Global Times

India knows ‘it can’t have a war with China’

▶ New Delhi would be ‘more humiliated than 1962’ in a new conflict

- By Yang Sheng and Liu Xuanzun

After the border clash in the Galwan Valley, nationalis­m and hostility against China within India are rising sharply, while Chinese analysts and some reasonable voices inside India warned that New Delhi should cool down the nationalis­m at home.

India will be more humiliated than after the 1962 border conflict with China if it cannot control anti-China sentiment at home and has a new military conflict with its biggest neighbor, analysts said on Sunday.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said Friday that his government has given the armed forces full freedom to take any necessary action, and he also appeared to downplay the clash that killed 20 Indian soldiers and injured more than 70 on the Chinese side of the Line of Actual Control in the Galwan Valley on Monday.

“Nobody has intruded into our border, neither is anybody there now, nor have our posts been captured,” Modi said, referring to Ladakh’s Galwan Valley, Reuters reported.

Lin Minwang, a professor at Fudan University’s Center for South Asian Studies in Shanghai, told the Global Times on Sunday that Modi’s remarks will be very helpful to ease the tensions, because as the prime minister of India, he has removed the moral basis for hardliners to further accuse China.

Beijing-based military expert Wei Dongxu told the Global Times on Sunday that Modi’s assertion that Indian forces can take all necessary steps is a show of strength for domestic audiences to appease the Indian masses and boost the Indian troops’ morale.

“It is normal to see heated nationalis­m in India, but we don’t need to worry whether nationalis­m will hijack the policymaki­ng of India to further provoke China. When India is in conflict with Pakistan or other neighbors, nationalis­m might drive New Delhi to take actual operations, but when it comes to China, it is a different story,” Lin said.

Indian government and military leaders understand how powerful China is, while Indian nationalis­ts are ignorant and arrogant, Lin said. “So they might say some harsh words, but they dare not take the first shot against us.”

“If 20 were martyred on our [Indian] side, then there would have been at least double the casualties on their [China] side,” V.K.Singh, India’s minister for roads and transport, told TV News24 in an interview broadcast late on Saturday.

Chinese experts said the official wants to placate the nationalis­ts by making speculatio­ns to satisfy the hardliners. They do not want to put more pressure on the government to further provoke China, and the reason why China did not release the number is that China also wants to avoid an escalation, because if China’s casualties number less than 20, the Indian government would again come under pressure.

For now, India should focus on its own epidemic and economic problems, Wei said, noting that having frictions with neighbors will do India no good, as the accumulati­on of negative factors will damage India even more.

China is being very restrained in its efforts to avoid conflict, but this does not mean China is afraid of provocatio­n or aggression from any country, especially India.

Chinese military observers said that an escalated, largescale military conflict involving main Chinese troops, if that were to happen, would mean a rout just like the war in 1962, with very disproport­ionate casualty figures unfavorabl­e to India.

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