IAS Gyan

Daily News Analysis

India’s outreach to Myanmar

29th October, 2020 International Relations

Context: The recent visit of Foreign Secretary and Chief of the Army Staff Gen. to Myanmar reflected India’s multidimensional interests in the country and the deepening of ties between Delhi and Naypyidaw.

For India:

This visit underscored two lines of thinking that drive India’s Myanmar policy:

  • engagement with key political actors and
  • balancing neighbours.

For Myanmar:

The visit would be viewed as

  • India’s support for its efforts in strengthening democratization.

Non-interference in internal politics

  • The political logic that has shaped India’s Myanmar policy since the 1990s has been to support democratisation driven from within the country.
  • This has allowed Delhi to engage with the military that played a key role in Myanmar’s political transition and is still an important political actor.
  • It has also enabled Delhi to work with the party in power, whether the military-backed or the pro-democracy party.
  • India and a few Asian countries have engaged Myanmar keeping in mind the need to reintegrate it with the region and world.
  • This has been a strategic imperative for Naypyidaw as part of its policy of diversifying its foreign engagements.
  • A key factor behind the military regime’s decision to open the country when it initiated reforms was, to reduce dependence on China.
  • By engaging Myanmar, Delhi provides alternative options to Naypyidaw. This driver in India’s Myanmar policy has perhaps gained greater salience in the rapidly changing regional geopolitics.

Recent initiatives

  • India suffers from an image of being unable get its act together in making its presence felt on the ground.
  • Some initiatives announced during the joint visit suggest Delhi is taking steps to leverage its political, diplomatic, and security ties with Myanmar to address some of these issues. T
  • he inauguration of the liaison office of the Embassy of India in Naypyidaw may seem a routine diplomatic activity.
  • However, establishing a permanent presence in the capital where only a few countries have set up such offices does matter.
  • Interestingly, China was the first country to establish a liaison office in Naypyidaw in 2017.
  • India has also proposed to build a petroleum refinery in Myanmar that would involve an investment of $6 billion. This is another indication of Myanmar’s growing significance in India’s strategic calculus, particularly in energy security.
  • It also shows India’s evolving competitive dynamic with China in the sector at a time when tensions between the two have intensified.
  • Another area of cooperation that has expanded involves the border areas. The joint visit reiterated the “mutual commitment not to allow respective territories to be used for activities inimical to each other.”
  • Both Delhi and Naypyidaw have been collaborating in the development of border areas with the understanding that it is the best guarantee to secure their borders.
  • And this is an area where the fruits of bilateral cooperation are already evident on the ground.
  • Furthermore, the recent announcement that India was transferring a Kilo-class submarine to Myanmar demonstrates the depth of their cooperation in the maritime domain.
  • The balancing act between Bangladesh and Myanmar remains one of the keys to its overall approach to the Rohingya issue.
  • Delhi has reiterated its support for “ensuring safe, sustainable and speedy return of displaced persons” to Myanmar.
  • Delhi’s political engagement and diplomatic balancing seems to have worked so far in its ties with Myanmar.
  • The aforementioned initiatives could be the beginning of change on the ground by establishing India’s presence in sectors where it ought to be more pronounced.
  • For India, Myanmar is key in linking South Asia to Southeast Asia and the eastern periphery becomes the focal point for New Delhi’s regional outreach.

https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/indias-outreach-to-myanmar/article32957339.ece?homepage=true