The National Interest

The National Interest

Summer 2006

The East Moves West

Geoffrey Kemp

 

Abstract

 

06.01.2006

In the coming years, India and China again will become increasingly important players in the Middle East. The United States will have to accept that its "unipolar moment" in the Middle East is transitory. Today the United States has satisfactory relations with China, and there is much discussion of a new U.S.-Indian strategic relationship. Does this mean, however, that India will eventually cooperate on Gulf security? Or that China will be a continuing partner in the effort to bring stability to the world's most important source for oil and natural gas? Both countries have their own agenda for the region that may, over time, diverge from U.S. objectives.

India's Middle East Presence

Indians are no strangers to the region. For hundreds of years Indians enjoyed close economic and cultural ties with the peoples of the Gulf. During the period of the Raj, officials in Bombay managed British interests in the Gulf. Indian soldiers and laborers provided the bulk of the workforce that sustained Britain's Gulf presence in peace and war. Indian volunteers played a crucial role as members of Britain's Indian Army that fought in the Middle East during World War I and World War II.