India, China Target Trade

advertisement

BEIJING — India's prime minister pledged Tuesday to maintain an independent foreign policy that seeks strong ties with China and other Asian neighbors, apparently trying to assuage Chinese concerns about New Delhi's warming ties with Washington.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said China and India should cooperate to further spur global economic growth and reject demands that developing nations shoulder an equal responsibility in combating climate change.

"Our policy seeks to ... give us strategic autonomy in the world. Independence of our foreign policy enables us to pursue mutually beneficial cooperation with all major countries of the world," Singh said in an address to the government-backed Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing.

Singh's visit to China, the first by an Indian prime minister in five years, highlights growing interaction between the Asian powerhouses, whose combined populations of nearly 2.4 billion account for about one third of humanity.

On Monday, the countries agreed to ramp up trade and military links.

Singh was scheduled to meet later Tuesday with President Hu Jintao and the ruling Communist Party's No. 2 ranking official, Wu Bangguo.

Bilateral ties have improved markedly on the back of soaring commerce and increased contacts. Two-way trade grew to $37 billion last year, and on Monday, Singh and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said they would push for that figure to $60 billion annually by 2010.

Singh and Wen also reiterated a commitment to maintaining calm along their disputed border while negotiators try to resolve the long-standing disagreement.

They said joint military drills would be held in India this year, following the first such exercises in China last year.

Even amid the buoyant mood in ties, residual mistrust remains over the border dispute that sparked a brief but bloody 1962 war. New Delhi has expressed concern about China's cultivation of relations with Myanmar, Pakistan and other Indian neighbors, while Beijing is believed to be watching developments in New Delhi's increasingly close relationship with Washington.

Stronger U.S.-India ties have been emphasized by a bilateral agreement that allows the United States, for the first time in three decades, to ship nuclear fuel and technology to India. New Delhi will in exchange open its civilian nuclear reactors to international inspectors.

Against that background, Singh's comments appeared aimed at reassuring China that India was not contemplating a fundamental change in its traditional foreign policy of nonalignment.

With China's economy steaming ahead at about 11 percent a year and India's at about 9 percent, both nations are exerting a growing influence on the global economy.

That growth has prompted demands that China and India do more to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, a task that Singh maintained was the primary responsibility of the developed world — virtually echoing China's viewpoint.

"The rights of our people to a fair chance to improve their lot cannot be abandoned because of environmental damage caused by others who ... squandered the earth's resources," Singh said.

  • 1 Vote
  • Enjoy this article? Help vote it up the 'Vine.

Back To Top

Published to:

{"canLink":false,"threadId":0,"isPrivate":false}
Leave a Comment:
You're in Easy Mode. If you prefer, you can use XHTML Mode instead.
As a new user, you may notice a few temporary content restrictions. Click here for more info.
{"threadId":0,"contentId":"1225460"}
Start TrackingStart Tracking
Stop TrackingStop Tracking