Lesson from an unsettled boundaryhttp://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/lesson-from-an-unsettled-boundary/article4657978.ece?homepage=trueThe reality is that the Line of Actual Control between India and China is notional and has not been put down on any mutually agreed map
In 1950, the Survey of India issued a map of
India showing the political divisions of the new republic. While the
border with Pakistan was defined as it is now, including the
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir area, the borders with China were depicted
differently. In the east, the McMahon Line was shown as the border,
except in its eastern extremity, the Tirap subdivision, where the border
was shown as “undefined.” In the Central sector of what is now
Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh and the eastern part of Jammu &
Kashmir, including Aksai Chin, the boundary was depicted merely by a
colour wash and denoted as “boundary undefined.”
Unilateral act
In
March 1954, the Union Cabinet met and decided to unilaterally define
the border of India with China. The colour wash was replaced by a hard
line, and the Survey of India issued a new map, which depicts the
borders as we know them today. All the old maps were withdrawn and the
depiction of Indian boundaries in the old way became illegal. Indeed, if
you seek out the White Paper on Indian States of 1948 and 1950 in the
Parliament library, you will find that the maps have been removed
because they too showed the border as being “undefined” in the Central
and Western sectors.
What was the government up to?
Did it seriously think it could get away with such a sleight of hand? Or
was there a design that will become apparent when the papers of the
period are declassified? Not surprisingly, the other party, the People’s
Republic of China, was not amused and, in any case, there are enough
copies of the old documents and maps across the world today to bring out
the uncomfortable truth that the boundaries of India in these regions
were unilaterally defined by the Government of India, rather than
through negotiation and discussions with China.
It is
not as though the Chinese have a particularly good case when it comes
to their western boundary in Tibet. The record shows that the Chinese
empire was unclear as to its western extremities, and rejected repeated
British attempts to settle the border. The problem in the Aksai Chin
region was further compounded by the fact that this was an uninhabited
high-altitude desert, with few markers that could decide the case in
favour of one country or the other. But there was cause for the two
countries to sit down and negotiate a mutually acceptable boundary. This
as we know was not to be and, since then, the process has gone through
needless tension and conflict.
In the initial period,
India’s focus was on the McMahon Line which defines the boundary with
China in what is now Arunachal Pradesh. It tended to play down the issue
of Aksai Chin because it was a remote area and of little strategic
interest to India. But for China, the area was vital. Indeed, according
to John W. Garver, it was “essential to Chinese control of western Tibet
and very important to its control of all of Tibet.” In other words, in
contrast to India’s legalistic and nationalistic claims over the region,
for China, control over Aksai Chin had a geopolitical imperative.
For
this reason, it entered the area, built a road through it and undertook
a policy to expand westward to ensure that the road was secure. India
woke up to the issue late and when it sought to confront the Chinese
through its forward policy in 1961, it was already too late. And the
1962 war only saw a further Chinese advance westward which led to almost
the entire Galwan River coming under the Chinese control.
We
can only speculate on the causes of their present westward shift in the
Daulat Beg Oldi area. But one thing is clear: the central locomotive of
Chinese policy remains Tibet. Despite massive investments in the
region, large numbers of Tibetans remain disaffected. No country in the
world, including India, recognises Tibet as being a disputed territory
yet, for two reasons. The Chinese constantly seek reassurance from New
Delhi about its intentions. First, because of the past support that
Tibetan separatist guerrillas got from the U.S. and India, and second,
because of the presence of the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan
government-in-exile in India. Despite the massive growth of Chinese
power, their insecurities remain high. In great measure, they are due to
Beijing’s own heavy-handed policies and only China can resolve the
issues through accommodation and compromise with its own people. But not
untypical of governments, Beijing seeks to deflect the blame of its own
shortcomings on outsiders.
There could be other
drivers of the tension as well. In the past five years, the Chinese have
been generally assertive across their periphery and this could well be
an outcome of policy decisions taken by the top military and political
leadership of the country or, as some speculate, because of an
inner-party conflict. Exaggerated Chinese maritime boundary claims have
brought them into conflict with the ASEAN countries, principally the
Philippines, Vietnam and Malaysia. A separate order of tension has
arisen with Japan over the Senkaku islands in the East China Sea. In the
case of India, an important initiative to resolve the border dispute
through Special Representatives has been allowed to run aground.
Another
possible explanation for the Chinese behaviour could be the steps India
is taking with regard to its military on its borders with China.
India’s border infrastructure and military modernisation schemes have
been delayed by decades. But in recent years, there have been signs that
New Delhi may be getting its act together. In any case, the cumulative
impact of the huge defence expenditures since 2000 is beginning to show
in terms of better border connectivity and modernisation programmes.
This momentum could see Indian forces’ confrontation with China become
even stronger when you take into account new manpower and equipment such
as mountain artillery, attack helicopters, missiles and rocket
artillery.
Overlapping claims
Even so, it
would be hazardous to speak definitively about Chinese motivations.
After being lambasted by the Indian media for occupying “Indian
territory,” the Chinese might be concerned about losing face with a
hasty retreat. The fact of the matter is that the boundary in the region
is defined merely by a notional Line of Actual Control, which is
neither put down on mutually agreed maps, let alone defined in a
document through clearly laid out geographical features. While both
sides accept most of the LAC and respect it, there are some nine points
where there are overlapping claims and both sides patrol up to the LAC,
as they understand it. In such circumstances, the Chinese could well
withdraw after a decent interval.
This more benign
interpretation of Chinese behaviour is also in tune with the statements
that the new leadership in Beijing has been making. As has been noted,
following his meeting with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on the
sidelines of the BRICS conference in Durban, the new supremo of China,
Xi Jinping, was quoted in the Chinese media as saying that Beijing
regarded its ties with New Delhi as “one of the most important bilateral
relationships.” Belying the belief that the Chinese were dragging their
feet on the border issue, Mr. Xi declared that the Special
Representative mechanism should strive for “a fair, rational solution
framework acceptable to both sides as soon as possible.” This last
sentence is significant because a week earlier, he was quoted as making
the standard formulation that the border problem “is a complex issue
left from history and solving the issue won’t be easy.”
2013
is not 1962 and the Indian media and politicians should not behave as
though it was, by needlessly raising the decibel level and trying to
push the government to adopt a hawkish course on the border. But what
the recent controversy does tell us is unsettled borders are not good
for two neighbours because they can so easily become the cause of a
conflict that neither may be seeking.
(The writer is a Distinguished Fellow at the Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi)
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Tuesday, April 30, 2013
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