Category: China

  • India is emerging as the alternative to China

    India is emerging as the alternative to China

    After centuries of decline, India is on cusp of emerging once again as a superpower, writes Pro. Madhav Das Nalapat

    It is not accidental that there has been a record inflow of Rs 3.33 lakh crores of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) into India during the 2023-24 financial year. Beginning in the 1970s, with the reversal of US policy towards the CCP and the KMT initiated by President Richard Milhous Nixon, geopolitical tailwinds favoured the PRC.

    Henry Kissinger is celebrated as a strategic genius, mostly on account of the self-serving and lugubrious tomes that he authored in a successful bid to pass himself off as a statesman who changed the world. Henry found in Nancy Maginnes a wife who thought him as much of a prodigy as he sought to portray himself as being. His other love was the PRC. From the time he was met in Beijing by the dapper, shred Zhou En-Lai, romance and emotion clouded reason.

    While Nixon and his men (for there was nary a woman amongst his intimates) secured one favourable deal after the other from a USSR leadership desperate to reduce defence spending in an attempt to rescue a sinking economy, the opposite was the case with the PRC. Given that Mao hated the USSR with a passion even greater than that of Nixon, even minor concessions cast his way would have made the CCP Chairman continue on the path he had been embarked on since the 1960s, of fanning hostility to the Soviet Union and its unimaginative, timid leadership.

    Unnecessarily, the PRC was given gold in the form of concessions, including Washington throwing longtime ally KMT under the CCP bus without a qualm. While Nixon was brought down by what in truth was what he had described the Watergate saga as being, “a third-rate burglary”, Kissinger with characteristic modesty took on himself the entire credit of the US about turn in policy towards China.

    He made it respectable, indeed moral and patriotic, to lavish the PRC with one-sided concessions in exchange for symbolic gestures that had as little value as trinkets. Nixon’s successors continued with the policy of lavishing favours on China, concessions that were totally unnecessary, and which failed to dilute in the slightest the CCP leadership’s desire to leap ahead of the US in the same way that it had sought to leap ahead of the USSR.

    Carter’s National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski hated the USSR in the same visceral fashion as his relatives and friends in Poland (with justifiable cause) did. Zbigniew ensured that the keys to priceless secrets involving US intelligence assets and technology were handed over to the CCP, compromising long-term security interests not simply of his country of adoption but that of the whole world. Only in the initial weeks of the George W. Bush Presidency was a more hard-nosed policy towards China contemplated, but 9/11 changed all that.

    Bush took his eye off China and focused instead on the Taliban, through that ignoring the mountain where future danger was lurking and instead chasing after a mouse. Of course, as a consequence of policy disasters, that mouse eventually succeeded in wresting back Afghanistan from the US in 2021. The surrender to the Taliban was an event that demonstrated to the rest of the world that the Pax Americana which had defined so much of the 20th century was dead.

    To this date, the CCP threat has not been responded to by successive US administrations in anything close to the manner that ought to have been the case. There is a significant direct and indirect causal link between the fall in US credibility and prestige globally, and the China policy that Kissinger grabbed almost the entire credit for from Nixon.

    Since the 1980s, the CCP has spent countless sums of money and a profusion of favours so as to ensure that elites and influencers in key countries (especially those that are targets of CCP hybrid warfare) ensure that a pro-PRC policy remains the norm. Despite much expenditure of effort and money, facts on the ground have created geopolitical currents that are obvious even to the self-proclaimed geniuses steering strategy in the White House and the US National Security Council.

    These currents have made it impossible even for governments riddled with PRC-favouring policymakers not to push back against the systematic manner in which the CCP has chopped away at US and allied interests. Barack Obama, while President of the US, shared the same trait made famous in India by P.V. Narasimha Rao, which was to make the doing of nothing appear as the wisest course of action to follow. As a consequence of US indifference to PRC expansionism, the ASEAN Sea (incorrectly named the South China Sea) became a lake controlled by the PLA.

    As a consequence of such neglect of the security of the Indo-Pacific, this crucial waterway can be choked off from external egress by the PLA Navy and Air Force almost at will. A deterrent to such intolerable defiance of the international law governing seaways could be the Quad, which up to now is falling far short of the expectations generated in 2017 when Narendra Modi and Shinzo Abe revived the grouping.

    President Joe Biden has filled his administration with policymakers stuck in a time warp, who are busy battling the previous Cold War in Europe, even as a new version of the Cold War that is centred on Asia rages around them. However, byte by byte, bit by bit, technological and other squeeze tactics by democracies on the expansionism of the PLA is resulting in an accelerating move away from the PRC as the country of choice for setting up advanced manufacturing and other capabilities.

    Should the 2024 Lok Sabha polls go the way indicated in recently conducted opinion polls, the odds are bright that the policy matrix in India will finally move forward from 19th and 20th century constructs into a mix of policy that adjusts to the reality of the present, and which promotes a better future rather than remain tethered to the past.

    As a consequence of anticipated policy changes, India will emerge as the destination of choice for companies that (for reasons linked to the shift in attitudes created by the 1930s model expansionism of the CCP leadership) are hastening to move production and research facilities out of China. Many are looking to India as the alternative. After centuries of decline, India is on the cusp of emerging once again as a superpower.

    ALSO READ: US-Japan security alliance upgrade worries China

  • US-Japan security alliance upgrade worries China

    US-Japan security alliance upgrade worries China

    The defence plans that are expected to be announced at a summit in April are being considered the biggest upgrade to the security alliance between Washington and Tokyo in decades….reports Asian Lite News

    China has been raising objections to the US-Japan plans to upgrade their security alliance, saying it does not want to be a ‘target’ of the defence plans, Voice of America (VOA) reported.

    The defence plans that are expected to be announced at a summit in April are being considered the biggest upgrade to the security alliance between Washington and Tokyo in decades.

    “China always believes that military cooperation between states should be conducive to regional peace and stability, instead of targeting any third party or harming the interests of a third party,” Liu Pengyu, a spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, said.

    A US State Department spokesperson pushed back against Beijing’s concerns, emphasising the importance of the US-Japan alliance in the Indo-Pacific region.

    “The US-Japan alliance has served as the cornerstone of peace, security and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific and across the world for over seven decades and has never been stronger,” the spokesperson said.

    On Tuesday, White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan met his Japanese counterpart, Akiba Takeo, at the White House to discuss “next steps to finalise key deliverables” that President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida will announce during their April 10 meeting in Washington.

    Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi said on Monday that Tokyo was in discussion with Washington about strengthening the command and control of their militaries to enhance readiness.

    Meanwhile, this discussion comes as Indo-Pacific Command chief Admiral John Aquilino told the US House Armed Services Committee that the Chinese People’s Liberation Army is preparing to invade Taiwan by 2027, VOA reported.

    “The time is long overdue to upgrade the command structure in Japan so that the US and Japanese militaries can operate together more seamlessly” in the region, Ralph Cossa, president emeritus and WSD-Handa chair in peace studies at the Pacific Forum, said.

    James Schoff, senior director of the US-Japan NEXT Alliance Initiative at the Sasakawa Peace Foundation USA, said, “This is probably the single most important step that the allies can take to enhance deterrence against regional threats and respond to any sort of major crisis.”

    “This is especially true at this moment as Japan prepares to stand up its first joint operational command and introduces longer-range counterstrike capabilities,” he added.

    Notably, Japan plans to set up a joint operations command by March 2025 to improve coordination among its air, ground and maritime Self-Defense Forces (JSDF). The updated command structure within US Forces Japan (USFJ) is expected to complement Japan’s establishment of its joint operations command, VOA reported.

    Ryo Hinata-Yamaguchi, senior non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Indo-Pacific Security Initiative in the Scowcroft Centre for Strategy and Security, said, “Although the details are yet to be determined, the plan is to enhance the USFJ’s authority within INDOPACOM [US Indo-Pacific Command].”

    He added that the revised US military command “will also have greater institutional ability to communicate and coordinate with the JSDF.”

    Currently, US Forces Japan has limited authority to conduct joint operations with Japan. The commander of USFJ needs to coordinate its operation with US Indo-Pacific Command, located in Hawaii, as reported by VOA.

    Earlier on Tuesday, President Biden nominated Air Force Major General Stephen Jost as the new commander of USFJ and promoted him to Lieutenant General.

    Schoff said that “the existing parallel chain of command would remain” in the US and Japanese militaries rather than “a single allied chain of command for both US and Japanese forces.”

    However, the US Forces Japan will be unlike the South Korean-US Combined Forces Command led by a US general during wartime, according to VOA.

    James Przystup, senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and its Japan chair specialising in alliance management in the Indo-Pacific, said the upgrades in US military command in Japan “would serve to enhance US-Japan defence cooperation and deterrence in Northeast Asia, both with respect to North Korea and China.”

    “As for what this might look like in practice, the US-ROK Combined Forces Command could be one model, but not necessarily the one [into which it] eventually evolves,” he added. (ANI)

    ALSO READ: $62 BILLION INVESTMENT AT STAKE: Challenges for China in Pakistan

  • Beijing joins probe into suicide attack on its nationals in Pakistan

    Beijing joins probe into suicide attack on its nationals in Pakistan

    The incident that occurred on March 26 was the third major attack in little over a week on China-invested infrastructural projects….reports Asian Lite News

    In the wake of the suicide bomb attack that claimed the lives of five Chinese nationals, Chinese investigators arrived in Pakistan to probe the incident, The News International reported, citing Pakistan’s interior ministry.

    According to the report, the incident that occurred on March 26 was the third major attack in little over a week on China-invested infrastructural projects, where Beijing has invested more than USD 65 billion as part of its wider Belt and Road initiative.

    Pakistan Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi met the Chinese team of investigators at Beijing’s embassy and briefed them on the investigation so far, the statement said.

    At present, no one has claimed responsibility for the recent attack, in which a suicide bomber rammed a vehicle into a convoy of Chinese engineers working on a hydropower project at Dasu in Pakistan’s northwest, killing six people.

    During his interaction with the Beijing’s probe team at Chinese Embassy in Islamabad, the security czar informed them about the progress made so far in the investigations into the tragic incident, The News International reported.

    Measures pertaining to protection of Chinese nationals and overall security were also discussed in the meeting

    The federal minister also met the Chinese ambassador and updated him on the probe into Besham incident.

    In the meantime, civil work at the sites of the Dasu and Diamer-Bhasha Dams has been temporarily suspended by the Chinese companies overseeing operations due to security concerns.

    The News International reported that approximately 991 Chinese engineers were working on both projects, while the local staff has been told to stay at home till further instructions, an official working on the project confirmed to the publication.

    Similarly, GM Diamer-Bhasha Dam (DBD) Nazakat Hussain also confirmed that the Chinese company had suspended work on the dam. He said around 500 Chinese nationals were engaged in DBD but the FWO staff continues to work. Around 6,000 locals are busy in dam construction.

    He hoped that the situation would normalise in a few days, leading to the return of Chinese employees. The Diamer-Bhasha Dam would produce 4,800 MW of electricity through hydropower generation, The News International reported.

    However, the GM of Mohmand Dam Asim Rauf said that 250 Chinese continue to work on the Mohmand Dam and they have not stopped work. “Chinese have shown satisfaction over the security situation in the project area and they are working on the site,” the official said.

    Chinese military offers help

    After five Chinese nationals were killed in a suicide blast in Besham in Pakistan’s Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, Beijing has offered help to Islamabad to contain terrorism.

    After the deadly attack, the Chinese government has called on the Pakistan government to ensure more security for its nationals.

    “The Chinese military is willing to work with the Pakistani side to enhance the capability of the two countries to tackle various security risks and challenges, including terrorist attacks and jointly safeguard regional peace and stability,” said Colonel Wu Qian, spokesperson of the China Ministry of National Defense.

    Moreover, the Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson also urged Pakistan to enhance security measures to safeguard Chinese nationals, projects and institutions.

    A Chinese investigation team is also in Islamabad to work with the Pakistani side to probe further into the terrorist attack.

    Pakistan’s Federal Minister for Interior Mohsin Naqvi visited the Chinese Consulate in Islamabad on Friday and had a brief meeting with the Chinese investigating team.

    As per official sources, Naqvi briefed the Chinese team about the ongoing investigation and assured complete and full cooperation by Pakistan in getting those involved in the heinous attack, to accountability and justice.

    “Besham attack has opened up new domains for military level cooperation between Pakistan and China that will be discussed and explored in the coming days. The strategic partnership between the two countries has a strong history,” said political analyst Adnan Shauqat.

    Millitaries of both the countries have maintained frequent, close and high-level exchanges, resulting in successful outcomes including joint-military exercises and training professional exchanges, personnel training and equipment and technological cooperation. (with inputs from agencies)

    ALSO READ: $62 BILLION INVESTMENT AT STAKE: Challenges for China in Pakistan

  • Chinese Companies Halt Dam Projects in Pakistan

    Chinese Companies Halt Dam Projects in Pakistan

    Approximately, 991 Chinese engineers working on both projects have stopped operations…reports Asian Lite News

    After Tarbela Dam, Chinese companies have also suspended civil work on the Dasu and Diamer-Bhasha Dams, local media reported.

    Five Chinese engineers working on the Dasu Dam perished when an explosive-laden vehicle hit the bus they were travelling in on the Karakoram Highway in the Bisham area on Tuesday.

    Approximately, 991 Chinese engineers working on both projects have stopped operations. Local staff of both projects have been directed to stay home till further orders, The News reported.

    However, the Chinese engineers are still working on the Mohmand Dam in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

    The Chinese company stopped work on Dasu Dam and local staff was asked to stay at home. Around 741 Chinese and 6,000 locals are working on the 4,320 MW Dasu Dam in District Upper Kohistan.

    The Chinese company had also stopped work on the Diamer-Bhasha Dam (DBD). The Diamer-Bhasha Dam would produce 4,800 MW of electricity through hydropower generation.

    An official of Mohmand Dam said that 250 Chinese continue to work on the Mohmand Dam and they have not stopped work.

    “Chinese workers have shown satisfaction over the security situation in the project area and they are working on the site,” he said.

    Once completed, the Mohmand Dam will generate 740 MWs of hydroelectricity, irrigate 15,100 acres of land and control floods downstream, The News reported.

    ALSO READ: Marcos Jr. warns of countermeasures against China

  • US seeks constructive talks with China

    US seeks constructive talks with China

    Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen says she will raise concerns of China overproducing solar panels, EVs and lithium-ion batteries…reports Asian Lite News

    Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Wednesday she intends to warn China about the negative effects of Beijing’s subsidies for its clean energy industries, including solar panels and electric vehicles, during a visit to the country.

    “I intend to talk to the Chinese when I visit about overcapacity in some of these industries, and make sure that they understand the undesirable impact that this is having — flooding the market with cheap goods — on the United States but also in many of our closest allies,” Yellen told MSNBC in a live interview.

    Yellen travelled to the state of Georgia to visit a Suniva solar cell manufacturing plant that closed in 2017 due to competition from cheaper, subsidized solar panels from China.

    The plant is now reopening because of anticipated demand fueled by tax credits for US-made clean energy technology in the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

    Earlier on Wednesday, Suniva and Canada’s Heliene announced a three-year, $400 million deal to join forces to cooperate on the production of fully US-made complete solar panels that can be installed into solar power projects. A steady supply of US-produced panels will enable solar project developers to claim a 10 percent bonus credit on top of the 30 percent tax credit on the cost of renewable energy facilities.

    Yellen said in remarks at the factory that she will raise concerns China is now overproducing solar panels, EVs and lithium-ion batteries in the same way that it built too much capacity to make steel and aluminum, distorting global markets and hurting jobs in other industrial and developing economies.

    Politico has reported that Yellen will travel to China in April. The Treasury Department has declined to confirm her travel plans.

    US-China flag

    “I will convey my belief that excess capacity poses risks not only to American workers and firms and to the global economy, but also productivity and growth in the Chinese economy, as China itself acknowledged in its National People’s Congress this month,” Yellen said. “And I will press my Chinese counterparts to take necessary steps to address this issue.”

    China’s excess capacity is an increasing source of concern to Biden administration officials as its exports surge in the face of weak demand at home, while Chinese policymakers are pledging more support for strategically important sectors.

    At the same time, the US is pouring hundreds of billions of dollars of tax incentives into clean energy to attract investments that can build viable EV and alternative power sectors that do not depend on China for crucial components such as batteries.

    Yellen highlighted the Suniva plant as an example of how the Biden administration’s economic agenda is “lowering energy costs for American consumes and powering growth in strategic industries.”

    Yellen told reporters the US has been advocating a rebalancing of China’s economy toward more consumer spending, but added that she was not prepared to discuss potential retaliation from the US and its allies against China’s policies.

    “We see, of course, the same concerns in Europe, for example, but I don’t want to get into retaliation,” Yellen said. “We want to see what we can do that’s constructive.”

    Trade with China is poised to become a prominent issue in the 2024 presidential campaign pitting Biden against Donald Trump, his Republican predecessor.

    Biden has kept many of the tariffs on Chinese imports that Trump imposed, but the former president has vowed to impose steeper levies on Chinese products if he wins a second term. This is expected to put pressure on Biden to take a tougher stance against Beijing on trade heading into the November vote.

    Yellen said in her speech that Biden’s policies were already producing results, including in Georgia — a crucial swing state in the election.

    She highlighted companies’ announcements of more than $675bn in clean energy and manufacturing investments since the start of the administration, saying that solar accounted for more than half of new power generation capacity added to the US grid last year.

    With US-China relations at a low over national security issues — including Taiwan, US export bans on advanced technologies and China’s state-led industrial policies — Washington has been trying to repair ties between the world’s two biggest economies.

    China, still the world’s largest greenhouse gas emitter, has also invested in technological innovation — in electric cars, electric batteries and renewable energy — that could drive down the cost of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the US and around the world.

    Earlier, Yellen also said the US would not compromise on national security interests and democratic values, even when they forced economic trade-offs. She underscored that Washington’s actions against China were motivated solely by these concerns, and the goal was not to gain a competitive economic advantage.

    ALSO READ: Biden passes $1.2 tr bill averting shutdown

  • BLA Claims Over 30 Pakistani Soldier Deaths, Warns China

    BLA Claims Over 30 Pakistani Soldier Deaths, Warns China

    The group said that its Majeed Brigade successfully concluded the fifth phase of “Operation ZirPahazag” to “retaliate against ongoing Baloch genocide…reports Asian Lite News

    The Baloch Liberation Army claimed killing more than 30 Pakistani soldiers as it targeted PNS Siddique, the country’s second-largest naval air station located in Turbat and warned China on its “illegal” settlements and projects in Balochistan.

    In a statement, the group said that its Majeed Brigade successfully concluded the fifth phase of “Operation ZirPahazag” to “retaliate against ongoing Baloch genocide” and save the region from Chinese “occupation and exploitation”.

    “Majeed Brigade of Baloch Liberation Army, in the fifth phase of Operation ZirPahazag, last night (Monday) at ten o’clock, attacked the occupied army’s Naval Airbase, PNS Siddique, engaging the enemy till morning and successfully achieving the objectives of the operation by killing more than thirty enemy soldiers,” BLA spokesperson, Jeeyand Baloch, stated.

    The statement came as local media reports in Islamabad said that the attack killed one paramilitary soldier while security forces on the Pakistan side killed all five attackers in retaliatory fire.

    Pakistan’s Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said the “terrorists” attempted to attack PNS Siddique in Turbat and the assault was “foiled” due to the “swift and effective response by the troops”.

    Baloch said that while bringing the operation to its culmination, four fighters of the Majeed Brigade were killed, identifying them as Ayub alias Doda, Khalif alias Islam, Wajid alias Nodan, and Murad alias Farhad.

    He added that their fighters “broke through the strong security barricade of the enemy army’s Naval Airbase PNS Siddique and entered successfully, neutralising one enemy bunker and destroying two drones of the enemy army”.

    “When the ammunition ran out, all four fighters embraced martyrdom with their last bullets,” Baloch said, adding, “These were just four fidayees; currently, there are hundreds of trained men and women fidayees in the ranks of Majeed Brigade, who are always ready to strike effective blows against the enemy”.

    Further, the BLA issued a stern warning to China on its CPEC (China–Pakistan Economic Corridor) projects in the region and reiterated that the Asian nation is complicit in looting Baloch resources by colluding with Pakistan.

    In addition, it is also involved in suppressing the Baloch movement by providing military and economic assistance to the occupying Pakistani Army, the statement said.

    “If China does not stop its exploitative projects in Balochistan and does not cease its support to the occupying Pakistani army in Baloch genocide, the Baloch Liberation Army reserves the right to launch severe attacks on illegal Chinese settlements and projects in Balochistan,” Baloch said.

    The development corresponds with Tuesday’s suicide attack on five Chinese nationals who died after their vehicle was targeted in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Besham city in Shangla district. Police said the attackers crashed their vehicle full of explosives into the car carrying Chinese engineers who were going to Dasu camp in Kohistan from Islamabad.

    Dasu is the site of a major hydroelectric dam, under construction by the China Gezhouba Group Company, and the area has been attacked in the past.

    The safety of Chinese workers has long been an area of concern in Pakistan and in January this year, BLA initiated ‘Operation Dara-e-Bolan’ in the Mach and Bolan regions of Balochistan. This was followed by an attack on the Military Intelligence headquarters in Gwadar on March 20.

    Active since 2011, the BLA is one of the most prominent separatist groups operating in Pakistan’s restive Balochistan province — a strategically important area for the Islamic nation due to an abundance of natural resources.

    ALSO READ: Rise in blasphemy cases amidst Pakistan’s increasing radicalisation

  • UK blames China for cyber-attack on voter data

    UK blames China for cyber-attack on voter data

    The government revealed that National Cyber Security Centre concluded that the country’s Electoral Commission systems were “highly likely” compromised by a Chinese entity between 2021 and 2022…reports Asian Lite News

    The government on Monday accused China state-affiliated cyber organisations of at least two “malicious” and “reprehensible” cyber campaigns targeting Britain’s voter data and parliamentarians.

    In a statement in the House of Commons, the government revealed that the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), a part of its Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), concluded that the country’s Electoral Commission systems were “highly likely” compromised by a Chinese entity between 2021 and 2022.

    The NCSC also claims that it is “almost certain” that the China state-affiliated APT31 conducted reconnaissance activity against British parliamentarians during a separate campaign in 2021. All such attacks to interfere with UK democracy and politics are said to have been unsuccessful, but it has led to two individuals and one company linked to APT31 being sanctioned.

    “The UK will not tolerate malicious cyber activity targeting our democratic institutions. It is an absolute priority for the UK government to protect our democratic system and values,” said Oliver Dowden, Deputy Prime Minister.

    “I hope this statement helps to build wider awareness of how politicians and those involved in our democratic processes around the world are being targeted by state-sponsored cyber operations. We will continue to call out this activity, holding the Chinese government accountable for its actions,” he said.

    Dowden told the Commons that the malicious cyber activity had not impacted electoral processes or affected the UK electorate’s rights or access to the democratic process or electoral registration. The Electoral Commission has since taken steps to secure its systems against similar activity in the future.

    “It is completely unacceptable that China state-affiliated organisations and individuals have targeted our democratic institutions and political processes. While these attempts to interfere with UK democracy have not been successful, we will remain vigilant and resilient to the threats we face,” stated Foreign Secretary David Cameron, who said he has raised the issue directly with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

    “One of the reasons that it is important to make this statement is that other countries should see the detail of threats that our systems and democracies face,” he said.

    The majority of the UK parliamentarians targeted include those calling out the malign activity of China, but the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) said no parliamentary accounts were successfully compromised.

    “It is reprehensible that China sought to target our democratic institutions. China’s attempts at espionage did not give them the results they wanted and our new National Security Act has made the UK an even harder target,” said Home Secretary James Cleverly.

    “Our upcoming elections, at local and national level, are robust and secure. Democracy and the rule of law is paramount to the United Kingdom. Targeting our elected representatives and electoral processes will never go unchallenged,” he said.

    The UK’s statement is said to be supported by allies across its Five Eyes alliance, which includes Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States. The British government said the international community is calling on the Chinese government to demonstrate its credibility as a responsible cyber actor and welcomed the expression of solidarity from across the Indo-Pacific and Europe.

    Through the Defending Democracy Taskforce and National Security Act, the NCSC has also published guidance on its website to help high-risk individuals, including parliamentarians, to bolster their resilience to cyber threats, as well as advice to help organisations improve their security.

    The UK’s Elections Act 2022 also clarified the offence of undue influence, which it claims better protects voters from improper influences to vote in a particular way or to not vote at all, including activities which deceive an elector about the administration of an election or referendum. These electoral offences fall within the scope of the Online Safety Act’s illegal safety duties, requiring online platforms to swiftly take down such content when they are alerted to it.

    The commission previously said that the data contained in the electoral registers was limited and noted that much of it was already in the public domain. However, it added that it was possible the data could be combined with other publicly available information, “such as that which individuals choose to share themselves, to infer patterns of behavior or to identify and profile individuals.”

    In addition to the infiltration of the Electoral Commission, Dowden confirmed that the Chinese attempted unsuccessfully to hack email accounts belonging to several members of Parliament.

    Although he did not name the individuals, they are thought to include Iain Duncan Smith, a former leader of the Conservative Party; Tim Loughton, a former Conservative education minister; and Stewart McDonald, a member of the Scottish National Party — all of whom have a record of making hawkish statements about China.

    Dowden said that British officials had determined that it was “almost certain” that a state affiliated group, APT31, conducted reconnaissance against the lawmakers in 2021. “The majority of those targeted were prominent in calling out the malign activity of China. No parliamentary accounts were successfully compromised,” he added.

    Speaking to the media on Monday, Duncan Smith said that China should “immediately be labeled as a threat,” something that would go significantly beyond the language used in a British foreign policy review which last year said that Beijing “poses an epoch-defining and systemic challenge.”

    ALSO READ-Awareness is best defence against cyber crime

  • US Bolsters Japan HQ for Security Against China, NK

    US Bolsters Japan HQ for Security Against China, NK

    Japan and the United States will also work on further steps to enhance their response capabilities…reports Asian Lite News

    The US military plans to bolster functions of its command headquarters in Japan, as it aims for smoother cooperation with the Asian country’s self-defence forces in tackling security threats posed by China and North Korea according to diplomatic sources cited by Kyodo news agency.

    Japan and the United States will also work on further steps to enhance their response capabilities, Kyodo reported. Tokyo had in 2022 decided to acquire the capability to strike enemy bases even under Japan’s war-renouncing Constitution.

    Also, Japan is set to establish a joint headquarters to command its ground, maritime and air forces by the end of March 2025 with Kishida’s government is aiming to deepen cooperation between the US military and the joint headquarters.

    The development comes amidst what the two countries, which have been allies since the World War II, view as a growing threat from North Korea and China in the backdrop of Pyongyang’s missile tests and Beijing’s military activities in the South China Sea as well as the Taiwan conflict.

    Notably, China (People’s Republic of China) considers the self-ruled territory of Taiwan as part of its territory and claims there is only “one China.”. China has increased military activities around Taiwan in recent years, including near-daily incursions into the country’s air defence identification zone (ADIZ) and sending military ships near its maritime borders

    This comes ahead of talks in Washington next month between Japan Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and US President Joe Biden in which the two leaders are expected to agree on the review of their command and control operations, sources said. Kishida is scheduled to visit the United States as a state guest, the first such visit by a Japanese leader since Shinzo Abe in 2015.

    The US and Japanese sides are likely to discuss such details ahead of the two plus two talks of foreign and defence ministers of the two countries later this year.

    The US and Japan had signed a defence treaty in 1960., which granted the United States the right to establish bases on the archipelago in exchange for a commitment to defend Japan in the event of an attack.

    The two countries have worked closely on developing ballistic-missile technology and in 2020, the United States approved the sale of 105 F-35 fighters to Japan.

    Currently, the US Indo-Pacific Command, responsible for Japan, has its headquarters in Hawaii but the different time zone (19 hours behind Japan time) and physical distance (6, 200 kilometers) hampers the efficient interaction of Japanese forces and the US. military.

    Last week, US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell told reporters in Tokyo that Washington welcomes Japan’s efforts to boost its defence capabilities and that a related announcement may be made after the upcoming summit between Biden and Kishida, Kyodo reported. (ANI)

    ALSO READ: Biden to host trilateral summit with Japan, Philippines

  • US Reaffirms India’s Sovereignty in Arunachal Amid Regional Dynamics

    US Reaffirms India’s Sovereignty in Arunachal Amid Regional Dynamics

    India considers Arunachal Pradesh to be an essential part of the country and insists that using different names for the area does not change the fact that it belongs to India, writes Dr. Maheep

    In a clear statement on Wednesday, the U.S. State Department confirmed that the U.S. government considers Arunachal Pradesh to be an integral part of India. They went further to express strong opposition to any one-sided actions taken to claim territory within this northeastern Indian state, which borders China. State Department Principal Deputy Spokesperson Vedant Patel, speaking at his daily press conference, observed that the United States recognized Arunachal Pradesh as Indian Territory strongly opposed “any unilateral attempts to advance territorial claims by incursions or encroachments, military or civilian, across the Line of Actual Control.”

    Defence Minister Rajnath Singh during his visit to forward areas in Arunachal Pradesh

    This has been the consistent position of USA on the question for some time now. Earlier in March 2023, the United States Senate passed a bipartisan resolution that recognizes the McMahon Line as the official border between China and Arunachal Pradesh, an Indian state. This resolution signified that the U.S. considered Arunachal Pradesh to be an inseparable part of India. Senator Bill Hagerty, who introduced the resolution, highlighted the importance of the United States supporting India, a strategic partner in the Indo-Pacific region, particularly in light of ongoing Chinese threats.

    The recent reaffirmation of India’s stance on Arunachal Pradesh by the United States follows China’s renewed claim to the region after the Indian Prime Minister’s visit. China asserts Arunachal Pradesh as part of Tibet and disputes its status as an Indian state. The United States now unequivocally opposes any Chinese attempts to assert control over the area.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping during discussions at an Informal Summit, in Tamil Nadu’s Mahabalipuram. (Photo: PIB)

    The Indian government had earlier firmly denied China’s criticism of Prime Minister Modi’s trip to Arunachal Pradesh. They emphasized that Arunachal Pradesh has always been and will always be an official part of India. This position has been clearly communicated to China by the Ministry of External Affairs on multiple occasions. Responding to questions from the media about China’s disapproval of Indian leaders visiting Arunachal Pradesh, Randhir Jaiswal, the official spokesperson from India’s Ministry of External Affairs explained that Indian leaders routinely visit Arunachal Pradesh, just like they visit any other state in India. He argued that China’s objections to these visits, or to India’s development projects in the region, defied sense.

    China had officially complained to India about Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Arunachal Pradesh. This complaint stems from Modi inaugurating the Sela tunnel, a key infrastructure project in the region. China, which still refers to Arunachal Pradesh as South Tibet, claimed that India’s actions in Arunachal Pradesh make resolving the border dispute between the two nations more difficult.

    PM Narendra Modi being welcomed by the Governor of Arunachal Pradesh, Brigadier (Retd.) (Dr.) B.D. Mishra, in Itanagar, Arunachal Pradesh on February 15, 2018.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the Sela Tunnel on March 9th. Located at a high altitude of 13,000 feet in Arunachal Pradesh, the tunnel is a game-changer for connectivity. It will provide year-round access to Tawang, a strategically important town near the border. This will also significantly improve the movement of troops and supplies in the region.

    China believes this action made it harder to resolve the ongoing boundary disagreement between the two countries. The official statement used terms like “strongly dissatisfied” and “firmly opposed” to describe China’s position on the visit. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin claimed India had no right to arbitrarily ‘develop’ Zangnan, which is an alien province. Zangnan is the name China has given to Arunachal Pradesh.

    In the past too, China has raised objections to visits by Indian statesmen to the region. However, India considers Arunachal Pradesh to be an essential part of the country and insists that using different names for the area does not change the fact that it belongs to India.

    While the Indian government responds to China’s claims on Arunachal Pradesh, some believe China is trying to provoke India and keep tensions high. China’s economy and its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) are facing challenges, with some countries struggling to repay loans. In contrast, India’s economy and international standing are growing. India avoids directly challenging China’s “One China” policy but also doesn’t fully accept it. India engages with Taiwan and the South China Sea, showing its independence. China’s stock market decline and high BRI debt raise concerns about its economic health. China may need to forgive some debt or accept lower repayments to keep borrowers afloat. This economic pressure, along with a more critical US and a cautious Europe, could weaken China’s position.

    Rajnath Singh during his visit to forward areas in Arunachal Pradesh

    In essence, the recent US endorsement of India’s stance on Arunachal Pradesh signifies international recognition of its integral status within India. This support is coupled with India’s strategic infrastructure developments such as the Sela Tunnel that highlights a growing assertiveness and sovereignty assertion in response to Chinese provocations. China’s economic challenges and global scrutiny further weaken its position while India’s expanding international stature and cautious yet independent engagement signal a shifting regional dynamic. These developments suggest a potential diminishing of China’s influence in the Indo-Pacific region as India strengthens its regional standing and partnerships.

    *Dr. Maheep is an analyst of International Relations and Global Politics. He has been teaching and conducting research for over a decade

  • Chinese Divided on Taiwan Unification

    Chinese Divided on Taiwan Unification

    Amidst tensions, Chinese citizens advocate peaceful means for China-Taiwan unification, preferring status quo if peaceful resolution isn’t feasible….reports Asian Lite News

    The ‘unification’ of Taiwan with mainland China is not the main priority for many Chinese people, and around one-third consider launching a full-scale war on the self-ruled island “unacceptable,” Al Jazeera reported.

    But, even though the people’s focus remains underpinned on the economy and other crucial fronts, the Taiwan issue will remain the ‘cornerstone’ of the Chinese Communist Party’s narrative.

    The communists won the Chinese Civil War in 1949, and the nationalists of the Kuomintang (KMT) fled Beijing for the island of Taiwan. It was on Kinmen, the main island of the archipelago of the same name, less than 10 km (6.2 miles) from the coast of China, that the nationalists repulsed repeated communist invasion attempts, but not before the fighting had wreaked havoc on both Xiamen and Kinmen, Al Jazeera reported.

    Kinmen and its outlying islets – some of which lie even closer to the Chinese coast – have been a part of Taiwan’s territory ever since.

    Chinese citizens were once able to get tourist visas to visit the islands, but that ended with the pandemic.

    “It is difficult to imagine that this used to be a warzone,” 23-year-old Shao Hongtian said. “Kinmen, China and Taiwan are all part of the same nation, so it should be possible to visit, and I hope I can visit one day.”

    Like Shao, Chinese President Xi Jinping and the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) too claim that Taiwan and its territory are part of China.

    Xi said in his New Year’s address that China’s unification with democratic Taiwan was an “historical inevitability,” and China has not ruled out the use of force to achieve unification. Last year Xi called on China’s armed forces to strengthen their combat readiness.

    In recent years, the Chinese military has increased its pressure on Taiwan with almost daily airborne and maritime incursions close to Taiwan’s air and sea space. This further intensified after the visit of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to Taipei.

    At times, the Chinese manoeuvres have been accompanied by sabre-rattling rhetoric and large-scale military drills.

    Lately, tensions have also been rising near Kinmen.

    Last month, two Chinese fishermen were killed when their speedboat capsized as they attempted to flee the Taiwanese coastguard when they were discovered fishing “within prohibited waters” about one nautical mile (1.8km) from the Kinmen archipelago, Al Jazeera reported.

    Since then, the Chinese coastguard has stepped up its activities around Kinmen.

    Zhu Fenglian, a spokesperson for the Chinese government’s Taiwan Affairs Office, called the February incident “vicious” and stressed the waters were “traditional” fishing grounds for fishermen in China and Taiwan. There were no off-limits waters around Kinmen, she added.

    A second capsize was reported on Thursday, and on this occasion, China asked for help from the Taiwan coastguard.

    But, despite the recent tensions, Chinese citizen Shao says hostilities are not the way to bring China and Taiwan together.

    “I want unification to happen peacefully,” he said. He said that if that is not possible, it would be better to keep things as they are.

    He knows that many of his friends feel the same way. According to Shao, if they go to Kinmen and Taiwan, it should be as visitors, not as fighters.

    “The Taiwanese haven’t done anything bad to us, so why should we go there to fight them?” he said, convinced that any war between China and Taiwan would result in significant casualties on both sides. “Unification with Taiwan is not worth a war.”

    According to Al Jazeera, a study published by the University of California San Diego’s 21st Century China Center last year suggests that Shao and his friends are not alone in opposing a war over Taiwan.

    China breathes fire as the world converges on the South China Sea(Photo:indianarrative)

    The study explored Chinese public support for different policy steps regarding unification with Taiwan and it was found that one-third of Chinese respondents termed launching a full-scale war to achieve unification as “unacceptable.”

    Only one per cent rejected all other options but war, challenging the Chinese government’s assertion that the Chinese people were willing to “go to any length and pay any price” to achieve unification, Al Jazeera reported.

    Mia Wei, a 26-year-old marketing specialist from Shanghai is not surprised by such results.

    “Ordinary Chinese people are not pushing the government to get unification,” she said. “It is the government that pushes people to believe that there must be unification.”

    At the same time, support for a unification war turned out to be close to the same level found in similar studies from earlier years, indicating that despite the growing tension in the Taiwan Strait and renewed talk about taking control of Taiwan, there has not been a corresponding increase in support for more forceful measures.

    Wei believes that Chinese like herself are more concerned with developments inside their country, amid issues like property crisis and economic concerns.

    “First there was Covid, then the economy got bad and then the housing market got even worse,” she said. “I think Chinese people have their minds on more important things than unification with Taiwan.”

    However, regardless of what Chinese people might think, Eric Chan, a senior fellow at the Global Taiwan Institute in Washington, DC believed that unifying Taiwan with the mainland will remain a ‘cornerstone’ of the CCP’s narrative.

    “Unification is not a topic that is up for any sort of debate with the general public,” he said.

    Although the Chinese leadership often claims that China is a democratic country where the party is guided by the will of the Chinese people, there are no regular national elections or free media, and online discourse is restricted and regularly censored. Speaking out against the CCP can also result in criminal convictions.

    Since Xi became president in 2012, crackdowns on civil liberties have intensified, and Xi has centralised power around himself to a degree unprecedented since the rule of Mao Zedong – the man who led the communists to victory against the nationalists and became communist China’s first leader, Al Jazeera reported.

    During Mao’s rule, reforms and purges of Chinese society led to the deaths of millions of Chinese people, while over 4,00,000 Chinese soldiers died as a result of his decision to enter the 1950-1953 Korean War on North Korea’s side.

    But according to Chan, the days when a Chinese leader could expend tens of thousands of lives in such a manner are over. Recent government actions that exacted a heavy toll on citizens led to public pushback, and Xi did not appear immune.

    During the Covid pandemic, Xi ardently defended the country’s zero-COVID policy even though its mass testing and strict lockdowns had dire socioeconomic consequences. The government eventually abandoned the policy as the economy sank, and people took to the streets across China’s major cities demanding an end to the lockdowns, even calling for Xi to step down, Al Jazeera reported.

    As for war, the circumstances are also different. A battle for Taiwan would be existential for the communist party and Xi, according to Chan.

    According to Chan, the public outrage over a long unification war that might even end in a Chinese defeat could ‘endanger’ the party’s rule. So, he expects the CCP instead continuing to engage in low-cost grey zone operations against Taiwan while developing a Chinese military that would be able to score a swift victory.

    For citizens like Shao, however, any attempt to settle the issue through conflict would be a disaster.

    “I don’t think it will end well for anyone – not for those that have to fight it and not for the government that starts it,” he said. (ANI)

    ALSO READ: China’s Kinmen Coup: Experts Decode Tactical Intrusion