China's Westward One Belt One Road Strategy

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Brigadier
Indians are typical treacherous as usual. In Chinese sites they will bad mouth against Pakistan and all negativity. In Pakistani site they will paint China as blood sucker, new colonialist who flood local markets with cheap goods and labours. Just visit Pakistani online news like Dawn or Tribune or Youtube for CPEC or China related news, Indians trolls are lurking busy spreading all kind of conspiracy and negativity

I don't know why the Indian media is getting so worked up about such a lose-lose deal between its two greatest rivals. Why not just sit back, have a good laugh, and pop some champagne when it spectacularly fails? :rolleyes:

Not just their media/Press/Bloggers etc, even their political parties use anti Pakistan slogan to gain popularity. The current government of BJP (Hindu Extremists) is having success by using the same in great deal.
 

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Brigadier
As for military involvement in CPEC, the military is the most competent institution in Pakistan, and way more organised than the civilian government.

And having the military making money from business is good at this stage, as business thrives better when there is peace and stability

Exactly, Army & in some extent Judiciary are the 2 institutions who are holding the things together. The main worry is our corruptest Political elite, who are ever ready to do any thing for their vested interests.
 

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Brigadier
OBOR -

The First High-Speed 300 Km/h Rail of
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Made by
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...Travelling time between 2 Holy Cities will be 2 hour from MAkkah and
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.

The Haramain High Speed Rail project also known as "Makkah-Medina high speed railway", is a 453-kilometre-long high-speed inter-city rail transport system under construction in Saudi Arabia.

It will link the holy cities of Medina and Mecca, As of November 2016 the whole project is scheduled to be open in March 2018 with partial operations from December 2017.


 

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Brigadier
OBOR -

China's first freight train to London completes round trip. On the first day of 2017, the China Railway Express sent out its first London-bound train, marking the eighth line from China to Europe. On April 29 the first returning train arrived at Yiwu in east China's Zhejiang province. (Source: GTN)
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.

 

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Brigadier
This event post serves only INFORMING PURPOSE, thank you!

Description:
The upcoming forum will discuss ways to boost cooperation, build platforms and share cooperation outcomes. The forum will also explore ways to address problems facing global and regional economies, create fresh energy for pursuing inter-connected development and help the Belt and Road initiative deliver greater benefits to people of countries involved.

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Brigadier
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SUMMIT

India Likely To Boycott China's 'One Belt One Road' Meet: Sources

The Ministry of External Affairs, however, has not officially commented today on participation in the meeting.

With a day to go for China's big "One Belt One Road" summit, NDTV has learnt that
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is unlikely to send any representative, in effect a boycott of Beijing's ambitious initiative for cross border connectivity through ports, railways and roads. Part of the project runs through Pakistan Kashmir, called the CPEC (the China Pakistan Economic Corridor), which India has strongly objected to on grounds that Kashmir is a part of India, not Pakistan.

However the Ministry of External Affairs has not officially commented today on participation in the meeting even though there is less than a day left for it to begin.

India's boycott comes as Nepal confirmed its's participation in the meeting on Friday. Sri Lanka and Pakistan are already attending. The US too has decided to attend, marking a U-turn in its position.

Earlier this week, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Gopal Baglay said no decision had been taken on whether an Indian government delegation would attend the meeting. "The matter is under consideration," he said, a position the government has maintained since March when China extended an invitation. Since then, Beijing has stepped up efforts to get India to attend.

India's main objection to China's plan to build ports, railways and power links across Asia and on to Europe is that the $75 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a key part of the plan, runs through from disputed Kashmir.

Mr Baglay said India supports connectivity across the region, but there is a problem with the Pakistan end of "One Belt, One Road" (OBOR) - a term widely used to describe the project.

"As far as OBOR is concerned, you know that our position is that since the so-called CPEC forms a part of OBOR, that is where our difficulty is," he said. "It passes or proposes to pass through what is sovereign Indian territory and we have made our views in this regard very, very clear to the Chinese side."

But the "Belt and Road" initiative involving hundreds of billions of dollars over the coming decades could also cement China's dominance over Asia, including in India's neighbourhood.

Leaders of 29 countries plus senior delegates from other nations gather in Beijing for a two-day summit starting on Sunday to map out a project that is seen as broad on ambition but short on specifics.

China's economy is nearly five times the size of India's.

India, which is Asia's third largest economy behind China and Japan, sits near one of the world's busiest shipping lanes in the Indian Ocean. For Delhi not to be part of the continent-wide project presents a headache for both China and India.

China's ambassador to India, Luo Zhaohui, told an Indian military think-tank in New Delhi last week that while India has reservations about the China-Pakistan corridor, Beijing is wishing to settle the territorial disputes between India and Pakistan.

Delhi is upset over China's refusal to allow it entry into the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), a global cartel that controls nuclear trade.

Beijing is angry at India's increasing public engagement with the Dalai Lama, including hosting the Tibetan spiritual leader last month in Arunachal Pradesh, which China claims as South Tibet.

China has also grown wary of India's military cooperation with the United States, as well as with Japan in recent months.

Some Indian officials and experts have urged India not to miss out on opportunities presented by the initiative to boost transport and trade links.

Mehbooba Mufti, Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir, said the border state could benefit from the Chinese project as it would boost economic activity.

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SUMMIT

India Likely To Boycott China's 'One Belt One Road' Meet: Sources


India's boycott comes as Nepal confirmed its's participation in the meeting on Friday. Sri Lanka and Pakistan are already attending. The US too has decided to attend, marking a U-turn in its position.
It's shortsighted for India to boycott OBOR fourm, especially when US has realized its mistake and is now sending representatives. India is effectively isolating itself, to the detriment of not only its own economic development, but geostrategic positioning too. With Nepal and Sri Lanka joining the Belt and Road Initiative, India's influence over its traditional satellite countries will wane in both hard and soft power terms.

India made an unforced error, and it's a good object lesson on political leaders embracing form over substance by choosing the urgent over the important. Prime Minister Modi made a big strategic mistake and did his country no favors.
 

vincent

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According to Pakistani press, one highlight of the participation by PM Nawaz Sharif at the Belt and Road Forum in Beijing (May 14-15) will be the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between the two countries opening the door to massive Chinese investment – to the tune of $50 billion – for the development of the North Indus River Cascade in Pakistan’s Gilgit-Baltistan region. This will be Chinese investment over and above the $46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.

A whopping 40000 MW of electricity can be produced in the region known as the North Indus River Cascade, which stretches from Skardu in Gilgit-Baltistan and runs through Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa as far as Tarbela. The stunning development catapults Pakistan as by far the number one recipient of Chinese investment in infrastructure development. The geopolitical significance is at once obvious.

Beijing, which went the extra league in the recent months to convince India that the latter’s concerns over sovereignty relating to the CPEC are unwarranted, has apparently given up and decided to simply ignore Delhi’s protestations and proceed with the CPEC projects in a big way in Gilgit-Baltistan. It is a political and diplomatic snub by China, conveying a frank message to the Modi government to “get lost”.

The Modi government is now left with an option to carry on regardless along the path of confrontation and rivalry with China, or, alternatively, to see the writing on the wall and get adjusted to the fait accompli with a sense of stoicism and sense of modesty. The latter course is not easy since the “core constituency” of the BJP will mutiny and the RSS will rap on the government’s knuckles. However, China seems to estimate that it is in India’s DNA that sooner rather than later, it will feel the intensity of regional (and global) isolation – especially now that all of India’s neighbours, including Nepal, have joined the OBOR – and make atonement.

Meanwhile, the announcement in Washington on Thursday that President Donald Trump has nominated his special assistant and the point person on Asia in the National Security Council Matt Pottinger to represent him at the weekend event in Beijing must come as shock to the Indian foreign-policy elites. The US-China détente that is unfolding under Trump’s stewardship makes complete nonsense of Modi government’s China policies that are tied to the apron strings of the Obama administration’s pivot strategy in Asia. The US and China made a joint announcement on Thursday regarding the first tranche of policy decisions on trade issues envisaged under the so-called Initial Actions of the U.S.-China Economic Cooperation 100-Day Plan that was agreed upon by Trump and President Xi Jinping at their Mar-a-Lago meeting in Florida in April.

The White House feels delighted that the relationships Trump has built with President Xi Jinping and other Chinese leaders “are clearly paying dividends.” The announcement covers areas such as agricultural trade, financial services and energy to boost economic cooperation. Amongst other things, China will receive imports of beef and LNG from the US, while the latter agrees to apply the same bank prudential supervisory and regulatory standards to Chinese banking institutions as to other foreign banking institutions.

The US Commerce Department announced on Thursday that Washington “recognizes the importance” of China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative and is therefore deputing a delegation to attend the forum in Beijing. It cannot be lost on the Trump administration that OBOR is shaping up as a new vector of globalization and the US will be the loser if it stays out of the new supply chain. Ning Jizhe, China’s vice-minister of the National Development and Reform Commission said in Beijing on Saturday, “Chinese outbound investment is forecast to total $600 billion to $800 billion over the next five years, a fairly large proportion of which will go into markets related to the Belt and Road Initiative.” This compares with the $60 billion China has so far invested in OBOR projects.

All in all, Modi government’s China policies are turning out to be very short-sighted and based on vanities and prejudices carried forward from another era that are hopelessly unsustainable today. It was possible to have rationally analysed that the Belt and Road Forum in Beijing will turn out to be a seminal event in global politics. But Modi decided to boycott it. The sad part is the sophistry in the Indian argument. The plain truth is that in the emerging scenario in J&K, India should be more than satisfied with a solution to the Kashmir problem without having to redraw territorial boundaries and which would somehow legitimise the Line of Control as the international border.
Indira Gandhi knew this home truth; Rajiv Gandhi knew it; Narasimha Rao knew it; AB Vajpayee most certainly knew it. But Modi somehow doesn’t get it. The Modi government dreams up that all of Greater Kashmir stretching up to Wakhan Corridor belongs to India. A foreign policy based on such poppycock does not serve the country’s interests. The Modi government lends money to Vietnam to buy patrol boats to stand up to China, while President Tran Dai Quang attends the OBOR event in Beijing and is feted by President Xi.The international community will only regard our leaders as a frivolous lot with a provincial mind. Read a candid essay, here, by Prem Shankar Jha on what OBOR could have been and should have been for India’s development agenda.
 

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Brigadier
The plain truth is that in the emerging scenario in J&K, India should be more than satisfied with a solution to the Kashmir problem without having to redraw territorial boundaries and which would somehow legitimise the Line of Control as the international border.
Indira Gandhi knew this home truth; Rajiv Gandhi knew it; Narasimha Rao knew it; AB Vajpayee most certainly knew it. But Modi somehow doesn’t get it. The Modi government dreams up that all of Greater Kashmir stretching up to Wakhan Corridor belongs to India. A foreign policy based on such poppycock does not serve the country’s interests. .

Well the Kashmir issue is already out of Indian hands & sooner rather than later will be going to settled down under UN resolutions (Kashmir people to decide their fate).
 
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