DRAGON IN THE
TENT
(Prudence yes, but appeasement, No!!)
China ’s motives
in provoking the Depsang valley incident in Ladakh are not easy to decipher.
The Line of Actual Control (LAC) on the undemarcated India-China border is not
defined on the ground, unlike in the case of the Line of Control in J&K. We
have our own perception of the areas we control and the Chinese their own. One
way to signal territorial control is patrolling, which both sides undertake in
contested areas. Until the sovereignty
over these areas is determined through an agreement, both sides want to
maintain the appearance of actual control, with periodic patrolling serving as
proof in future negotiations. Neither side, however, as matter of practice,
sets up posts in the disputed areas- a noteworthy point.
In
Depsang valley the Chinese have violated this practice. Since the 1986
Sumdorong Chu incident in the eastern sector, this is possibly the first major
one of this nature. The implication of setting up a tent and staying put for
almost two weeks is that the Chinese are now frontally and unilaterally
asserting their sovereignty over an area that India too claims. If all these
years they did not feel the need to do this, why now? The question
is all the more pertinent because the purpose of the 1993 peace and
tranquillity agreement and the 1996 agreement on CBMs was not to bar patrolling
but to avoid any headlong clash between patrols and observe a certain protocol
if they did come face to face.
What is puzzling is that, purely militarily
speaking, the Chinese move makes no sense. They can be easily dislodged by the
Indian army. The Chinese platoon has limited provisions and there is no
evidence of any planned logistic support. Even if that was there, their lines
can be easily cut off, forcing them to retreat. Alternatively, India could set
up a similar position outflanking the Chinese one and wait for the stand off to
run its course. If, as some speculate, the Chinese move might be a riposte to
aggressive Indian patrolling in eastern Ladakh in the Chumar area, then why choose
such an ineffective counter in military terms?
The argument that this could be an action by a local
commander, without any larger military or political design, no longer holds
because apart from two flag meetings on the spot, the demarche to the Chinese
Ambassador by the Foreign Secretary hasn’t resolved the stand-off. The top
leadership in China has now
been seized of India ’s
protest through the Ambassador, but the Chinese government is asserting that
they have not violated any agreement with India and that their platoon is
within their side of the LAC.
Some
argue that the Chinese have decided to pressure us in order to dissuade us
from participating in the US pivot towards Asia ,
about which they are deeply concerned.
Firstly, India
is quite reluctant to join for larger reasons relating to doubts about the
capacity and willingness of the US to seriously confront China.
Secondly,
such intimidating steps do not make any sense as the more China takes them, the more opinion in India would look favourably at forging
partnerships with US, Japan ,
Australia and South-East
countries that too are threatend by Chinese territorial claims in the South China Sea .
With China
already embroiled in such maritime disputes in the east, common sense would
dictate that they do not open up another front with India in the west, as this
will only to serve to deepen concerns all round about Chinese assertiveness as
the country grows stronger. Such does not seem to be China ’s thinking, however.
It
is difficult to believe, as some suggest, that the communist party and the PLA
might be at odds with each other after
the change of leadership in China
and that this adventure in Ladakh constitutes independent muscle-flexing by the
PLA. The latter supposedly wants to send a hard signal about India to the political leadership in China before
Premier Le Keqiang visits us in May. If this were so, the PLA would have chosen
to provoke us in a location and with means that would make their action more
credible. As
things are, the Chinese have exposed themselves to an effective rebuff by the
Indian armed forces, which could cause them great embarrassment potentially. The
assessment of those who believe that our forces are not capable of dealing with
this incident and any likely escalation thereafter by the Chinese seems
erroneous.
China’s action
is also at variance with the general improvement of India-China ties, notably
in the economic domain but also in terms of maintaining high level political
exchanges bilaterally and working together in multilateral groupings. Defence
contacts and regional dialogues, including the recent one on Afghanistan ,
are other signs of positive engagement between the two countries.
This
incident comes in the wake of the supposedly friendly exchanges between our
Prime Minister and President XI Jinping at Durban on the occasion of the BRICS Summit.
But then, despite the intensity of US-China economic and financial ties, the
adversarial element in their relationship is sharpening. With Japan too, despite the huge trade and investment
relationship, China is being
aggressive on territorial issues. Clearly, the Chinese logic allows slaps and a
friendly handshake simultaneously.
One
explanation that may not be wrong is that China
has begun to believe that India
can get easily intimidated, that its leadership is weak and prone to temporize
and concede. Past Chinese presidents like Jiang Zemin were privately
contemptuous about the fibre of the Indian armed forces. Our lack of reaction
to Chinese provocations in recent years, our
overly conciliatory political discourse and eagerness to reach out to
them may have convinced them that a little show of force will prod us to find
ways to placate them.
Our
political reaction to their latest provocation would confirm this. We are downplaying
its import, calling it a local affair, shielding the Chinese political
leadership from responsibility even after our failed demarche to the Chinese
Ambassador and the Chinese spokesperson’s repeated statements that they are
blameless. We don’t want the relationship built up with such effort to be
damaged, as if we have provoked the present crisis. We have taken the
responsibility for defusing it before the Chinese premier visits India next
month. We seem to be more keen than the Chinese themselves to ensure that Li
Keqiang comes and the atmosphere becomes congenial for this visit.
We are describing
the Depsang valley incident as part of a growing up process, as acne on the
beautiful face of India-China relations. Our six decades of differences with China have,
some may say, outlived the phase of adolescence. From China being India ’s
enemy number one and, more moderately, India ’s biggest strategic
adversary, the ugly visage of the relationship has now become beautiful.
Rather
than the Chinese Foreign Minister visiting India to prepare for his Prime
Minister’s visit, our Foreign Minister is, most unusually, going there, as if
we owe China an explanation for the face-off in Ladakh. If now China withdraws it will seem a friendly gesture
in the face of appeals by India .
Why
have we lost our nerve? Prudence, yes,
but appeasement, no.
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