Observers India and
Pakistan to Join the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, Iran too in the Waiting
Central Asia to Join North Asia and South Asia?
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Pakistani Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif are headed to Ufa, Russia will attend the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization (SCO) Summit as observers. Their accession is expected
to conclude in 2016, according to statements by a Russian official. Next
meeting of SCO may be Delhi! The SCO was founded in 1996 and is largely a forum
for limited consultation and cooperation on political, economic, and military
matters.
As my colleague Catherine Putz recently detailed in our Central Asia pages, Modi is on a
eight-day, six-nation tour of Central Asia and Russia, with plans to attend the
combined BRICS/SCO summit in Ufa from July 8 to 10. Modi’s
meeting with Sharif at the SCO summit was expected for some time but was only
recently confirmed. Modi and Sharif spoke most
recently at the commencement of Ramadan when the Indian prime minister called
his Pakistani counterpart. Before then, Sharif and Modi
last met in Kathmandu for the 18th SAARC Summit–though they didn’t hold an
official bilateral meeting. Last May, shortly after Modi’s
inauguration as India’s prime minister, it appeared that the two leaders would
establish a positive personal rapport after a series of photo ops and candid
personal exchanges but, as in the past, trouble along the border and other
issues reverted India and Pakistan to their normal
state of mutual suspicion and rivalry.
The Implications of Indian and
Pakistani Accession
China, Russia, Tajikistan,
Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan are current members of SCO.
India and Pakistan, along with
Iran, Afghanistan, and Mongolia, have been observers of the SCO. Iran’s
president, Hassan Rouhani, will travel to Ufa to
attend the summit at Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invitation.
Geopolitically, SCO membership
could highlight avenues for greater cooperation between India and China in
areas such as terrorism and Afghan reconstruction. Pakistan’s membership, if anything, will help it interface better with the
organization’s Central Asian members and Russia; Pakistan and China already
enjoy a close strategic partnership. For China, incorporating India and
Pakistan is a testament to the organization’s openness–something Beijing has
stressed in the past with little to show for it.
China will be hoping that
India’s inclusion will stave off some of the criticism of the organization as a
grouping of states with little affection for the Western world order; having a
state that in addition to being the world’s largest democracy has a range of
disagreements with China on board may indeed do so. Incorporating India as a
full member also mitigates fears that the SCO will shape up to be a China-led
NATO–an unfounded, but persistent perception of the organization. This
perception has been exacerbated by full-scale military cooperation between SCO
members; it remains unclear how India and Pakistan will figure into the SCO’s
existing arrangements for counter-terrorism and intelligence sharing.
With India and Pakistan’s
accession, the SCO will probably head toward becoming more a symbolically
important Asian talk-shop rather than a substantive forum for cooperation.
Unfortunately, it’s hard to image how the inclusion of Pakistan and India will
allow the organization to somehow suddenly become more dynamic and cooperative
forum. In essence, the SCO is going from being more like-minded to less so,
especially with India’s inclusion.
With Xi’s burgeoning “One
Belt, One Road” vision for increased connectivity through continental and
maritime Asia, an expansion of the SCO will be a welcome development.