In an article in Global Times, Wang Dehua, Director at the Shanghai Municipal Centre for International Studies, said China should not hype India's role in disputed South China Sea (SCS) but "guide" New Delhi to work with it in view of attempts by US and Japan who are cozying up to India to strengthen anti-China alliance.
"New Delhi has its own geopolitical interests in mind too. By playing the card of the South China Sea issue, it wants Beijing to make compromises on the border disputes or Pakistan-related issues," it said.
China has lodged official protests against such moves more than once, because this is not the first time India has explored for oil in the nine-dash line area claimed by China, it said.
"India is no longer 'looking East', for it has already been 'acting East'. The current focus of the country's maritime strategy is the 'Indo-Pacific'.
This is the second article in recent days to criticise ONGC's move to drill for oil off Vietnam's coast at the invitation of Hanoi.
China claims whole of the SCS as its own which is disputed by Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan.
India asserts that the ONGC move is a commercial operation. Similarly, China defends its various projects, including the USD 46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor in the disputed Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) as a commercial venture aimed at improving people's livelihood issues.
