Chinese President Xi Jinping emphasized the need for close cooperation between the two nations, in a message to Indian President Draupadi Murmu on the 75th anniversary of diplomatic relations between India and China. He described his relationship as a “Dragon-Alphant Tango”, a symbol of a harmonious partnership among his symbol animals.
In particular, this is not the first time Beijing has exposed the ‘Dragon-Elephant Tango’. In March, Beijing renewed its calls for the Dragon-Elephant Tango, stating that the China-India partnership for the two countries was “the right choice”.
On Tuesday, Chinese Premier Lee Kiang and Prime Minister Narendra Modi also exchanged congratulatory messages.
While the ‘Dragon-Elephant Tango’ has been avoiding Chinese for many years-especially after June 2020, the Galvan Valley clash killed 20 Indian soldiers-this has been imbuated with new urgency between geopolitical rub due to the foreign policy of Donald Trump.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said in March 2025, “China and India are the biggest neighbors of each other. China always believes that both should be partners who contribute to each other’s success.”
Wang Yi said, “A cooperative pass of Dragon and elephant is the only correct option for both sides.”
The conversation of Chinese and Indian presidents on 1 April comes as an ease in tension after the 2020 Galvan Valley confrontation between its shared boundaries in the Himalayas.
Chinese President Xi Jinping said that China and India peacefully find co -existence methods and were ready to deepen communication and coordination in major international affairs, and were jointly protecting peace in border areas.
China is ready to buy more goods than India because American tariff loom
China is ready to buy more Indian products to balance trade, with Beijing Ambassador Joo Fihong on April 2 asked US President Donald Trump an anticipated mutual tariff just before the announcement.
A report posted to the Ambassador of India on Monday stated by the state-driven global time of China, “We are ready to work with the Indian side to strengthen business and practical cooperation in other fields, and to import more Indian products which are well suited in the Chinese market,” Monday, a report posted on Monday, stated a global time in China’s state-driven global time.
According to India’s Ministry of Trade, bilateral trade between India and China was $ 101.7 billion in 2023-24, with India running a significant losses. According to government data, India’s main exports include petroleum oil, iron ore, sea products and vegetable oils, $ 16.6 billion.
US President Donald Trump, who is ready to roll mutual tariffs in countries around the world on Wednesday, has called China and India for trade practices that they see as unfair.