India wants complicated' relationship with China to improve'

Noting the complicated relationship, he said India has given an enormous amount of time and priority to ties with China.

Update: 2019-10-03 11:52 GMT
The government will fail in its duty if it does not take that call, Jaishankar said, adding that instructions given to the security forces have been to exercise extreme restraint. (Photo: File)

Washington: Asserting that both New Delhi and Beijing would like to see their relation become "better and substantive", External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar Wednesday told a Washington audience that India will weigh on merit the issues being faced by other countries with China.

In fact, Jaishankar refused to join the Trump administration which describes 5G as a national security issue, by saying that for India it is a telecom issue and not political one.

"Our intention obviously is to progress our relations with China. We are very clear on that and we get the sense that they too would like to see the relations become better and substantive," Jaishankar told The Heritage Foundation think-tank in response to a question.

"On lot of the issues which different countries face with China, frankly, we would weigh the issues on their merit and largely take a bilateral approach," he said responding to a question.

"We actually, essentially handle China relationship very, very bilaterally. We believe that's frankly the best way of moving forward," he added.

"Our position on 5G for example is we don't see 5G as a political problem. 5G for us is a telecom issue. And we will make whatever decisions we have to at the right time on the merits of that particular decision," Jaishankar said.

"When it comes to China, for me what's important is I have this neighbour who's my biggest neighbour, who's now the second biggest economy in the world, with whom I have a long history, not always an easy history. But I would like to make sure that this relationship remains... stability for me is my bottom-line requirement," he said.

Noting that it's a very complicated relationship, he said India has given an enormous amount of time and priority to ties with China.

"Because we believe that it's not just our own two countries, but really the larger region, even the world has vested interest, has stakes in that in broadening the stability and the substance of that relationship, he said.

As a result, a lot India's attention actually goes into this, this aspect of it.

"How do you, I mean, as I said, the minimum manager it and ideally grow it where you can. And in recent years, we've seen some positive developments. We have seen trade numbers improve. We've seen sectors where we didn't have market access, we have now started to get market access," he said.

We have seen by and large the borders being very stable. So, our ability to engage and converse with them on a range of issues has really been, it's sort of, it's freer, its franker. Those to my mind have been good signs for us, Jaishankar said.

“We were of course aware that there is a larger global context in which all of this is happening,” he noted.

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