India today said China was a "major concern" than Pakistan given the power it
has to impact the country in various spheres.
Noting that China was necessarily more important in terms of India's global
vision and the ties between the two countries can impact the region, External
Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid, in an interview to PTI, said as far as
Pakistan was concerned, the impact was "more pacific".
He was replying to queries on which was a bigger challenge for India --
territorial dispute with China or trust deficit with Pakistan.
"China is necessarily more important in terms of our global vision. In terms of
economics. In terms of stability and impact of stability that our friendship and
understanding can have on Asia and South Asia. As far as Pakistan is concerned,
it is more pacific."
"China is part of a larger picture and Pakistan being part of that picture ....
Significant part of the picture and can ruin that picture if Pakistan does not
have right colour.
"But it is much larger canvas and picture we are dealing with as far as China is
concerned. China we engage multilaterally everywhere. China can be a very very
important partner in both in Asia and Africa and elsewhere. China will play a
significant role in what we want to do in the UN," said the minister, who was on
way back from Myanmar after a three-day visit.
He further said, "China is also a constant reminder to us that we got to put our
economy at the right track. We can pretend that China is not there. But China is
there and unless we put our economy on the right track it is going to overwhelm
us completely.
"So China is a major concern and Pakistan, in a significant way (is a concern)
but not a major concern.
"Because Pakistan has the ability to ruin the game for us therefore we have to
keep Pakistan also in focus.....," the minister said.
"There are linkages also between China and Pakistan and that is important. But
the linkages again is less important dimension," Khurshid said.
Asked about the 'pinpricks' China keeps giving to India on territory issue, he
said, "I really wish they do not happen but they do happen."
"We have learnt to live with them. We have learnt to manage them. We have learnt
to control them. But today these are not restricted to what was our real problem
i.E issue of the border. Today they are coming elsewhere in multilateral
situation. We don't want to be drawn into any dispute vis-a-vis China because we
want to look at the positive as far as possible," the minister said.
He said India should engage with China, grow with China as was decided in 1988
during late Rajiv Gandhi's visit to Beijing and added that India was getting
signals from China that emerging young leadership also wanted to go on the same
path.
Emerging story. Watch this space for updates as more details come in
© Copyright PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of any PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without their prior written consent.