Arun Joshi
Jun 30 2015 
BEIJING’S move at the UN blocking action against Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, one of the masterminds of  26/11,  should  be read  as a small  piece in the larger game that China and Pakistan are playing in South Asia, particularly Jammu and Kashmir. By vetoing  action against Pakistan on the release  of Lakhvi, China has shown  with an assertive demonstration  that for it Pakistan matters more  in its geo-strategic  scheme of things in South Asia  than even the growth of  radical Islam  and terrorism in its own backyard Xinjiang.  It’s not that China is oblivious of dangers of terrorism,  but it is playing a bigger game where it probably thinks that radicalism and terrorism would not hurt it.  History is replete with the facts that terrorism doesn’t know any boundaries. If the terrorists could strike at the geographically and militarily invincible America  in September 2001, they would not spare anyone.  China knows it but for now sees larger gains through the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CEPC); hence its anxiety to please Pakistan.


