PRIYA CHACKO. Indias changing and Australias paying no attention(EAF 1.2.2020)
February 4, 2020
With bilateral trade negotiations stallingand India choosingnot to jointhe Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) agreement, attention has shifted away from economics and towards defence and security cooperation as the key to building a closer relationship between Australia and India.
This year, the two governments plan to sign a logistics-sharing agreement that will allow for reciprocal military access to facilities and operational support. Potentialagreementsfor information-sharing and maritime cooperation will facilitate greater military cooperation in the Indian Ocean. A memorandum of understanding to increase collaboration in the research and development of new defence technologies is also in the works.
By boosting defence cooperation with India, Australiahopesto limit the extent to which China will dominate the Indo-Pacific region as its political and economic power grows. Underpinning these hopes are assumptions that India and Australia share democratic values and have a similar conception of a rules-based order in the Indo-Pacific.
The days of making easy distinctions between security and economics and a democratic India and authoritarian China, however, are long gone. India is changing rapidly in ways that may push it towards rather than away from China.
Economically, India is facing a majorgrowth slowdownwith entrenched declines in consumption, private investment and exports, and fallingtax revenue. Bolstering the few dynamic sectors of the Indian economy such as e-commerce, telecommunications and technology start-ups will become increasingly important. These are areas in which China is deeply embedded.
A case in point concerns Huawei. Australia hasexcludedHuawei from the construction of its 5G network on security grounds. But the Indian government recently announced that Huawei will beallowedto take part in Indias 5G network trials. Indias major telecommunications carriers Airtel, Reliance and Jio use Chinese technology extensively, considering it to be both cheaper and moretechnically advancedthan the options.
TheArmyand theSwadeshi Jagran Manch(SJM) a group linked to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Partys affiliate, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh have both objected to Huaweis participation in 5G trials over security concerns. But the SJMs economic nationalist views have only ever had amodest impacton policy. Setting up a domestic 5G network requires sustainedgovernment fundingto develop locally-built equipment like semiconductor chips. So far, this has not been forthcoming.
Chinese products also dominate Indias boomingsmartphone marketdue to lower price points and distinctive design features. India is the biggest market for the Chinese phone manufacturer Xiaomi, which recently stepped up local production. Xiaomi is one of the companies the Trump administrationaccusesof being enmeshed with the Chinese government and military.
Chinese companies like Alibaba and Tencent are alsomajor investorsin Indias technology start-ups. Alibaba is the biggest shareholder in Paytm, an Indian financial technology and e-commerce company whose digital payments systembenefitedfrom Modis demonetisation policy.
China is also a leader in technology that can be used for surveillance such as facial recognition. This is becoming important for amore authoritarianModi government. India is a growing market for the Chinese artificial intelligence-driven surveillance camera makerHikvision, another company banned by the United States.
India is rapidly changing politically. Recent events, such as the introduction of religious criterion to itscitizenshiplaws andviolentcrackdowns on protests, call into doubt the governments commitment to secular democracy. As the ruling regime intensifies itsideologically-driven policy agendaand its bid for political domination, India enters a cycle of protest and violence.
In this period of political flux, China appears to be becoming a model for the Modi regime. Indias Foreign MinisterSubramanyam Jaishankarrecently dismissed the protests and praised China for having the mindset to decisively address its current issues.
The admiration appears to be mutual. ThePeoples Dailyhas pointed to Indias repeated use ofinternet blackoutsacross the country as an example of how sovereign nations should respond in a state of emergency. Many of Indias internet shutdowns were undertaken in the name of public safety. In the Kashmir Valley, the internet was completely blocked for six months. It continues to beheavily restricted.
This is despite the Supreme Courts declaring that indefinite internet curbs areunconstitutionaland despite the absence of majorviolencein Jammu and Kashmir. It reflects the governments lack of confidence in its ability to deal with the fall-out of its move to strip the state of its constitutionally-guaranteed political autonomy.
The ongoing protests in India against the citizenship laws are unlikely to result in the regime changing its behaviour. Anti-pluralism and intolerance for dissent are intrinsic to its current Hindu nationalist politics. These values are now surfacing in Indias foreign policy. In a visit to the United States last month, Jaishankarcancelleda meeting with the House Foreign Affairs Committee to avoid Pramila Jayapal, a congresswoman critical of Indiaspolicies in Kashmir.
The Australian government has remained scrupulously quiet about the recent violence in India, which haskilled25 people even while it hasrepeatedlycriticisedHong Kong authorities for violence resulting intwo deaths. Australia has said nothing of the indefinite detention of political leaders and civilians in Kashmir. To the contrary, before embarking on her visit to the Raisina Dialogue in New Delhi, Australias Foreign MinisterMarise Paynerecycled the usual refrain that India and Australia are natural partners that share common values based on democracy.
This whitewashing is unsustainable. Australia will need to find a way to acknowledge and deal with the changes taking place in India. Increasing AustraliasIndia literacyhas never been more pressing.
Priya Chacko is a Senior Lecturer in international politics at the Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Adelaide.
John Menadue
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