Diplomatist Magazine Diplomatist October 2019 | Page 39
SPOTLIGHT
project would enable India to reduce the impact of BRI
and thus minimise Chinese presence in the region.
BCIM vs BRI: The Tug of War between the Elephant
and the Dragon
While the original roots of the project can be traced back
to the ‘Kunming Initiative’, which was launched in 1999,
the project was offi cially renamed as BCIM-EC in 2013.
Seemingly, soon after it’s rechristening the project came
under the fold of Chinese grand vision of BRI. However,
India has expressed strong reservations against the China-
led BRI since its inception, especially to the China-Pakistan
Economic Corridor (CPEC) cutting across Pakistan Occupied
Kashmir (PoK), as it infringes on the ‘sovereignty’ of India.
Consequently, for a very long time now India has been
persistent in its position that since BCIM-EC predates the BRI
project, the former should be excluded from the BRI umbrella.
In what appeared to be a step towards celebrating the
bonhomie between India and China at the Wuhan Summit of
2018, BCIM-EC project was reported to be dropped from the
lists of projects under the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative in
April 2019, generating much speculation. However, China
denied that it excluded BCIM-EC from the BRI. Meanwhile,
in another signifi cant move, and running parallel to BCIM-
EC, China and Myanmar formally signed the 1700 km
China-Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC), under the BRI
umbrella, linking Kunming in China to Myanmar’s Mandalay,
Yangon and Kyaukpyu Special Economic Zone on the Bay
of Bengal in September 2018, and in the process providing
China access to the Indian Ocean. Both these projects, when
completed, would have Mandalay as its intersecting point,
leading all the way to the Indian Ocean. Simply put, with
each new Chinese project under the pipeline in the region,
and reported a delay in BCIM-EC, the shadow of BRI might
continue to loom large on the success of the project.
BCIM-EC project has received a
new impetus with the 13th BCIM
Meeting. Given the multiple benefi ts
that would fl ow from the project
Kunming Meeting 2019: Reinvigorating BCIM-EC
In an attempt to reinvigorate BCIM-EC, the 13th BCIM
Kunming meeting was held by the four stakeholders in
June 2019. Recognising the importance of BCIM-EC, the
countries agreed to the need to come up with concrete
measures to fully tap the immense potentials of connectivity
through the successful completion of BCIM-EC, linking the
sub-regions. Given the lack of adequate capital investment
for infrastructure development, the four countries agreed
to cooperate ‘to innovate the application of public-private
partnerships in conformity with the laws and regulations of the
Parties to effi ciently utilise fi nancial resources’. The meeting
has renewed hope and opened up new vistas of opportunities
for expediting the project.
China-Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC) Way Ahead: Will the Elephant Dance with the Dragon?
BCIM-EC project has received a new impetus with the
13th BCIM Meeting. Given the multiple benefi ts that would
fl ow from the project, India’s pro-active role in the project
becomes even more crucial so that it does not miss out on the
opportunities generated by BCIM-EC, especially considering
Chinese connectivity projects around the region under the
BRI. There is no denying the fact that BCIM-EC might
most likely generate a measure of competition between the
Asian powers - India and China - in terms of its connectivity
projects. However, a healthy competition would eventually
create a win-win situation for both countries. In fact, the
convergence of the two corridors (BCIM-EC & CMEC) is
being seen as a step forward towards strengthening regional
integration. Nonetheless, and in the light of current progress
of BCIM-EC, certain questions remain to be considered:
whether the convergence of the two corridors will result in
convergence of interests between India and China? If so,
to what extent and in what ways, if at all, will both India
and China leverage such opportunity to their own mutual
advantage? Needless to say that India needs to push to fast-
track the work towards completion of BCIM-EC without
further delay and before the spirit of 13th BCIM meeting
dampens again!
Source: https://www.ramree.com/wp-content/
uploads/2014/06/gas-oil-pipeline-myanmar-china.jpg *The author is an independent research analyst on
International Aff airs based in New Delhi.
Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Diplomatist • Vol 7 • Issue 10 • October 2019, Noida • 39