INDIA EXPANDS TO FACE CHINA
strategypage January 28, 2013: The
Indian Army wants $3.5 billion, in order to create three more brigades
(two infantry and one armored) to defend the Chinese border. Actually,
this new force is in addition to the new mountain corps (of 80,000
troops) nearing approval (at a cost of $11.5 billion).
The
mountain corps is to be complete in four years. The
three proposed brigades would be ready in 4-5 years. By the end of the
decade India will have spent nearly five billion dollars on new roads,
rail lines, and air fields near the 4,057 kilometer long Chinese border.
The
Indian Army currently has 37 Divisions, including 4 RAPID (Reorganised
Army Plains Infantry Divisions) Action Divisions, 18 Infantry Divisions,
10 Mountain Divisions, 3 Armored Divisions, and 2 Artillery Divisions.
There are also 12 independent combat brigades (five armor and seven
mechanized infantry). Most of the army has been organized and
trained to fight the Pakistani army in flat terrain. The Chinese border
is largely mountainous.
Three
years ago India quietly built and put into service an airfield for
transports in the north (Uttarakhand) near their border with China.
While the airfield can also be used to bring in urgently needed supplies
for local civilians during those months when snow blocks the few roads,
it is mainly there for military purposes in case China invades again.
Uttarakhand
is near Kashmir and a 38,000 square kilometer chunk of
land that China seized after a brief war with India in 1962. This
airfield and several similar projects along the Chinese border are all
about growing fears of continued Chinese claims on Indian territory. India
is alarmed at increasing strident Chinese insistence that is owns
northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh. This has led to an
increased movement of Indian military forces to that remote area.
India
quickly discovered that a buildup in these remote areas is easier said
than done. Moreover, the Indians found that they were far behind Chinese
efforts. When they took a closer look three years ago, Indian staff
officers discovered that
China had improved its road network along most of their 4,000 kilometer
common border.
Indian
military planners calculated that, as a result of this network, Chinese
military units could move 400 kilometers a day on hard surfaced roads,
while Indian units could only move half as fast, while suffering more
vehicle damage because of the many unpaved roads. Building
more roads will take years. The roads are essential to support Indian
plans to build more airfields near the border and stationing modern
fighters there. Once the terrain was surveyed and calculations
completed, it was found that it would take a lot more time, because of
the need to
build maintenance facilities, roads to move in fuel and supplies, and
housing for military families.
All
these border disputes have been around for centuries but became more
immediate when India and China fought a short war, up in these
mountains, in 1962. The Indians lost and are determined not to lose a
rematch. But so far, the Indians have been falling farther behind China.
This situation developed because India, decades ago, decided that one
way to deal with a Chinese invasion was to make it difficult for them to
move forward. Thus, for decades, the Indians built few roads on their
side of the border. But that also made it more difficult for Indian
forces to get into the disputed
areas.
The
source of the current border tension goes back a century and heated up
when China resumed its control over Tibet in the 1950s. From the end of
the Chinese empire in 1912 up until 1949 Tibet had been independent. But
when the communists took over China in 1949, they sought to reassert
control over their "lost province" of Tibet. This began slowly, but once
all of Tibet was under Chinese control in 1959, China once again had a
border with India and there was immediately a disagreement about exactly
where the border should be. That’s because, in 1914, the newly
independent government of Tibet worked out a border (the McMahon line)
with the British (who controlled India).
China considers this border agreement illegal and wants 90,000 square
kilometers back. India refused, especially since this would mean losing
much of the state of Arunachal Pradesh in northeastern India and some
bits elsewhere in the area.
Putting
more roads into places like Arunachal Pradesh (83,000 square kilometers
and only a million people) and Uttarakhand (53,566 square kilometers
and ten million people) will improve the economy, as well as military
capabilities. This will be true of most of the border area. But
all the roads won't change the fact that most of the border is
mountains, the highest mountains (the Himalayas) in the world. So no
matter how
much you prepare for war, no one is going very far, very fast, when you
have to deal with these mountains.
India
has moved several infantry divisions, several squadrons of Su-30
fighters, and six of the first eight squadrons of its new Akash air
defense missile systems to the Chinese border. Most of these
initially went into Assam, just south of Arunachal Pradesh, until the
road network is built up sufficiently to allow bases to be maintained
closer to the border.
All
this is another example of the old saying that amateurs (and
politicians) talk tactics, while professionals talk logistics. China
realized this first and has built 58,000 kilometers of roads to the
Indian border, along with five airbases and several rail lines. Thus
China can move thirty divisions to the border, which is three times more
than India can get to its side of the frontier.
No comments:
Post a Comment