22 April 2025 The Hindu Editorial


What to Read in The Hindu Editorial( Topic and Syllabus wise)

Editorial 1: India, China at 75 — a time for strategy, not sentiment

Context

As India and China mark 75 years of ties, they must pursue ‘competitive coexistence’ with clear military, diplomatic, and economic safeguards.

Introduction

As India and China mark 75 years of diplomatic ties, it's not just a moment to celebrate but a key point in Asian and global geopolitics. What began with hopes of Asian unity is now a fragile balance amid border disputes, rivalry, and mistrust — yet it still holds chances for cooperation, economic ties, and shared regional responsibility.

 

The ‘China lens’, the challenge

Theme

Details

China’s Central Role in India’s Policy

China is the most influential external factor shaping India’s foreign policy. Almost every major Indian decision — from border infrastructure to trade and defence — is viewed through the "China lens."

Strategic Challenge

India faces a structural challenge: balancing deterrence with dialogue, sovereignty with interdependence, and competition with coexistence.

Legacy of Conflict

The 1962 war and the 2020 Galwan clash serve as deep historical wounds, reaffirming that engagement cannot mask core differences. The LAC remains tense, with over 60,000 troopsdeployed in Ladakh.

Trade and Economic Paradox

Despite a trade deficit nearing $100 billion (2024-25) and efforts like banning apps, India and China remain economically entangled — especially in pharma and electronics. Full decoupling isn’t feasible.

India’s Strategic Response

India follows a model of "competitive coexistence" — competing in defence, infrastructure, and regional leadership while maintaining dialogue where needed.

Multilateral Platforms

India engages China in BRICS and SCO as peers, while aligning with democracies in the Quad to promote a free Indo-Pacific.

Regional Competition

China's growing role in South Asia — e.g., Hambantota Port, Pokhara Airport, and Maldives loans — challenges India's position. India counters with aid, defence ties, and connectivity projects.

Need for Proactive Diplomacy

India must shift from reactive to proactive diplomacy — focusing on long-term partnerships and people-centric engagement rather than just headlines.

Narrative & Perception Battles

Remarks like those by Bangladesh’s interim leader in Beijing about the northeast being landlocked reflect China’s framing. India must close infrastructure gaps and enhance trust with neighbours.

The Core Message

Influence today is as much about controlling narratives as building infrastructure. India must maintain strategic agency and ensure calibrated control in potentially adversarial situations.

 

Geopolitical Shifts: Impact of Trump's Return

  • Donald Trump’s second term has:
    1. Revived unilateralism
    2. Weakened multilateralism
    3. Intensified U.S.-China rivalry
  • Implications for India:
    1. Likely pressure to align more closely with the U.S., especially on:
      • Defence cooperation
      • Indo-Pacific security
    2. However, India’s strategic autonomy remains a core guiding principle.

 

India’s Diplomatic Balancing Act

Aspect

India’s Approach

With the U.S.

Strengthen ties, especially in defence and strategic sectors

With China

Manage tensions without provoking escalation

Strategic Autonomy

Maintain independence in decision-making, avoid binary alignments

Public Messaging

Present a steady, measured leadership image to domestic and global audiences

 

Modi’s Strategic Messaging (March 2025)

  • In a podcast with Lex Fridman, PM Modi:
    1. Referred to historical India-China synergy
    2. Promoted dialogue and “healthy competition”
  • Interpretations:
    1. To China: India is open to engagement
    2. To the U.S.: India will exercise independent judgement
    3. To domestic audience: Assurance of measured leadership

 

China’s Response and Signs of Thaw

Positive Signals from China (2025)

Implication

Mao Ning welcomed Modi’s “pragmatic approach”

Rare moment of diplomatic alignment

Verification patrols resumed at LAC (Jan 2025)

Tentative de-escalation in border tensions

Expert-level talks on river data-sharing initiated

Possible progress on hydrological cooperation

Discussions on Kailash Mansarovar Yatra and direct flights

Symbolic but strategic steps toward limited rapprochement

 

Enduring Risks: Water Security and Ecological Tensions

  • Key Concern: China’s planned dam on the Yarlung Tsangpo (Brahmaputra)
    1. Near Arunachal Pradesh
    2. Raises fears of ecological manipulation and water weaponisation
  • Challenges:
    1. No water-sharing treaty between India and China
    2. Low transparency in data-sharing
    3. High risk of mismanagement or deliberate manipulation

 

India’s China Policy: 4 Key Pillars

  • Military readiness – Stay prepared to defend without triggering conflict.
  • Economic diversification – Trade with China but avoid over-dependence.
  • Diplomatic engagement – Keep communication channels open to manage tensions.
  • Narrative control – Shape global and regional perception in India’s favour.

 

Strategic Approach

  • Deterrence without provocation
  • Trade without dependency
  • Skilled negotiation to protect India’s interests
  • Clear messaging and quicker delivery of regional projects
  • Think long-term — plan for decades, not headlines

 

Guiding Principles (As per Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri)

  • Mutual respect
  • Mutual sensitivity
  • Mutual interest

 

Competitive Coexistence: The Way Ahead

  • India and China should adopt “competitive coexistence”:
    1. Acknowledge rivalry but manage it responsibly
    2. Avoid conflict while maintaining competition
  • Asia needs regional leadership, not just reliance on the U.S.
    1. India and China must help create a local security system
    2. Build guardrails in military, diplomacy, and economy to avoid escalation

 

Conclusion

As India and China mark 75 years of bilateral ties, this is not just a time for celebration or looking back with nostalgia. It is a moment for clear strategy, not sentiment. India must focus on defining its role in a world that is rapidly changing, marked by intense rivalries and shifting global alliances. China will continue to be a major structural challenge, but it also serves as a mirror — reflecting India’s own strengths, decisions, and ambitions. In that reflection, India should not see a limitation, but an opportunity to rise, lead, and shape its own path forward.

 

Editorial 2: Power sharing across States

Context

Recent agreements reflect inter-State cooperation.

Introduction

Recent developments have brought federalism and inter-state relations into the spotlight, with positive examples of collaboration, particularly in the energy sector. Telangana, a Congress-ruled state, has forged significant agreements with Odisha (BJP-ruled), Rajasthan (BJP-ruled), and Himachal Pradesh (Congress-ruled) to address its escalating power demand, which is growing faster than previously anticipated.

 

Key Agreements for Power Supply

    1. Hydropower from Himachal Pradesh
    2. Solar power from Rajasthan
    3. Rajasthan: Focused on increasing solar energy production.
    4. Himachal Pradesh: Aiming to harness its abundant hydro energy resources.

 

Inter-State Cooperation and Policy Continuity

 

Telangana's MoU with Rajasthan

    1. Objective: Develop 1,600 MW of thermal power in Telangana and 1,500 MW of solar power in Rajasthan.
    2. Investment: ₹26,200 crore
    3. Equity Distribution:
      • SCCL: 74% equity
      • RVUNL: 26% equity

 

Purpose of the JV

 

Rajasthan's Vision for Renewable Energy

 

MoU with Himachal Pradesh for Hydro Power

    1. Seli (400 MW) and Meyar (120 MW) hydro power projects.

 

Demand Growth in Telangana

  1. Growth Projections:
    1. Projected: 8% growth between 2023-24 and 2024-25 (from 15,623 MW to 16,877 MW).
    2. Actual Growth: 9.85% growth (to 17,162 MW).

 

Renewable Energy Challenges in Telangana

While Telangana works to meet its rising energy demand, it faces several challenges:

  • Land Prices: High land costs for solar installations.
  • Limited Hydro Project Sites: Lack of suitable locations for hydroelectric power projects.

 

Future Cooperation in the Energy Sector

    1. Economic Growth: Ensuring the energy needs of a growing population.
    2. Sustainable Energy: Securing long-term, eco-friendly energy solutions for citizens.

 

Key Agreements

State Pairing

Power Source

Investment (₹ Crore)

Power Generation Capacity

Telangana & Rajasthan

Solar Power

₹26,200

1,500 MW

Telangana & Himachal

Hydro Power

N/A

520 MW (Seli & Meyar)

 

Conclusion

The recent power-sharing agreements between Telangana and neighboring states showcase a positive example of inter-state cooperation in addressing growing energy demands. These initiatives not only strengthen regional collaboration but also support India's transition to sustainable energy sources, emphasizing the importance of collective governance, policy continuity, and the shared responsibility for securing long-term energy security across states.