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India-Pakistan
Chicom's dams are sinking its relationship with India
2009-10-29
The operators of the Three Gorges Dam are continuing to export their hydro-power schemes to countries around the globe. The latest destination is Pakistan.
A prime candidate for such a grandiose scheme!
Around the globe? Does that mean we could get some?
According to recent reports, Pakistan's Ministry of Water and Power has signed a number of memorandum of understanding (MOU) with China's Three Gorges Dam Project Corporation. The MOUs concern the Bunji Hydropower Project, a $7-$-billion dollar project that is expected to produce 7,000-8,000 MW of power, and the Diamer-Bhasha dam, a $12.6-billion dam that is expected to produce 4,500 MW of power.
More Jihadi targets!
The agreements between the Three Gorges Dam Project Corporation and the Pakistan government are on a BOOT--build, operate, own and transfer--basis.
This is a financing arrangement in which a developer (1) designs and builds a complete project at little or no cost to the government of Pakistan, (2) owns and operates the facility as a business for a specified period after which (3) transfers it to the government of Pakistan at a previously agreed-upon price.
Both of the dams will be built in Pakistan-administered Kashmir. India and Pakistan have fought two wars over the Kashmir region, which each country administers in part, but both claim in full.
Sticking it in India's eye, I see.
A Chinese foothold in Pakistan near the Indian border, in other words? Clever people, those Red Chinese!
The announcement that China will help construct the two dams in the disputed Kashmir region comes after an announcement from the Pakistan government last month of a new autonomy package for the Northern Areas of Kashmir, renamed as Gilgit-Baltistan. India says the new law "is yet another cosmetic exercise intended to camouflage Pakistan's illegal occupation."

At the same time, India has lodged complaints about the construction of the Bunji and Diamer-Bhasha dams--which are in the newly named Gilgit-Baltistan--with Chinese assistance. Both India and Pakistan consider the Northern Areas as part of the larger Jammu and Kashmir dispute.

The dams have helped inflame tensions between China and India, as India is concerned about China's growing presence in Pakistan. India has claimed in the past that China has assisted Pakistan in the development of its nuclear and ballistic weapons programs.
Just another way Chicoms are sticking it to India and tying them up.
"The government of India lodged a protest today over the proposed construction of the Bunji hydroelectric project in a part of the state of Jammu and Kashmir under illegal occupation of Pakistan," Indian Foreign ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash was quoted in a report by the Indo-Asian News Service (IANS).

And in response to the Diamer-Bhasha dam he said: "we hope that the Chinese side will take a long-term view of the India-China relations and cease activities in areas illegally occupied by Pakistan."

China's dam-building expertise in Pakistan is not new. According to International Rivers, Chinese companies are already involved with nine other dams in Pakistan, with a number of these projects, including Bunji and Diamer-Bhasha, located in the disputed Kashmir region.

China's hydroelectric schemes in another part of Southeast Asia are also helping to inflame diplomatic tensions between the two countries. Recent media reports claim that China has started construction of the Zangmu dam on Yarlung Tsangpo river in Tibet, which is a headwater for the Brahmaputra River, and eventually runs through the the Arunachal Pradesh state in India--a region over which India and China have had a running dispute for decades--and Bangladesh. The river is source of fresh water for millions of citizens living in India and Bangladesh.
A large reservoir behind the dam could serve as a nice choke point for water flowing to India and Bangladesh. And I think that the Chicoms really do not care what India thinks. Take it to the UN, they will say. BFD.
Not all warfare involves armies and guns. I think Sun Tzu wrote that.
Posted by:Alaska Paul

#8  Hmmmmm - I wonder how those Indian airlift capabilities and Afghan-sited bases talks are going with Karzai?
Posted by: Frank G   2009-10-29 19:37  

#7  Do NOT forget, Dams can be bombed and broken.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2009-10-29 19:05  

#6  I would think the Chinese would worry more about Japan/Korea/Tawian. This smells to me like a chip to be bargained away rather than something the Chinese really care about.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2009-10-29 17:14  

#5  TW has the right idea. Sun Tzu. The Chicoms are doing to India what Iran, Hizb'Allah, and the Paleos are doing to Israel. They are slowly encircling their adversary. The Chicoms want to build a strong navy to work on India's coastline, as one of their objectives. This is a full scale game of Go.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2009-10-29 13:57  

#4  Will the Three Gorges Dam survive long enough to see the completion of these new ones? I've read scary stories on rantburg about that dam.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2009-10-29 13:39  

#3  ION FREEREPUBLIC > GET READY FOR THE ISLAMIST BOMB: THE WHITE HOUSE MUST PREPARE FOR MIDEAST WAR + THE US MUST PLAN FOR NUKE WARS.

* SAME > OBAMA BELIEVES/FEELS THE US CAN'T DEFEAT THE TALIBAN: WILL PUT OFF AFGHAN TROOP DECISION UNTIL NOVEMBER.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2009-10-29 01:31  

#2  The Chinese are being who they are, and meddling in the Jammu-Kashmir dispute. All this also involves China's own territorial claims in the SW Himalayas....
Posted by: BigEd   2009-10-29 00:42  

#1  This is where the vaunted Chinese ability for long-range thinking comes in to play. They have looked into the future and seen that control of resources plays a huge role. They are moving to control as many resources as they can, now, while China is still using the "hides his strength" strategy. Later there will be a lot of opposition to China obtaining any more resources, so get while the getting's good.
Posted by: gromky   2009-10-29 00:15  

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