A China-India Reset? What to Know About the Modi-Xi Summit
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A China-India Reset? What to Know About the Modi-Xi Summit

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping meet on the sidelines of the BRICS summit in Kazan, Russia, October 23, 2024.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping meet on the sidelines of the BRICS summit in Kazan, Russia, October 23, 2024. China Daily/Reuters

The upcoming meeting on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization could bring the two Asian giants closer together amid worsening U.S.-India relations.

August 28, 2025 4:11 pm (EST)

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping meet on the sidelines of the BRICS summit in Kazan, Russia, October 23, 2024.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese President Xi Jinping meet on the sidelines of the BRICS summit in Kazan, Russia, October 23, 2024. China Daily/Reuters
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Current political and economic issues succinctly explained.

Alyssa Ayres is adjunct senior fellow for India, Pakistan, and South Asia at the Council on Foreign Relations.

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On August 31, 2025, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the 2025 Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Tianjin, China. It’s the first visit of either leader to the other’s country in six years and comes shortly after Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi traveled to India for meetings with Indian External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar and National Security Advisor Ajit Doval to discuss next steps in their bilateral relations.

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The China-India relationship has been strained in recent years following a clash along their disputed Himalayan border in 2020 that killed at least twenty-four soldiers. But as tensions rise between the United States and India over new U.S. tariffs on Indian goods, some experts believe this meeting could mark a major turning point for the two Asian giants, with implications for U.S.-India relations.

CFR turned to Alyssa Ayres, CFR adjunct senior fellow for India, Pakistan, and South Asia, to make sense of this meeting and what it could mean for U.S. interests in Asia. Ayres is also a professor of history and international affairs, and dean of the George Washington University’s Elliott School of International Affairs.

Why are Modi and Xi meeting now, and is this summit significant?

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I think they were likely to meet more substantively at some point. They did meet recently, in 2024, on the margins of the BRICS summit in Russia, so it’s not that they haven’t met together—they just haven’t had a reciprocal visit to each other’s countries since 2019. This week they will sit down for more than just a brief “pull aside” on the margins of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Summit in China. 

Why is it significant? It would be important at any time, and previous summits received substantial attention, but this bilateral takes place at a moment of major disruption in India’s relationship with the United States. That is raising all kinds of questions about whether the United States is causing New Delhi to lean away from Washington and look to hedge India’s relations further on the world stage. Only Modi can answer the question of “why now?,” but I do think this geopolitical backdrop gives this particular visit greater significance at this time.

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China and India have had a contested border for decades, one that led to fatal conflict just a few years ago and which will be a major discussion point. What other topics could be on the table?

We know that they’ll talk about the border. This is an area that has defied resolution for decades. They went to war over the border in 1962, and they clashed along it again in 2020 in the Galwan region, resulting in the acknowledged deaths of at least twenty-four people. 

The border issues formed a significant part of the Chinese foreign minister’s visit to India this week. If you look at the official statement released by the Indian Ministry of External Affairs on border issues resulting from Wang’s visit, it has a whole program of steps to restart conversations about the border and border delineation. This includes what they have termed “early harvest”—identifying areas along the undemarcated border that might be easier to resolve, perhaps trying to bank some early wins on that front, leaving the harder areas (the areas that create more significant dispute) for later. The “border question” remains the subject of ongoing dialogue between China and India, but twenty-four negotiating rounds have not resulted in resolution. 

Trade and economic relations will be high on the agenda. They have an important trade relationship. China, I believe, is still India’s largest trade partner in goods, although the volume is very close to the United States, hovering around the same level. But India runs a trade deficit with China and has for years, which is a continued source of frustration for New Delhi. (Here, I would note that by contrast, India runs a trade surplus with the United States, as President Donald Trump has pointed out).

They will likely talk further about connectivity and people-to-people ties based on the announcement during Wang’s visit to India that direct flights between China and India will restart. Direct flights were paused during the COVID-19 pandemic and then kept suspended after the Galwan conflict in 2020. I imagine there will be some further specification of visa facilitation during the Modi and Xi summit, perhaps some more official details on further mechanisms to enhance people-to-people and, of course, business ties.

They may discuss water issues. That was something that was also included in the list of outcomes from Wang’s India visit. If you look at that document, they “exchanged views on transborder river cooperation and agreed to give full play to the role of India-China expert-level mechanisms on transborder rivers.” The Brahmaputra River, quite important for Northeast India, originates in China on the Tibetan Plateau, and China is building a dam on this river. 

Pakistan is likely to be a topic on the agenda too. China has a very strong “all-weather friendship” relationship with Pakistan, and India has recently put the Indus Waters Treaty on hold following the April terrorist attack in Kashmir. China may raise the Indus Waters Treaty as an issue of concern on behalf of its close partner Pakistan. Modi would likely raise Indian concerns about Pakistan and cross-border terrorism, although it is hard to see how that would result in any significant breakthrough of any type.

Are there likely to be any major breakthroughs at the summit?

I would be surprised if there were major breakthroughs announced from this summit. We should look perhaps for some modest announcements that would serve to illustrate next steps in re-engagement after this lengthy hiatus. For example, the possibility of unbanning TikTok and other Chinese digital platforms, which have been blocked in India since the Galwan clash. The issues at stake in the China-India relationship, just frankly, are very hard for India to resolve, whether on the nationally sensitive border issues, or the various potential domestic flash points when it comes to trade and economic matters. 

Could we call this summit a reset in China-India relations? How might Trump’s recent tariff push affect the summit’s outcomes? 

They may very well term it a reset. I think even if they don’t, it looks like the global strategic affairs watchers are going to be terming this a reset, which may be as important to perceptions. 

Coming back to your earlier question about the significance of the timing, this occurs against the backdrop of a very alarming and quite abrupt deterioration of U.S.-India ties surrounding the Trump administration’s decision to apply not only a 25 percent tariff on India, but also add another 25 percent as a sanction for Indian purchases of Russian oil. This has created a whole new dispute, with India objecting strenuously. Indian media and strategic analysts are outraged, so there’s a public diplomacy dimension here that is going poorly for Washington. People wonder why the United States, which has been cooperatively building a strong strategic partnership with India for decades, would suddenly treat its close strategic partner worse than some of its toughest competitors. China’s not getting punitive tariffs like this for its massive Russian oil imports, so the disparate treatment is hard to reconcile.

An important element bringing the United States and India closer together over the course of the last twenty-five years has been a shared concern about the balance of power in Asia. If India now has stronger concerns about the United States on the world stage—some concerns that may be shared in some ways with China—that changes the foundation of the conversation entirely.

Can we expect more cooperation between China and India on the global stage in the future?

That will be a really interesting thing to gauge from this summit. I will be watching for what they identify and publicly agree upon as their next outcomes. 

The outcomes from the Chinese foreign minister’s visit to India are nearly entirely focused on bilateral issues. It may very well be the case that they develop a stronger program or a strengthening of the cooperation that they have had in multilateral environments—including the BRICS group, developing the New Development Bank together as the BRICS Bank. They cooperate with the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. 

Will they pick up shared concerns about global governance and the Global South? This has historically been an area of some cooperation between China and India, even when they have some pretty significant bilateral differences, and even when they also compete for influence. I would bet that we’ll see some outcomes pointing to deeper multilateral and/or global cooperation in some manner resulting from this summit.  

This interview has been edited for length and clarity. It represents the views and opinions solely of the interviewee. The Council on Foreign Relations is an independent, nonpartisan membership organization, think tank, and publisher, and takes no institutional positions on matters of policy.

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