Few in India remember that the Mahinda Rajapaksa government had first offered the Hambantota port project to India. China took it on only after India turned down the offer. India’s private sector was not keen or perhaps lacked the expertise at that time. Today there is much heartburn over the Chinese research and survey vessel the Yuan Wang 5, docking in Hambantota. Fears that the "spy ship" will use the opportunity to track India’s underwater and maritime installations across its vast coastline is very real. This concern has grown in the last two decades as Chinese submarines and ships make frequent reconnaissance around the Indian Ocean-island states. Now with China regarding the four nation quadrilateral between US, Japan, India and Australia as a move to contain China’s military might in the Indo-Pacific (which extends also to the Indian Ocean), rivalry in the Indian Ocean has been revving up. South Asian nations are being wooed assiduously by the two Asian rivals. While this works out well for many of India’s smaller neighbours, occasionally it also lands them under massive pressure from both sides.