World
Surendranath C & Naren Menon
Oct 14, 2016, 04:33 PM | Updated 04:33 PM IST
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In this first part of two articles, the authors analyse how an ostensible geopolitical coup – the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, terminating in the port of Gwadar – is a potential quagmire in terms of geopolitics.
A world conqueror returns
When Alexander returned from India, he was misled into marching back to Persia through the Makran desert. This is a narrow coastal plain abutting high mountain ranges. Temperatures rise to 50 C during the summer.
Hemmed in by the narrow plain and harried by Malloi tribesmen, the world conqueror's army, which had fought across most of the known world, perished in large numbers like cornered rats.
The eventual insubordination of his army and ill health finally did Alexander in, a few years later.
These Malloi were the forefathers of today’s Bugti and Marri. They probably spoke some distant Iranic ancestor of Balochi, or probably of Brahui, a Dravidian language that survives in this inhospitable waste, far from the subcontinental peninsula.
The Islamic juggernaut takes a detour
The Rashidun Caliph Umar, after a few skirmishes on the eastern borders of what had been the Sassanian Persian Empire, enquired about the nature of Makran, and when informed, “O Commander of the faithful! It’s a land where the plains are stony; Where water is scanty; Where the fruits are unsavoury; Where men are known for treachery; Where plenty is unknown; Where virtue is held of little account; And where evil is dominant. A large army is less for there; And a less army is useless there,” instructed the Governor of Bahrain to leave the region alone.
And thus it stayed, a nominal vassal territory to Umayyads, Abbasids, the Mongol Ilkhanate and various Turkic dynasties that swept out of inner Asia into Persia and the Indian subcontinent.
Throughout the British ascendancy in the subcontinent, the port city of Gwadar was held by the Sultan of Oman, until it was added to Pakistan as part of the annexation of the Khan of Kalat’s territory.
The Middle Kingdom seeks an outlet to the Indian Ocean
The Chinese government initiated the development of a deep water harbour at Gwadar in 2002, and completed it in 2006.
After this port was constructed, expansion and further development was halted due to the political instability in Pakistan.
This port has been touted by Pakistan’s army as a competitor to Hong Kong. However, nearly a decade after completion, the port is still not fully operational. Also, the Special Economic Zone designated adjacent to the port has come unstuck, due to strategic difficulties expressed by Pakistan’s navy.
In the meantime, the expansion and development of Chabahar, an existing port 100 miles to the west, in Iran, has effectively curtailed the need for any such port.
After the deal with the United States (US), it is expected that thawing trade relations for Iran will squeeze any traffic being routed to Gwadar.
One Belt One Road – The Chinese case for the CPEC
China’s strategic shifts are two-fold:
1. Integration with Africa
a) Chinese government-backed firms are investing for the long-term in natural resources – land, agriculture and minerals – in Africa.
b) Africa, after the larger Islamic world, is the region with the fastest growing population and will, therefore, become a large market for finished goods.
c) In the long-term, Africa must move from basic resource extraction to manufacturing. Chinese-funded infrastructure development in Africa is made with this end in mind; for example, the Djibouti-Ethiopia electrified railway line.
d) From a geo-strategic perspective, the Chinese naval facility in Djibouti is a point of military leverage for the Chinese in the Western and Southern Indian Ocean.
2. Tensions in East and South East Asia – a rising China is increasingly seen as a regional hegemon
a) East Asian countries – notably Taiwan, Japan and South Korea – are understandably wary of the Chinese rise.
b) Countries such as Vietnam and Philippines, which have large and growing populations, would view a China hungry for the resources of the South China Sea with caution.
c) Vietnam is building strategic partnerships with the US and India. From the Indian viewpoint, granting the Indian Navy access to key naval bases is one aspect. The Vietnamese army has received military aid from India and is looking at possibly acquiring the BrahMos missile system.
d) Indonesia, despite President Jokowi’s early bonhomie with China, is beginning to strengthen its naval position, particularly in waters around the strategic and resource-rich Natuna islands.
e) Prior to the lifting of sanctions, China was Myanmar’s most important economic partner. This resulted in the oil and gas pipeline project which connects the Kyaukpyu port in Myanmar to the city of Kunming in China. However, as sanctions were lifted and Myanmar began engaging the world for foreign direct investment, resentment towards China has increased. Native Myanmarese resent extraction of resources for China.
Traditional Chinese trade routes have been through the Malacca Straits and around the Indian subcontinent. Currently, this is the primary route to the partners of the future in Africa. On this route, the Chinese can expect the following threats:
The CPEC – China-Pakistan Economic Corridor – is planned as the alternative route to the Indian Ocean. A land route, a new version of the ancient Silk Route – dubbed the maritime Silk Route, has been a strategic goal for the Chinese since the 1950s. President Xi Jinping, faced with a slowing economy and worsening relations with the US, has embarked upon this project as one of his ambitious attempts to leave a lasting legacy for the Han.
The intention is to have a land route starting from Gwadar and cutting across to Kashgar, and then across the Karakoram through Xinjiang and onto the bustling cities of China.
This also ties in with the Chinese plan to decongest the coastal plains and populate the languishing Western Regions.
Geopolitical pressures
From a political perspective, there are certain strong headwinds against the project: