The West’s notions of history and geography between Europe and Asia, are drenched in myriad cultural implications and can be traced back to ‘The Romance of Alexander’.
This is a collection of essays mixing truth, epic drama and mythology, composed between the death of Alexander The Great in 323 B.C., and the fourth century A.D, and attributed either to Callisthenes, Aristotle’s nephew or to Alexander’s tutor.
During a 10-year period, Alexander forged an empire encompassing Asia Minor and what the West later defined as the Middle East, annexing the current lands of Turkey, Syria, Israel and Palestine, Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, Iran, a slice of Pakistan and northwest India.
For more than two millennia, Alexander best embodied in the West the clash of these two lofty paradigms: East and West. Alexander’s conquests also helped India to enter the Western frame of mind in terms of geography and civilization.
We eventually learned that India was actually close to the Arab world – overland via Iran, and in naval terms via its direct connection to the Persian Gulf.
The exchange of goods, traditions and culture was always inbuilt in the Big Picture. Overland or seaborne, the ancient Silk Road – before arriving in China – went through India. Rome was already trading with India before learning about the Middle Kingdom, and vice-versa as the Chinese barely knew the Mediterranean existed.
Closer to the West
So, India was always closer to the Western mind than China.
In parallel, when Vasco da Gama reached southwest India in 1498, those ports for more than a millennium had been trading with China, Southeast Asia, the Arab world and the Mediterranean.
The historical case can be made that India’s royals, after trading for so long with Arab, Jewish and Chinese merchants, were fooled by the “peaceful” intention of the first European incursions, which eventually led to British domination of the subcontinent.
This background should be taken into account when we look at what happened during the latest international Raisina Dialogue in New Delhi. This was sponsored by the Indian Ministry of External Affairs and the Observer Research Foundation (ORF), an Indian think tank.
The theme of the Raisina Dialogue was “Managing Disruptive Transitions.” And the number one “disruptive transition” was identified as no less than China’s New Silk Road, otherwise known as the Belt and Road Initiative.
“The reality is that China is a disruptive transitional force in the Indo-Pacific, they are the owner of the trust deficit in the region.”
More than 200 million Indians are Muslims, which makes it the third largest Muslim nation in the world after Indonesia and Pakistan. So, it is no wonder that Premier Narendra Modi’s right-wing pro-Hindu BJP acts as the self-proclaimed defender of a multi-millennium civilization.
But when we dig deeper we find that modern Hindu nationalism – instead of worrying about the destiny of the Mahabharata – was actually born in the 1920s, infused with the theories of Mazzini, d’Annunzio and even one Benito Mussolini. Still, that was all about fear of the Hindu identity being swamped by Islam and Christendom.
Now, it is all about fear of China.
Belt and Road versus ‘Quad’
NATO was in full voice at the Raisina Dialogue in New Delhi via Admiral Harry Harris, commander of US Pacific Command and named recently as US Ambassador to Australia. According to Harris, “the reality is that China is a disruptive transitional force in the Indo-Pacific, they are the owner of the trust deficit in the region.”
Significantly, the navy chiefs from the Quad nations – US, India, Japan, Australia – all agree on it. So does retired General David Petraeus, the former CIA director and mastermind of the surges in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Neocon ideologue Zalmay Khalilzad, a former US Ambassador to Iraq and Afghanistan, also attended, and duly agreed that by trying to connect all of Eurasia via the Belt and Road, China would “change the international order.”
The Raisina Dialogue fully illustrated the scope of Washington’s terminological pivot from “Asia-Pacific” to “Indo-Pacific”, while detailing the prescription inbuilt in the new Pentagon Defense Strategy.
China – along with Russia – are “revisionist powers” bent on undermining the “international, rules-based order”, especially China with its “predatory economics” which will be fully developed through the Belt and Road program.
So, it was up to Quad to implement a new China containment strategy.
Geopolitically, in Beijing, China-India relations are regarded very seriously, second only in importance to China’s relations with the US. Lately, China-Russia relations have been in the ascendant – mutually exhorted as a “strategic partnership”.
China-Japan relations, meanwhile, may qualify as a distant fourth although vast swathes of the Chinese public appear to consider it the second biggest threat to President Xi Jinping’s “Chinese Dream”.
Yet once Beijing consolidates its influence over key maritime trade routes across East Asia, Japan will cease to be a problem. The real problem is if India ever decides to try to cut or at least interfere with China’s Belt and Road Initiative naval routes – and complex supply lines – across the Indian Ocean.
The key geopolitical question of the 21st century is how the ascension of China will “disrupt” American hegemony and arguably enable a Chinese – actually Eurasian – century.
China and India would have all it takes to be complementary. Both are members of BRICS, the group also comprising Brazil, Russia and South Africa. They are also part of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), as well as top nations in the G-20. And yet New Delhi persists on treating Beijing not as a partner but as a threat.
Fear of the rising power
Xi Jinping, for his part, seems to take the Thucydides Trap seriously: when a rising power causes fear in an established power which escalates toward war. Xi has referred to it many times in his speeches.
So, closing the historical circle that started with Alexander, we now have an informed reader from the Middle Kingdom showing respect toward the most eminent historian of Ancient Greece
Xi is, in fact, warning the US, and by proxy, India, not to fall into the mistake that generated the Peloponnesian War, where every player lost.
The fear instilled in Sparta by the ascent of Athens rendered the war inevitable (replace Sparta by Washington/Delhi and Athens by Beijing). Athens was defeated as well as its model of democracy. In fact, the whole of Greece was defeated, its decline acting as a prelude for being conquered by Philip of Macedonia.
Inspired by the maritime expeditions of Admiral Zheng He, Xi’s point is that China is a benevolent power, with the New Silk Road – a massive trade route and a potential multiplier of wealth – developed as the archetypal globalization 2.0 “win-win”.
But, don’t count on India and the Quad to play along.

Бозе Турбан
At 15 Quadriliion BTUs for 1 billion 300 million is really backward. One reason why so many foreign companies have their own generators is due to the rolling black outs and brown outs in India.
Btw I tried using your link but it ended in a blank page with the headlines on India. nothing else.
Michael Bagala this is which country produce how much electricity @https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_electricity_production….india 3rd on list
Michael Bagala cant agee more 1st as per world economic forum report 1% Billioner owned 83% wealth of world. ..for China its 57% wealth owned by 1% of people… for India its 73% owned by 1% people or 1,20,000,00 people owned 73% world wealth…… population diffrence between India and China is still huge not same and.. …………..in electricity production india stand 3rd in world after China, USA,
Бозе Турбан
Quoting you "ok as per Forbes report there are more than 41 yes check the number again 41 Indian whoes personal wealth is more than Donald Trump $3 Billion Dollar…"
True but Donald Trump’s 15 billion is accrued in a population whose standard of living is considered either the best or one of the best in the world. India’s standard of living remains one of the worst. All you have pointed out is that the elite get richer while the majority remain extremely poor.
Бозе Турбан
All of that maybe true but the image China has is far better than India. India’s image abroad is dismal, just going by the examples I gave. China may have similar problems but the world media does not focus on them and for good reason.
Take electricity. China produces 115 Quadrillion BTU’s per year, the US produces 100 Quadrillion BTU’s per year, India produces 15 Quadrillion BTU’s per year. Both India and China have a similar sized population yet China produces more electricity than the US. It will take India 85 years just to catch up to America. India adds 1 Quadrillion BTU per year.
What I see is that New Delhi is worse than London. She is similar to a colonial power over the various cultures of India. Beijing aka Peking has always been the capital of China and has run it in a similar manner as she is doing today.
You pointing all those facts only makes the problem worse. Being the largest producer or consumer in all these areas (and more) should translate to a society who has met the basics. It does not. It only means the elite in India get the most benefits of this massive production scale. while the vast majority do not. India grows at 13 million per year, 99% of them are bon at the bottom of India’s economy and will remain extremely poor and disenfranchised.
Michael Bagala fact you cant denied India 5th largest car manufacturer in world, 2nd Largest Gold consumer in world,3rd largest steel producing country
Michael Bagala your so call slum, doesnot exist in china you mean ha ha ha ha joke of the century 7% chinies(same as total populaton of germany or bit higher tan uk) as per world bank report not get food for 2 days daily first tell china to reduce its 1.4 Billion population dont talk about chinies elite people… talk aboutr villegers,,,talk abour income inequlity,,,check also how much aid it receive from uk…………….and kindly put your photo >>>>>ha ha
india stands to gain more by cooperating with china than confronting it at every turn out of some deep sense of insecurity and paranoia. this will also force the US to show its real intentions towards india
Vietname is not as stupid as India.
Tony Bass Come up with some concrete argument, will you!
Sandesh Herwade Yes, so they will not be attached by you hidu majorities barbarians. I know you are very proud of it.
Lots of drivel about Alexander the Great and China as a benevolent power, and then not a single mention of China’s militarization of maritime territory that rightfully belong to the Philippines and its naval aggression against Vietnam, or how China continues to encroach on India’s border and seeks to build naval bases to surround India. Seriously – is Escobar dumb enough to think that India will buy into his propaganda???
In the Peloponnesian War, Sparta won against Athens. But it was Persian gold, not Spartan strength that decided in the end.
Will the Western World find its "Persian gold"? Or will we have, instead, a reedition of the Punic Wars, where the land power (Rome; Russia/China) subdued the sea power (Carthage; USA) to become the ruler of the whole Known World?
China’s stand on Terrorists operating from Pakistan has given bitterness and resolve to look into its own interests
The gap between India and the USA today is less than the gap between China and the USA in the late 1970s. The USA foolishly helped totalitarian China to rise in order to punish the Soviets, who were in fact a far less dangerous enemy. Now the USA will help India to rise.Unlike China, liberal, open India will not stab America in the back.
China is the arch betrayer. She betrays those who foolishly try to befriend her. She betrayed the Soviets; she betrayed the Indians; she betrayed the Vietnamese; she betrayed the Americans. She has been faithful only to her two deadly partners in crime, North Korea and Pakistan.
nice article which gives information of the world’s nations.
As if there is always a contest as to who is more powerful, braver and who will succeed. Pity the soldiers you are going to send to fight and get killed. So no soldier is needed only nuclear weapons? But everyone will be affected the wind will blow the bad effect of nuclear weapons that will make water and air harmful to all. Plants/vrgegtabes and animals will die and there will be nothing left. No jobs no money zero in everything. So why not stop this fight as to who should LEAD and start being friends with all leaders. Anyway you leaders will also die one day. You are not immortal.
Richard Truong : Yes, everyone! Indigenous people and new immigrants benefit included. It is a rule of law that whilst not by any means perfect is still a hell of an improvement that anything else in the Asia-Pacific region currently has on offer right now.
China was so great a nation with high morality that it took the burden of ruling unarmed Tibet
James Greaves Funniest comment.