Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04TAIPEI3845
2004-12-06 05:10:00
CONFIDENTIAL
American Institute Taiwan, Taipei
Cable title:  

TAIWAN DREAMS OF AN INDIAN CARD

Tags:  EINV ETRD PREL TW IN 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 TAIPEI 003845 

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EAP/TC

E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/02/2024
TAGS: EINV ETRD PREL TW IN
SUBJECT: TAIWAN DREAMS OF AN INDIAN CARD

REF: A. NEW DELHI 5161


B. SINGAPORE 3294

Classified By: AIT Director Douglas Paal; Reasons: 1.4 (B/D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 TAIPEI 003845

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EAP/TC

E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/02/2024
TAGS: EINV ETRD PREL TW IN
SUBJECT: TAIWAN DREAMS OF AN INDIAN CARD

REF: A. NEW DELHI 5161


B. SINGAPORE 3294

Classified By: AIT Director Douglas Paal; Reasons: 1.4 (B/D)


1. (C) Summary: Taiwan dreams of parlaying closer economic,
political, and educational ties with India into an economic
and even strategic counterweight to China's regional
dominance. India seeks Taiwan investment along with
manufacturing and commercial expertise but rejects the idea
of forming any sort of counterweight to China as &pure
fantasy.8 Both sides' expectations have proven overly
optimistic as bilateral economic relations encounter
frictions and restrictions. Educational, scientific and
technical exchanges remain fruitful. End summary.

A History of No Relations
--------------


2. (C) India-Taipei Association (ITA) Director General Vijay
Gokhale told AIT in a November 9 meeting that the relatively
undeveloped state of relations between Taiwan and India was
largely due to India's complicated and sensitive ties with
the PRC. India was among the first countries to formally
recognize China in 1949. Gokhale said that in spite of the
1962 Sino-Indo War and China's "covert and overt" military
assistance to Pakistan, India maintained a policy of
non-recognition of the Republic of China (ROC) that resulted
in almost total non-contact with Taiwan. Throughout the Cold
War years even low-level Taiwan officials were not issued
visas to visit India.

Economic Basis of India-Taiwan Relations
--------------


3. (C) It was not until 1991 after the end of the Cold War
and India's financial crisis that economic pragmatism began
to play a more important role in India's foreign policy
according to Gokhale. He explained that economic factors
such as the potential for trade and investment were the only
reasons India finally ended its no-contact policy with
Taiwan. When India opened its unofficial representative
office in Taiwan in 1995 total bilateral trade was only
USD700 million. By 2003 the bilateral trade volume had
doubled to USD1.4 billion. In spite of this growth, Taiwan's
exports to India still only account for 0.6 percent of its
total exports. Likewise, Taiwan's imports from India are

less than 0.6 percent of total imports. Taiwan's total
cumulative investment in India through 2002 was only about
USD110 million (according to Indian sources) compared to
USD1.1 billion Taiwan investment in the Philippines, USD4.3
billion in Singapore, and USD100 billion in China (according
to unofficial estimates). In April 2002 a Taiwan airline
began direct flights between Delhi and Taipei and in October
2002 India and Taiwan signed an investment promotion and
protection agreement.

Economic Relations Have Limitations
--------------


4. (C) India hopes Taiwan will invest in high-tech
manufacturing operations in India instead of the current
Taiwan practice of importing Indian engineers to work in
Taiwan's science parks, universities, and research
institutes. Director General Gokhale said he believed the
two economies are highly complementary but it would be more
effective for Taiwan manufacturers to establish R&D centers
in India rather than hiring Indians to work in Taiwan R&D
centers. Gokhale said that from his experiences in China he
understood why Taiwan investors were reluctant to invest in
India instead of China. He thought India's economy was more
restrictive than China's economy and had fewer incentives for
foreign investors. He also believed Taiwan investors had
unrealistic expectations of preferential treatment from the
Indian government, similar to the preferential treatment he
thought they received in China. Gokhale admitted that
Taiwan's complaint to the WTO over India's excessive use of
anti-dumping duties as a trade barrier was probably
justified. (Note: India has imposed anti-dumping duties on
seven Taiwan products. Taiwan claims the duties are "unjust"
and were imposed without any investigation. Taiwan has
requested formal consultations with India under WTO dispute
resolution procedures. End note.) Gokhale noted that Taiwan
restrictions on Indian fruit, chemicals, and bulk
pharmaceuticals were also unfair trade barriers.

Rising China No Threat?
--------------


5. (C) Director General Gokhale said that while India did
not view China's rise as a threat, its relations with China
were still (since the 1962 war) a very sensitive issue in
India's domestic politics. Chinese companies were not
permitted to work on construction of airports, ports,
telecommunications, or road projects because of the strategic
implications of having a rival power build India's
infrastructure. India hesitated to sign a tax agreement with
Taiwan to eliminate double taxation on Taiwan investors
because such an agreement would need parliamentary approval.
The Indian government feared that opposition parties in
parliament could use an agreement with Taiwan to claim the
government was jeopardizing hard-won rapprochement with
China. Gokhale expected that within a few years greater
China (i.e., Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Mainland China) would
overtake the U.S. in importance as a trade partner to India
and become the dominate economy in east Asia.

Strategic Relations Just a Fantasy
--------------


6. (C) ITA Director General Gokhale told AIT that Taiwan
officials were "living in fantasy" with their inflated
expectations for India-Taiwan relations serving as a
counterweight to the pull of China. He said India had no
interest in relations with Taiwan outside of the economic
sphere. India had repeatedly refused Taiwan's requests to
permit its Vice Minister for Foreign Affairs to visit India.
India had flatly rejected Taiwan's inquiries about a Free
Trade Agreement saying it was "simply not going to happen,"
and &far beyond the realm of the possible.8

Taiwan Still Dreams of a Deeper Relationship
--------------


7. (C) Oblivious to India's open and adamant rejection of
political ties, some Taiwan officials still believe they can
use economic ties to develop a political or strategic
relationship with New Delhi. Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Section Chief in the Department of East Asian and Pacific
Affairs Ben Chen told AIT that Taiwan's strategy is to push
the economic relationship and then the political ties will
come naturally. Chen said Taipei is also focusing on
cultural and educational exchanges to give Indians a better
understanding of Taiwan. Chen added that he believes New
Delhi is reaching out to Taiwan to counterbalance the PRC.
He asserted the PRC is promoting relations with India's
neighbors so New Delhi is doing the same thing to Beijing.
Taiwan's Minister of Economic Affairs Ho Mei-yueh in May 2004
spoke of the need to reduce dependence on the PRC by
increasing investment in Eastern Europe and India. Taiwan's
Board of Foreign Trade has repeatedly urged manufacturers to
develop markets in India as part of its efforts to diversity
Taiwan's export markets away from the PRC.

Common Democratic Values or Common Fear of China?
-------------- ---


8. (C) In mid-November 2004, Taiwan Thinktank (a think tank
closely associated with former Taiwan President Lee
Teng-Hui's pro-Taiwan independence policies) sponsored a
seminar entitled &Taiwan-India-Japan Democratic Values,
Cooperation, and Prospects.8 Taiwan President Chen
Shui-bian received the Indian delegation. In his remarks at
the seminar, the Indian delegation head former Defense
Minister George Fernandes (known, according to Gokhale, for
his views that China poses a threat to India),called for
closer economic and security cooperation between Japan,
India, and Taiwan. Taiwan Premier Yu Shyi-kun urged closer
cooperation based on shared values in freedom, democracy,
human rights protection, and economic prosperity. Yu also
mentioned that Taiwan fully supports Japan's and India's bid
to become permanent members of the United Nations Security
Council. Taiwan Thinktank Chairman Chen Po-chih said in his
opening remarks that by forging partnerships with Japan and
India Taiwan can break the Beijing-imposed diplomatic embargo
and gradually form alliances with even more Asian
democracies.

High-Level Contacts, Unrealized Hopes
--------------


9. (C) India now permits high-level Taiwan economic
officials to travel to India and sends high-level economic
and science officials to Taiwan. Taiwan Vice Minister of
Economic Affairs Yiin Chii-ming has visited India twice this
year. In mid-November Yiin led a trade and investment
mission of 30 executives from Taiwan telecommunications,
electronics and trading firms to Bombay and New Delhi. In
March 2004 an Indian Vice Minister for Science and Technology
visited Taiwan. During the visit the two sides agreed to
conduct at least two science and technology seminars each
year. Taiwan's National Science Council (NSC) plans to
establish a separate India office to handle science and
technology cooperation with India. NSC Section Chief Fu
Hsien-da told AIT that Taiwan has established numerous other
channels for technology exchange with India including a
Taiwan-India Forum, a Science and Technology Advisory Group,
educational exchanges, and think tanks. India had been
assisting Taiwan to develop space technology but abruptly
shut down the program according to the NSC. NSC Section
Chief Fu thought India pulled back in response to PRC
complaints.

Indian Engineers Contribute to Taiwan's Technology
-------------- --------------


10. (C) Each year the NSC invites about 200 Indian
post-doctoral researchers and guest scholars to Taiwan.
There are currently some 500 Indian post-doctoral researchers
at Taiwan universities. Although Taiwan's Hsin Chu Science
Park officially employs only 70 Indian engineers it holds an
annual Indian culture festival for the many Indian
expatriates employed in the park. Taiwan's Institute for
Information Industry (III) signed a strategic alliance
memorandum in February 2004 with India's Software Industry
Association to jointly develop software. III Manager Tsai
Mei-ching told AIT that Taiwan information industry
executives regularly travel to India to discuss opportunities
for technical cooperation and exchange. Acer and BenQ are
among Taiwan's leading companies that have established
offices in India as windows for technical exchange. Taiwan's
largest distributor of IT products Synnex Technology
International announced on November 18 that it will invest
USD24 million for a 36 percent stake in Redington Group, the
second largest distributor of IT products in India. However,
Synnex Vice President Lee Li-sheng told AIT his company has
no plans to conduct manufacturing in India.


11. (C) Comment: Taiwan companies can offer India not only
access to cutting edge manufacturing technology in key
information industries but also precious investment capital.
However India clearly has no intention of risking its
delicate relations with China over political ties with
Taiwan, and even the trade and investment relation between
Taiwan and India has serious frictions. Taiwan hears what it
likes in statements of Indian nationalists like Fernandes who
advocate a bilateral strategic alliance but this view is
adamantly rejected by Indian officials. The future of
Indian-Taiwan relations will likely be determined by two
factors: will Taiwan and India's high-tech companies be able
to find ways to cooperate based on their complementary
strengths in hardware and software; will Taiwan be able to
build on substantial linkages with India and restrain its
desire for symbolic gestures that could cause India to pull
back.

PAAL