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India opposes Bhutan’s diplomatic ties with China

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India opposes Bhutan’s diplomatic ties with China


Shamsuddin Ahmed

Bhutan is the only one of China’s 14 neighbours with which it does not have diplomatic relations. In fact, ‘big brother’ India has been preventing Bhutan exercising its sovereign right despite the fact that1949 Indo-Bhutan Friendship Treaty was revised in 2007 placing them on a substantially more equal footing. “Bhutan to be guided by India in regard to its external relations” has been replaced by “cooperate closely with each other on issues relating to their national interests.” But the will of big brother prevailed.

Nevertheless, China is looking to expand its diplomatic influence in Bhutan and to win over the small neighbour from India’s orbit. Analyzing the post-June (2013) election in Bhutan, Firstpost staff writer said that India’s relationship with Bhutan has so far endured. “But India’s efforts at promoting coercive commerce diplomacy with its ‘last friend’ in South Asia may have had the effect of cutting even that stable relationship adrift – and into the waiting arms of China, which is looking to expand its diplomatic influence in Thimphu.”

Delhi’s crude diplomacy
Days before the second democratic parliamentary election in Bhutan in June last, India suddenly withdrew all subsidies on cooking gas and kerosene that it had been supplying to the Kingdom, sending prices soaring. This has given rise to protests from within Bhutan. In fact, India was looking to fuel people’s discontent against the government. Delhi favoured opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in winning the election defeating the ruling Peace and Prosperity Party. Its henchman Tshering Togay of PDP was installed as prime minister replacing Jigme Thinley. A royal relative, Thinley was groomed for the position by former King Jigme Wangchuk. He has been heading the Peace and Prosperity Party since introduction of parliamentary democracy. Some commentators were critical of Indian actions as “meddling” in Bhutan’s internal affairs.
Indian subsidy withdrawal was no doubt intended to overthrow Prime Minister Jigme Thinley for his orientation of the country’s foreign policy towards China. Thinley had a meeting with Chinese Premier Wen Jibao at the World Summit in Rio when the latter expressed China’s readiness to open diplomatic ties with Bhutan and solve their border disputes. Following their discussions, Chinese vice Foreign Minister Fu Ying travelled to Thimphu marking the highest-level diplomatic engagements between the two countries. This appeared aimed at accelerating steps to establish diplomatic ties. Shortly after that Bhutan imported 20 buses from China, which was seen in India as strengthening of Thimphu’s commercial relationship with China at the cost of India. Delhi was angered and a section of Indian press commented that Thimphu has no business doing business with Beijing.

Raising hydropower tariff
India was also unhappy with Thinley for his pressing for hike in tariff from the hydropower generated from the Chukha project in Bhutan. Most of the electricity produced in the project is taken away by India at a low price. India refused saying that the tariff hike proposal was unwarranted. Political commentators in Bhutan resent what they see as India’s “overlordship” over internal affairs of their country. Writing in his blog, political analyst Wangcha Sangley wondered: “Why do Indian media and politicians want to castrate Bhutan for the most harmless effort to improve ties with China? Just the other day, I heard a rumour of a bureaucrat of India chastising Bhutanese leadership of being “dishonest”. What the hell is that suppose to mean? Which national leaders and governments bare its soul to another nation? We are not paid sex workers that benefactors need to know when our eyelashes and asses move and in which direction.” He urged the Indian leaders and the media to treat Bhutan as a friend, not a pawn to be manipulated.
Meanwhile, a Chinese tabloid known for its hard-line views has hit out at India for interfering in Bhutan’s elections and attempting to prevent the recently developing ties between Thimphu and Beijing.

China concerned
Liu Zongyi, a scholar of strategic affairs at the Shanghai Institutes for International Studies (SIIS), a well-known think-tank, writing in the tabloid alleged New Delhi influenced the outcome of the June election. It manifested Delhi’s anxiety over China’s recent overtures to Bhutan. “India won’t allow Bhutan to freely engage in diplomacy with China and solve the border issue,” said the article which was also carried by Global Time of China. He noted that former Indian ambassador to Bhutan Pavan K. Varma was forced to resign due to his failure to prevent Bhutan developing relations with China. Varma’s successor V.P. Haran, who was the acting ambassador to Nepal followed carrot-and-stick policy and played a big role in the Tshering Togay’s election victory in Bhutan.

When the concepts of protectorates and client states are dying, the Indian-Bhutan relationship seems to be unique. The leadership of Bhutan was worried about the colonial attitude of India.
New Delhi’s overt influence and manipulation of election results in Bhutan was meant to send blunt signals to its other weak neighbours to understand that where strategic issues and national interests are concerned it wouldn’t tolerate anyone or any country stepping across what she unilaterally demarcates as the red line.

Holiday
 
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As if we give a damn what India thinks or says :lol:

We will have relations with whoever the damn hell we want.
 
So let me get it straight, Bhutan's external affairs are dictated by India? WTF, isn't Bhutan a sovereign nation? i guess being a largest so called "democracy" gives you the right to bully smaller nations into submission and unequal treaty that would relinquish one most important aspect of a sovereign nation, external affairs.

I am sorry, but I cannot wrap my head around this crazy situation between India and Bhutan. Is there any other similar "treaty" int the post-colonial world? I don't know why India would do to Bhutan when India itself was involuntarily subject to British control, albeit more than external affairs.
 
off topic but I always thought if India and China were to go to war, I mean more than even 1962, then it's likely China would go in through either Bhutan or Nepal, with their blessing or otherwise.Much like the Germans went through netherland and belgium.

India has too much troop positioned near the China India border and going head on in that terrain is not good for China's mobility. Which also means Indian troops are also not going to be able to move quickly. Going around it and holding the border would mean we would trap all of the was it 100,000 troops at last count? And cut off all supply while being able to threaten Indian heartland.

1 million troops is massive amount of men, but for a country like India, you should do 2. One is not enough to defend such a long border and huge country. The US can do one because no military nation is close to them and no one is going to threaten them anyways.
 
off topic but I always thought if India and China were to go to war, I mean more than even 1962, then it's likely China would go in through either Bhutan or Nepal, with their blessing or otherwise.Much like the Germans went through netherland and belgium.

India has too much troop positioned near the China India border and going head on in that terrain is not good for China's mobility. Which also means Indian troops are also not going to be able to move quickly. Going around it and holding the border would mean we would trap all of the was it 100,000 troops at last count? And cut off all supply while being able to threaten Indian heartland.

1 million troops is massive amount of men, but for a country like India, you should do 2. One is not enough to defend such a long border and huge country. The US can do one because no military nation is close to them and no one is going to threaten them anyways.

I always thought if we could go faster than the speed of light I could cheat on my tests and get 100%. Let's be reasonable here, there is zero possibility for India and China to have a war. In the modern era, war is between a strong country(ies) towards a much weaker country were winning is guaranteed. To entertain the thought of an Sino-Indian war is quite irrational.
 
And Indians have the gall to call us bullies :lol:

Not even the western imperial powers were this bad.
 
I always thought if we could go faster than the speed of light I could cheat on my tests and get 100%. Let's be reasonable here, there is zero possibility for India and China to have a war. In the modern era, war is between a strong country(ies) towards a much weaker country were winning is guaranteed. To entertain the thought of an Sino-Indian war is quite irrational.

This is a military forum, just talking strategies. I didn't say why we should, just what happens if it happened. India is a nuclear nation, even if you detonates all you nukes within your own borders it would still devastates all of Western China due to resulting environmental and what other damages.
 
And Indians have the gall to call us bullies :lol:

Not even the western imperial powers were this bad.

The source of the article is Bangladeshi ......enough said ...... :rofl:

You are jumping without reason in this thread .
 
Bhutanese want their northern and western border opened for their relative Chinese which could really protect them and southern border closed for Indian but they actually they have no right to do so.Well done Indian aliens.
 

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