A Trilateral Geoeconomic Strategy for India and China

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A Trilateral Geoeconomic Strategy for India and China
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A Trilateral Geoeconomic Strategy for India and China

Context: The India-China relationship is defined by a paradox of deep economic interdependence overshadowed by persistent strategic distrust. A novel proposal suggests that engaging a trusted, neutral third country—specifically the United Arab Emirates (UAE)—in a trilateral framework could provide a more stable architecture to advance mutual economic interests without requiring an immediate resolution of bilateral political tensions.

How can a trilateral partnership with a country foster relations between India and China?

A trilateral framework, particularly one involving the UAE, offers a pragmatic pathway to foster India-China relations by creating a new geoeconomic architecture that mitigates direct strategic distrust and leverages complementary strengths.

  • Introducing a “Geoeconomic Guarantor”:

    The core mechanism is the introduction of a trusted, neutral third party. 

    • The UAE, through its policy of strategic neutrality and deep, independent relationships with both India and China, can act not as a political mediator but as a “geoeconomic guarantor.” 
    • Its credibility and the high value both Asian giants place on their ties with Abu Dhabi create a system of “trust-by-proxy.” 
    • Both nations have a powerful incentive to honour commercial agreements forged under the UAE’s aegis, as violating them would risk damaging their crucial bilateral relationships with the Gulf state.
  • De-risking and De-politicising Economic Engagement:

    The framework creates a buffer. 

    • For China, the UAE provides a de-politicised and reliable gateway into the Indian market, bypassing some of the direct political hurdles of the bilateral relationship. 
    • For India, access to Chinese capital and technology is facilitated through a neutral, rules-based hub with robust legal and financial systems, thereby mitigating perceived strategic and security risks. 
    • The UAE’s world-class infrastructure and financial centres offer a neutral ground for joint ventures, investments, and supply chain integration.
  • Leveraging Complementary Strengths for Mutual Gain:

    The trilateral model allows each country to contribute its unique assets within a structured, multi-lateral setting:

    • India provides a vast consumer market, immense human capital, and a scaling manufacturing base (e.g., “Make in India”).
    • China contributes advanced technology, sophisticated logistics, and substantial capital reserves.
    • The UAE offers neutral territory, global connectivity, sovereign investment capital (from funds like ADIA and Mubadala), and experience in managing complex international partnerships.
  • Building a New Geoeconomic Architecture:

    This moves beyond the stagnant bilateral paradigm. 

    • Collaborative projects in third countries (in Africa or Central Asia), co-investment in technology parks in the UAE, or green energy initiatives can be pursued. 

Success in these trilateral ventures can, over time, create a reservoir of constructive engagement that may positively influence the broader bilateral climate, building incremental trust through shared economic success.


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The Source’s Authority and Ownership of the Article is Claimed By THE STUDY IAS BY MANIKANT SINGH

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