. Xi has an ambitious agenda
for his visit. China wants to take full advantage of a pro-business regime
under the new prime minister and raise bilateral trade beyond 100 billion
dollars. Economic partnerships apart, China would want to keep its negotiations
on the contentious border issue going, if only to keep India interested since
India is now being wooed by the world. The U.S. has already sent three of its
cabinet secretaries to India, all before Modi has even visited America. That
visit is due in late September, where he will hold a summit meeting with
President Barack Obama. Clearly, Washington wants to reboot ties with New Delhi
after a downslide in relationship over the past four years. Australian Prime
Minister Tony Abbott has left for Mumbai and New Delhi, and is expecting to
sign a deal to supply uranium to India. Canberra has already indicated it wants
much closer defense cooperation with India.
Modi’s foreign minister
Sushma Swaraj has toured Vietnam – one of several of China’s neighbors that
have territorial disputes with Beijing – and Bangladesh to re-establish India’s
primacy in the region. The prime minister has himself decided to reach out to
smaller but important nations in the Indian sub-continent by visiting Bhutan
and Nepal, the two Himalayan countries wedged between India and China. His
decision to call off talks with Pakistan also shows he is prepared to make a
departure from conventional practice. Clearly, Modi is the international flavor
of the season. His challenge will, however, be to balance competing interests
between the U.S., Japan and China even as he pursues an independent Indian
foreign policy based on national interest.
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