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In December 2010, on the final day of his three-day India visit, Chinese premier Wen Jiabao offered a metaphorical vision for bilateral ties, suggesting that "the dragon and the elephant should tango".
The analogy - dragon for China, elephant for India - had already circulated in Western academic and media circles as a comparative frame. With Wen's remark, it formally entered China's diplomatic lexicon.
Over the past 15 years, through cycles of border tensions and uneasy resets, China's aspirational animal analogy has remained a peacetime constant: leaders float it, state media amplifies it and the pattern repeats with clockwork regularity.
India, however, has declined to take up the rhetorical offer - on the dance floor or off it.
Some Indian experts say New Delhi's reluctance to embrace Beijing's poetic flourish reflects its own view of China, shaped less by symbolism than by a lived history of military confrontation and accumulated distrust.
But Chinese analysts argue the phrase underscores the two countries as development partners rather than rivals, and signals Beijing's respect for India's civilisational heritage.
Chinese President Xi Jinping last used the metaphor in January in his congratulatory message to Indian President Droupadi Murmu on the country's Republic Day, calling on both sides to realise the vision of "dragon and the elephant dancing together".
In August, Xi also spoke about the framing during his meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Tianjin. The Indian prime minister, as before, did not return the "dance" favour.
On March 7 last year, on the sidelines of the "two sessions", China's annual legislative gathering, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi invoked the phrase again while speaking about China-India ties.
Source: Korea Times News