India- Republic of China (Taiwan): Relations and Trade

Already know that. Only difference is with ROC we will be in better position to negotiate than CCP
They'd ask us for diplomatic ties if we ask them to renounce their claims & this is only an assumption not a given. Knowing the Chinese whether from mainland China or Taiwan or even Singapore, they're not easy to negotiate with. Neither are we. It's a fallacy to think it'd be easier to Negotiate with Taiwan than it is with China. Both of them come with their own set of claims & baggage except China also comes bearing arms.
 
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They'd ask us for diplomatic ties if we ask them to renounce their claims & this is only an assumption not a given. Knowing the Chinese whether from mainland China or Taiwan or even Singapore, they're not easy to negotiate with. Neither are we. It's a fallacy to think it'd be easier to Negotiate with Taiwan than it is with China. Both of them come with their own set of claims & baggage except China also comes bearing arms.
Still lot better than CCP
 
They'd ask us for diplomatic ties if we ask them to renounce their claims & this is only an assumption not a given. Knowing the Chinese whether from mainland China or Taiwan or even Singapore, they're not easy to negotiate with. Neither are we. It's a fallacy to think it'd be easier to Negotiate with Taiwan than it is with China. Both of them come with their own set of claims & baggage except China also comes bearing arms.

Why do you think , Taiwanese President is buttering India

Because they know our Economic and Military Potential

If Today China is So hesitant to Fight with India , Will they dare to do so after 5 years
 
Why do you think , Taiwanese President is buttering India

Because they know our Economic and Military Potential

If Today China is So hesitant to Fight with India , Will they dare to do so after 5 years
What's the connection? It's not as if India is going to the assistance of Taiwan if they were to be invaded or vice versa.
 

India considers trade talks with Taiwan as both spar with China


By Bloomberg | Updated: Oct 20, 2020, 18:30 IST

NEW DELHI: Support is growing within India’s government to formally start talks on a trade deal with Taiwan as both democracies see relations with China deteriorate.

Taiwan has sought trade talks with India for several years, but Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has been reluctant to move ahead because it would involve a messy fight with China once any pact is registered at the World Trade Organization, according to a senior Indian government official who asked not be named, citing rules for speaking with the media.

Yet over the past few months the hawks in India who want to start trade talks are getting the upper hand, the official said. A trade deal with Taiwan would help India’s goal of seeking greater investments in technology and electronics, the official said, adding that it’s unclear when a final decision would be made on whether to start talks.

Earlier this month, Modi’s government gave approval to firms including Taiwan’s Foxconn Technology Group, Wistron Corp and Pegatron Corp as he looks to attract investment worth more than Rs 10.5 lakh crore ($143 billion) for smartphone production over five years.

Indian commerce ministry spokesman Yogesh Baweja didn’t immediately respond to a request seeking comment. Taiwan’s top trade negotiator, John Deng, didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

Any formal talks with India would amount to a big win for Taiwan, which has struggled to begin trade negotiations with most major economies due to pressure from China. Like most countries, India doesn’t formally recognize Taiwan, with the two governments maintaining unofficial diplomatic missions in the form of “representative offices.”

India and Taiwan in 2018 signed an updated bilateral investment agreement in a bid to further expand economic ties. Trade between them grew 18% to $7.2 billion in 2019, according to India’s department of commerce.

‘Country’ spat

President Tsai Ing-wen’s administration has raised its profile in India in recent weeks after China issued a statement telling Indian media outlets not to refer to Taiwan as a country when reporting on its October 10 National Day celebrations. Twitter users in India lambasted China and its ambassador to New Delhi, Sun Weidong, while heaping praise on Taiwan and making the hashtag #TaiwanNationalDay go viral.

Indian public sentiment toward China has fallen in the wake of deadly border clashes between the two neighbors starting in May. Modi’s government has since banned dozens of Chinese apps including TikTok, while also speaking with Japan, Australia and the US about creating alternative supply chains to diversify away from China in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. India has seen more than 7.5 million infections and 115,000 deaths from Covid-19.

That displeasure with China, as well as Taiwan’s successful handling of the pandemic, is translating into a soft power opportunity for Tsai. Taiwan’s 24 million have seen fewer than 600 infections and only seven deaths.

“We have to think about the way for democracies, for like-minded countries, to work further together,” Taiwan foreign minister Joseph Wu said during an interview last week on the television network India Today. “We have traditional good relations with the United States, with Japan, and we want to develop closer ties with India as well.”

Tsai, who was voted into a second term in a January landslide, has sought to capitalize on the wave of interest in Taiwan among Indians online. On October 11, she thanked Indian Twitter users who had sent national day greetings. Two days later she went viral again, posting photos of her visiting the Taj Mahal.

On October 15, Tsai tweeted a photo of Indian food accompanied by a cup of masala chai, which some Twitter users saw as a possible reference to the so-called Milk Tea Alliance that has united activists from Taiwan, Hong Kong, Thailand and elsewhere against Chinese nationalism. All three tweets received more than 40,000 likes each and thousands of friendly messages from Indian accounts.


China’s Communist Party, which claims Taiwan as its territory despite having never ruled it, has pushed back against the Tsai administration’s overtures to India.

“We urge relevant Indian media to adhere to the correct position with regard to the significant core interests of China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” Ji Rong, a spokesperson for China’s embassy in New Delhi, said in a statement on Friday. Indian media, Ji continued, “should not provide ‘Taiwan independence’ forces a platform, so as to avoid sending the wrong message.”

Sana Hashmi, a fellow at Taipei-based National Chengchi University and author of “China’s Approach Towards Territorial Disputes: Lessons and Prospects,” said it makes sense for India to align with Taiwan economically.

“Increasingly there seems to be an awareness not just among Indians but even in other nations about how China has dictated relationships in the region,” said Hashmi, who has penned op-eds in Taiwanese and Indian media encouraging closer ties between the two democracies. “And it’s not like China is going to give any concessions to India or Taiwan for toeing its line.”

 
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Taiwan Unveils New Policy Aimed At Setting Up Large-Scale Production Bases In India

by Swarajya Staff
Oct 19, 2020; 03:50 PM
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Photo Credit- Ulet Ifansasti/Getty Images.

Taiwan has launched its "new southbound policy", which is looking at setting up large scale production bases in India, in tune with a surge in the New Delhi-Taipei engagement.

India and Taiwan, a global hi-tech heavyweight, are rediscovering each other after China threatened the two with war. India's tighter ideological bonds with fellow democracies and its sharper strategic focus on the Indo-Pacific region, following the Covid-19 pandemic, is adding fresh ballast to growing New Delhi-Taipei ties.

With the government's New Southbound Policy, India is a good place for Taiwanese businesses to build production bases, given its democracy, ample human resources and strategically important location, Taiwan's deputy foreign minister Tien Chung-kwang said on Friday as quoted by Taipei Times.

Resentment over China has been rising in India, not just because of a decades-long border conflict, but also because of China's aggressive expansion in South Asia, its bullying of other countries and its dissemination of Covid 19, Tien said on Friday in Taipei on the sidelines of a Taiwan-India Parliamentary Friendship Association event. "The wind is beginning to blow" in Indian society, he observed, pointing out that Taiwan's success in containing the pandemic and medical aid, in sharp contrast with China, has not gone unnoticed in India.

With ties with China souring following the border standoff in Ladakh, Indian elites are showing visible inclination to pivot towards Taiwan as a strategic source of hi-technology and investments.

India's new representative to Taiwan, Gourangalal Das, said at the event that Taiwan's unique position in global supply chains can be leveraged to serve India's aspiration to emerge as the next key global manufacturing hub, at a time when new supply chains following the pandemic are emerging.

With an eye on decoupling from China, trade ministers from India, Australia and Japan, last month, decided to study establishment of new supply chains that do not include China. Das highlighted that India's start-up ecosystem, focusing on software can fuse with Taiwan's strengths in hardware.

Besides, smart agriculture, precision medicine, skills training and industrial automation offer great opportunities for collaboration.

Analysts say that India and Taiwan can also partner each other in the development of new energy vehicles. On Friday, Taiwan's electronics giant Foxconn Technology and local carmaker Yulon Group were teaming up to supply components and services for 10 per cent of the world's electric cars between 2025-2027.

Taiwanese academics are also pointing to the possibility of a trilateral partnership in key areas, which also includes the United States. The warming ties between Taiwan, India and the US herald new opportunities for Taiwanese businesses, especially in the electronics industry, Taiwan Asean Studies Center director Kristy Hsu was quoted as saying at the event.

Separately, in an interview with India Today on October 15, Taiwan's foreign minister, Joseph Wu signalled Taiwan's readiness to look at the Indo-Pacific Quad initiative led by India, Australia, Japan and the United States. Taiwan has traditionally had good relationships with the US, Japan and Australia - which are involved in the dialogue - while ties with India are "getting better and better," he said.

"Therefore, we certainly hope that Taiwan can start thinking about how we can work with all these countries that are taking part in the Quad discussions".

Taiwan's leadership is taking to social media to reach out directly to Indian citizenry, signalling a well-timed soft-power push. On October 14, President Tsai Ing-wen took to Twitter to appreciate support of Indian netizens for backing Taiwan during tensions with China in the Taiwan strait.

"#Namaste to our friends from #India!" Tsai tweeted. "Your warm regards remind me of fond memories from time spent in your incredible country, your architectural marvels, vibrant culture & kind people are truly unforgettable."

She also shared her pictures that had been taken during her previous visit to the Taj Mahal. A day later she was in full flow in praise of Indian cuisine. " #Taiwan is lucky to be home to many Indian restaurants, & Taiwanese people love them. I always go for chana masala and naan, while #chai always takes me back to my travels in #India, and memories of a vibrant, diverse & colourful country. What are your favourite Indian dishes?" she tweeted.

(The story has been published via a syndicated feed, only the headline has been changed)

 
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With an eye on decoupling from China, trade ministers from India, Australia and Japan, last month, decided to study establishment of new supply chains that do not include China.
Makes one wonder what exactly is the RCEP all about? Both Japan & Australia have just signed the RCEP & are already creating an alternative to it.
 
Potential ally.
Yo Paddy, Nobody reads yahoo these days except yahoos. In plain English, upgrade yourself. Don't link articles here from defunct moribund sites which may have been happening when you were young which was last century.
 
Why were do you get your news? The Maoist Nuthugger Express?
 
Why were do you get your news? The Maoist Nuthugger Express?
Everywhere except yahoo.

PS - isn't it too early in the day of a weekend for you to be here? What happened ? O'Shaughnessy's shut on account of the lockdown thanks to the second wave of the Chinese virus ? Sounds cheerful.
 
Says who? Some random turdlet in Mumbai?
Says everybody, old fart. Except for you, pls show me a single member who quotes yahoo. You do it coz that's the mail account you operate & you also use their browser , I suspect. That's how ancient you are.
 
Says everybody, old fart. Except for you, pls show me a single member who quotes yahoo. You do it coz that's the mail account you operate & you also use their browser , I suspect. That's how ancient you are.
I don't hear everybody, just a little turd sapling.