From being an emerging economy, China is on a path to becoming a superpower. Its rapid modernization entails an appetite for more and more resources and a deepening international market. Historically, the US tailored its diplomacy to secure an uninterrupted supply of energy resources so as to perennially fuel its economy. Now China is in its turn striving to monopolise resources across Africa, Latin America, Australia , Myanmar , Central Asia and the Middle East . Chinese strategists feel that, without command of the ‘commons’ like intercontinental oceans, space and cyberspace, the geopolitics of resource supply cannot be practiced. Suddenly, China is challenging US hegemony in Asian waters and space.
This is part of a considered practice of geopolitics. China has always been considered a heartland land power with less strategic mobility than rim-land powers like the empire-building Britain or the US . By building high-speed railways, China aims to invert the old geopolitical equation. Moreover, this is a secure investment and adds to China ’s strategic reach as well as influence across Eurasia . By building on its strategic advantages, it can avoid the pitfalls that caused the disintegration of another heartland power, the Soviet Union . Connectivity, infrastructure and Pan-Asianism is the three pronged strategy pursued by Chinese policy makers.
Construction of the Boten-Vientiane link is now due to commence in late April, 2011.
(based on an article which appeared in 'Chanakya' magazine,November,2010)
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