China’s “String of Pearls strategy” – Is it Only to Encircle India?
The String of Pearls
strategy of China has been talked about since many years. In the initial phase
many geopolitical analysts looked at it mainly from the prism of a Chinese
stratagem to encircle India.
However, a deeper analysis of the
recent Chinese moves suggests a wider game plan. With the majority of its trade
and oil supplies passing through the Malacca straits, the Indian Ocean Region
(IOR) has been the proverbial Achilles’ heel for China. So, apart from
encircling India and China’s recently demonstrated expansionist moves (which I
covered in my previous article), securing its interests in the IOR is
re-defining China’s String of Pearls strategy.
In the western rim of the IOR,
apart from the presence of the joint US-UK naval base in Diego Garcia and the
US Seventh Fleet dedicated for IOR, the French have a base in Abu Dhabi (UAE)
covering the Persian Gulf. Both the US and the French also have their separate bases
in Djibouti (in Africa) covering the Gulf of Aden. To add to this, in the central
IOR, India has a stranglehold of the Malacca Straits with its base in
Andaman & Nicobar and is in close coordination with navies of like-minded
powers in the eastern rim of the IOR like Australia and Indonesia. China
looks at these rather as a countervailing String of Pearls strategy against it!
To further signal IOR dominance
to China (and rub in its IOR weaknesses), the new Indo-Pacific concept was
initiated to replace the existing Asia-Pacific construct, along with the Quad
grouping and the proposal to include Australia in the annual showcase Malabar
exercises (which includes India, US and Japan).
All of these have also been triggers
for China to make its own moves in the IOR and under the garb of its Belt and
Road Initiative, BRI (read, debt trap diplomacy) it secured long term and, in
some cases, even 100-year leases of ports or investment partnerships with
various countries. The BRI model to simply put, is a chequebook diplomacy
of cash-rich China offering these countries loans at very low attractive
interest rates, and when they are unable to repay the loan, China exercises the
land concession clauses and takes over operational control of the ports and
other assets!
Some examples - Myanmar
(Sittwe), Thailand (financing the building of the Laem Chabang Phase 3),
Laos (a dry port built), Sri Lanka (Hambantota), Bangladesh
(financing a container shipping facility in Chittagong port), Pakistan
(Gwadar, as part of linking the Chinese provinces of Xinxiang and Tibet to the
Arabian Sea as part of the CPEC corridor), Iran (talks are rife about
China will be offered the Chabahar port at India’s expense!), Djibouti
(China already has built its military base there), Maldives (under the
last government China had made deep inroads, but under the current ruling dispensation
there, India has regained control), Nepal (with all the recent news of
China weaning away Nepal from India’s orbit, they have also offered building
dry ports for Nepal to use Shanghai and other Chinese ports for trade).
The Chinese game plan has clearly
unravelled. It will use the Gwadar, Chabahar and Djibouti ports to get access
to markets and supply lines in Europe, Africa and the Gulf countries via the
Arabian Sea, Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Aden, thereby reducing its current
dependence on the IOR based trade and supply lines and bypassing the strategic
Malacca Strait, especially in scenarios of conflicts and wars.
While this is its clear plan on
the trade and oil supply front, China is also investing heavily in terms of its
military objectives in the IOR as part of its overall aim to become a blue
water navy like the US and Russia. It is rapidly ramping up building its
own aircraft & helicopter carriers, submarines, destroyers, missile
frigates, long-range reconnaissance planes, etc. Its submarines are making
their rounds often in the IOR with stops at Colombo port and Karachi harbour,
on their way to Djibouti.
The intent and messaging from
China are clear. The String of Pearls is not just about encircling India, it’s
about a revisionist and expansionist power who feels its time has already come
for realising its 100-year dream!
PS: This article is based on my
personal opinion and information available in public domain, and is not
intended to hurt any sentiments.
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