republic_roi97
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Its funny when Chinese fan boys try to counter a well accepted argument by the Chinese themselves. I'll just leave you with a link for now and an extract from the same :-It is very funny when fanboys are talking something without checking the fact.
1. In 2018, imported oil counted 69.8% of Chinese demand. Among all oil importation, only 45.8% from middle east and Africa. In other words, India can only threat less than 35% of Chinese oil supplies;
2. India can’t do block Chinese ships without upsetting the whole Asian sea lane transport. Unfortunately, Chinese can easily get other countries’ boats to transport Chinese import/export. So, once India tries to intercept suspicious Chinese boat, she has to stop every boat that make Korean, Japanese, etc, etc to scream, which in turn will get US interference.
3. Even India successfully block Chinese oil supply, Chinese can easily make up this gap by ramp up her import from other places and domestic production.
Who tells you that Chinese can only supply weapons to Pakistan by sea?
Why India Can Be a Solution to China’s Malacca Dilemma
There are two major choke points in the region — the Hormuz Strait that connects the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea and the Strait of Malacca, through which goods flow to and from South East Asia. China, South Korea, and Japan are three of the biggest oil importers in the region and the majority of this oil has to pass through the Malacca Strait and the South China Sea. This has contributed to China’s ‘Malacca Dilemma,’ as mentioned by President Hu Jintao, where China could be starved of its energy needs due to the Malacca Strait being closed off either by hostile actors or due to natural or man-made disasters.
India is finally acting like a responsible power and lining its actions on par with its ambitions. By providing security in the IOR, it is slowly slipping into the role of security provider in the region and also tipping the balance of power in its favour. Warships and a country’s naval assets are indicators of a country’s foreign policy. To that end, it will be countries like India, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Singapore which can guarantee the energy and trade security of China and other nations who rely on the waterways of the Indian Ocean. China cannot afford to antagonize the powers that be in the Indian Ocean region and should not expect to get its way through a show of force. For a country like India which is aspiring for superpower status, it’ll be even more vital to prove that it can indeed step up to the task and guarantee the freedom of navigation for all nations in the waters of the Indian Ocean.
Read again what I said, I talked about consequences of supplying Pakistan with weapons, not a about baring them from supplying weapons.Who tells you that Chinese can only supply weapons to Pakistan by sea?