Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Balancing the U.S.: India and China Reopen Path to Cooperation

 China and India used the 24th round of boundary talks between Foreign Minister Wang Yi and National Security Advisor Ajit Doval to signal a broader reset in relations. While acknowledging the unresolved border issue, both sides emphasized stability, mutual respect, and the need to expand cooperation, linking progress on the boundary question with deeper engagement in trade, diplomacy, and regional forums.

Wang underscored the importance of viewing each other as partners rather than rivals, highlighting the 75th anniversary of diplomatic ties as an opportunity to reset relations. Jaishankar echoed this, stressing that stable, cooperative, and forward-looking relations serve both countries’ interests, and reaffirmed India’s support for China in hosting the SCO Summit.

The talks mark a step away from the lingering shadow of the 2020 border clashes, with both sides stressing parallel progress on boundary negotiations and broader cooperation. Analysts note that improving ties are driven not only by shared regional interests but also by external pressures, particularly U.S. tariff policies and a cooling in U.S.–India relations under President Trump. While Washington has sought to align New Delhi against Beijing, India is recalibrating toward a more balanced, autonomous strategy.

In this context, China and India appear intent on managing competition while deepening cooperation in trade, multilateral forums like BRICS and SCO, and supply chain stability. Their efforts to consolidate relations highlight an emerging alignment between Asia’s two largest powers, with potential implications for U.S. influence in the region.

References:

  1. https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202508/1341245.shtml

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