Things you see in the rear view mirror are not very
far. The name Radha Gobind Pal is not
old enough to be forgotten by the Japanese at least. In fact they revere him
more than any Indian & have two shrines the Yasukuni Shrine and the Kyoto
Ryozen Gokoku Shrine with busts specially
dedicated to Judge Radha Gobind Pal. Ryōma
and his associate Nakaoka Shintarō the
national heros of the Mieji Restoration who dreamt of an independent Japan
without feudal trappings are also given
a place of honour in these shrines. Judge Pal was one of the Asian judges
appointed to the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, the
"Tokyo Trials" of Japanese war crimes committed during the Second
World War. Among all the judges of the tribunal, he was the only one who
submitted a judgment which insisted all defendants were not guilty; Judge Pal
never intended to offer a juridical argument on whether a sentence of not
guilty would have been a correct one. However, he argued that the United States
had clearly provoked the war with Japan and expected Japan to act. On 14 December
2006, Manmohan Singh the PM of India, made
a speech in the Japanese Diet stating “The
principled judgment of Judge Radhabinod Pal after the War is remembered even
today in Japan. Ladies and Gentlemen, these events reflect the depth of our
friendship and the fact that we have stood by each other at critical moments in
our history”.
The two nations are once again working on kindling the fire
of friendship with development of economic, financial, industrial and cultural
sinews. India’s regional policy will get
a shot in the arm with the help from a highly developed country helping it steer
its manufacturing revolution and providing hi-tech solution to its defence
problems.
As East Asia forsees
changes in the regional order due to distractions in US policy towards security
gurantee to Japan, that started from the
Obama era; which allowed China to establish itself in South China Sea; Japan is
getting uneasy. In fact, the recent launch of a missile by North Korea over
Japanese island of Hikkaido has not drawn reactions from USA which can be
called strong enough for deterrence and the fact that China accounts for 90% of
North Korean imports is making Japan uneasy.
It has begun to wonder that it has to face the twin challenge of North Korea & China all alone. China has begun
to alter status quo in South China Sea by constructing islands on low tide
elevations, these islands will be used as military base in future. China claims
that it has ‘indisputable sovereignty’ over the land features and waters
involved in the South China Sea. It refuses to be bound by the UNCLOS (United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea ) tribunal’s anticipated decision on
the grounds that the decision will necessarily deal with issues of territorial
sovereignty (who owns which disputed islands) and maritime delimitation (how
conflicting national water boundary claims should be resolved) and that China
has never consented to any third party impartial arbitration of these issues.
Both India & Japan use the sea lanes that pass through that region.
In Doklam, China preferred to change the status quo by
consolidating their position in a region crucial for Indian defence posture. On
August 28, 2017, it was announced that India and China have mutually agreed to
a speedy disengagement on the Doklam plateau bringing to an end a military
face-off that lasted for close to three months. Chinese foreign ministry
sidestepped the question of whether China would continue the road construction.
The CPEC corridor through disputed POK is already a threat to India. Sovereignty
over two separate pieces of Indian territory has been contested by China in
Aksai Chin and Arunachal Pradesh. The McMahon Line which was part of the 1914
Simla Convention between British India and Tibet, has been rejected by China.
Though India’s maturity and diplomatic stance helped in resolving the Doklam issue, but the uncertainty still exists till
the next time when the status quo will be tampered again by China in some other
sector. Down south Chinese presence in Srilanka (Hambantota) is now real and
how far it will effect India’s maritime endeavor in times to come is anyone’s
guess.
Abe was here to
rekindle the fire of friendship between Japan & India and strengthen the coalition against a common
challenge. Japan is keen to expand infrastructure projects amid China’s OBOR initiative and, along with
India, it is exploring opportunities to develop projects in ASEAN. This is part
of Indo-Japan corridor for the
Indo-Pacific region that also extends to Eastern Africa under Asia Africa
Growth Corridor, an initiative that would provide an alternative to OBOR, which
is being implemented in a non-transparent fashion dictated by China’s
interests. Only close cooperation between the two nations; in commerce , cultural and defence will help improve the trust and tide over common challenges and drive forward, while
looking in the rearview mirror.
1 comment:
Everything that we do to raise our bar as an economic power will play a part in our facing up to our adversaries. It is that alone combined with our capabilities and reach of our armed forces that will ensure our security concerns
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