India & Central Asia : News & Discussion

India accords highest priority to Central Asia, ready to cooperate, invest in region: Ajit Doval at NSA meet​

National Security Advisor Ajit Doval Tuesday said India accorded the highest priority to Central Asia as it was “our extended neighbourhood”, and a “peaceful, secure, prosperous” Central Asia was in our common interest. Doval was addressing his counterparts from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan in a high-level security meeting in New Delhi.

“Central Asia is our extended neighbourhood and we accord highest priority to this region. A peaceful, secure, prosperous Central Asia is in our common interest,” Doval was quoted as saying by news agency PTI.
Doval also said that building connectivity with Central Asian countries was a key priority for India. “India stands ready to cooperate, invest and build connectivity in region. While expanding connectivity, it is important to ensure that connectivity initiatives are consultative,” he said.

Talking about the security situation in Afghanistan, Doval said, “Afghanistan is an important issue concerning us all. India’s objectives with regard to immediate priorities in Afghanistan are similar to those of many of us.” He added that “existence of terrorist networks in the region, including in Afghanistan, is a matter of deep concern.”

“Financing is the lifeblood of terrorism and countering terror financing should be an equal priority for all of us. We should call on United Nations member states to fulfill obligations enshrined in relevant counter-terror conventions,” Doval further said.
 
#INSTC

Executive summary: In his article, Dr. Vali Kaleji, a Tehran-based expert on Central Asia and Caucasian Studies, postulates that the year 2022 was a “turning point” in the development of maritime trade between Iran and Russia in the Caspian Sea. Although it was not limited to bilateral trade between the two countries, and was an important part of the “Preferential Trade Agreement” (PTA) between Iran and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), “International North–South Transport Corridor” (INSTC), and the economic and commercial relations of Russia, Iran and India in framework of “multimodal transportation” by sea, road and rail. However, maritime trade between Iran and Russia in the Caspian Sea suffers six main challenges that need to be solved. In this case, we can hope that the share of maritime trade in the economic relations between Iran and Russia, Iran and the EAEU, and INSTC will increase significantly and sustainably. (...)

Expanding Maritime Trade Between Iran and Russia in the Caspian Sea: Capacities and Challenges (17.02.2023)
Many challenges...
 

India is missing Hindu Kush for the Pacific​

Trade with Central Asian region remains low despite episodic bursts of enthusiasm​

Through the past couple of decades, the concept of ‘extended neighbourhood’ got woven into India’s foreign policy formulations. The concept has acquired a rare bipartisan character. Broadly, the SAARC region constitutes India’s immediate neighbourhood, while the regions beyond make up the extended one.​
Indian strategists miss the point that it is in Central Asia and Afghanistan that the Indian subcontinent’s core interests lie.​
The UPA-1 government gave a geographical dimension to the concept of extended neighbourhood as stretching from the Suez Canal to the South China Sea, encompassing West Asia and the Gulf, Central Asia, South East Asia, East Asia, Asia-Pacific and the Indian Ocean Region. The seeming absurdity of such a ‘universal’ definition of the concept highlights the paradox — while geography has been thrust upon the concept as an explicit element of India’s concerns, geo-economic considerations and, more importantly, their actual practice do not bear that out.​
Of course, the then Manmohan Singh government was exceptional in its focus on economic development as a driver of foreign policy. A Canadian diplomat assigned to New Delhi at that time even authored a book to share his admiration for the visionary outlook of Manmohan Singh. Unsurprisingly, the centrality ascribed to economic development in shaping India’s strength, interests and relationships came to be known as the ‘Manmohan doctrine’. We miss him today.​
However, looking back, the pattern of trade shows that India’s record remained patchy in both its immediate and extended neighbourhoods. Admittedly, trade has improved with West Asia and the ASEAN regions to some extent, but it is ridiculously minuscule in the Horn of Africa or the Indian Ocean littoral. Ironically, India takes credit for the coinage ‘Indo-Pacific’, which has gained worldwide currency, but its trade with the Pacific Islands (which Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited last week) is in real terms negligible; we promote the Indian Ocean Rim Association and ecstatically tom-tom the India-Pacific Islands Cooperation grouping of 14 Pacific islands, but that is paying lip service. The international community, including China, must be viewing the intriguing mystery of it all with amusement and wonder.​
Equally, trade remains low with the Central Asian region despite episodic bursts of enthusiasm. Central Asia has become highly strategic as the western strategy towards Russia (and China) has veered towards Halford Mackinder’s heartland theory — the idea that whoever gained control of eastern Europe controlled the heartland or the pivot area (Eurasia), and whoever controlled Eurasia could easily gain control of the ‘World Island’.​
Because of a multi-layered process of intercontinental reception and adaptation of Mackinder’s theory in Germany and the US, the term ‘heartland’ became a generic spatial denomination detached from the geographical region of Eurasian landmass it originally prescribed, which is, of course, integrable with various geopolitical concepts as the centre of an imagined world order. Indeed, Mackinder himself laid out the flexibility of his theory’s interpretive possibilities by reflexively adapting it to the history of events over the course of the first half of the 20th century. At any rate, in consequence, the generic spatial denomination ‘heartland’ and the associated adopted theory came to serve as a geopolitical argument for the strategic narrative, legitimising the US foreign policy in World War II and also the containment strategy against the Soviet Union pursued under the rubric of the Cold War.​
It needs no emphasis that the entire arc of countries in Central Asia (Inner Asia) is turning into a battleground. While Indian strategists are besotted with the idea of the US’s island chain strategy against China in the Pacific, which has now taken PM Modi to those tropical islands with sandy beaches and coconut trees, they miss the point that it is in Central Asia and Afghanistan — the ‘pivot area’ — that the Indian subcontinent’s core interests lie in the making of the world order. We are wasting our time when the AUKUS is already there for the US to give underpinning to the island chain strategy. The Indian Navy isn’t going to be terribly missed in the vast Pacific Ocean.​
That is why it is truly unfortunate, even exasperating, that the Indian radar missed two back-to-back summits involving China in the run-up to and overlapping the cacophony of events and flurry of photo ops in faraway Hiroshima — the summit (May 6) of the foreign ministers of Pakistan, China and Afghanistan in Islamabad, the first such ministerial since the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan, and the China-Central Asia Summit (May 18-19) in Xian, chaired by President Xi Jinping.​
If the Pakistan-China-Afghanistan ministerial amounts to a big leap forward for the Belt and Road Initiative and the consequent legitimisation of the Taliban rule in Kabul, the Xian summit signifies a historic shift in the axis of Central Asia as China steps in to reformat its cooperation with that region in consultation with Russia on the basis of common concerns and coordinated strategies. In geopolitical terms, what is of profound significance here is that the Xian summit was preceded by the meeting in Moscow on May 9 (Russia’s Victory Day) between President Vladimir Putin and the heads of the five Central Asian states.​
The Xian summit heralds the creation of a new ‘5+2’ strategic axis (Central Asia plus China and Russia) for the first time in the tumultuous history of the Silk Road, which, of course, had defined through centuries the history, culture, politics and economy of our subcontinent. We are missing the Hindu Kush for the Pacific’s coconut trees, aren’t we? How did this happen? Policymakers with uncluttered minds would know how to separate the wheat from the chaff, as the Bible says. /end
 
Mongolia's India-assisted refinery on track for 2026 launch: Ambassador

Press Trust of India
New Delhi
3 min read Last Updated : Feb 12 2024 | 12:20 AM IST

Mongolia's ambassador to India Dambajav Ganbold has said the India-funded greenfield oil refinery project in South Gobi is on track and will be operational by 2026
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Mongolia's ambassador to India Dambajav Ganbold has said the India-funded greenfield oil refinery project in South Gobi is on track and will be operational by 2026.

However, he acknowledged some delays from the Indian side in delivering products for the refinery plant.

"Of course, there are some delays from the Indian side in delivering the products, but overall, the project is progressing well," he told PTI. "It is crucial for our relations, and we eagerly look forward to its completion." With a USD 1.2 billion line of credit announced by India during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Mongolia in 2015, the refinery's construction has been delayed by 1.5 years due to COVID-19.

"The work on the refinery project is going well. Because of COVID, it has been delayed by one and a half years. We believe that it will be operational by 2026," Ganbold said.

The refinery aims to reduce Mongolia's reliance on Russian oil imports. Upon completion, it will have a capacity of 30,000 barrels per day or 1.5 million tonnes annually, helping the country meet its demand for gasoline, diesel, aviation fuel, and liquefied petroleum gas.
Mongolia anticipates a visit by the Indian Prime Minister in 2025, coinciding with the 70th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the two countries.

"We expect our President to visit India in the second half of this year, and we will celebrate 70 years of diplomatic relations in 2025. Therefore, we hope Prime Minister Modi will visit Mongolia to commemorate this milestone and the 10th anniversary of his first trip," the ambassador said.

Ganbold, along with Union Ministers Kiren Rijiju and Meenakshi Lekhi, on Saturday, launched the song "Duur", marking the first musical collaboration between India and Mongolia. The song features renowned Indian singer Mohit Chauhan and Mongolian artist Baataraj Erdenetsogt.

"I believe this is a great fusion and a promising start," said the ambassador. "We believe the Dragon Year will bring us closer. Indeed, the sky's the limit." He also emphasized that the two countries can strengthen their economic ties by enhancing collaboration in tourism, agriculture, and the mineral sector.

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"Indian businesses can come to Mongolia for minerals, especially, rare earth elements crucial for telephones," he noted.

Expressing a similar sentiment of moving beyond formalities, Minister of Earth Sciences Kiren Rijiju highlighted India and Mongolia's spiritual connection.

"Diplomatic relations are limited to formalities, and true friendship comes from informal events, like music, entertainment, and other cultural and social activities," Rijiju said.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

https://www.business-standard.com/i...or-2026-launch-ambassador-124021100231_1.html