Business Standard

BREAKING THE TWO AND A HALF FRONT SIEGE

A powerful nation’s army must be able to fight on multiple fronts. The question is must it be made to do so?

- SHEKHAR GUPTA The writer is the founder and the editor in chief, ThePrint

General Bipin Chandra Rawat’s statement that his army is prepared for a two and a half front war has drawn a fair bit of comment. The fact is, India has faced multiple and multi-layered threats since 1959 and its army has been the politicalg­o-to option. With one exception ,1962, it has delivered each time.

Many questions, however, arise from this, particular­ly now when the second front, China, has sprung to life after decades and the language coming out of Chinese official media will embarrass panelists on our commando-comic TV channels.

The first question is, almost 60 years after the two and a half-front challenge first developed, how come it hasn’t altered, after three full wars, the break-up of Pakistan, many peace accords in the Northeast, the end of the Cold War, and nuclear weaponisat­ion? No other major nation has continued to have the same combinatio­n of threats for six decades.

The second, is this remarkable continuity in existentia­l military threat a result of India’s diplomacy and strategic thought processes, or in spite of them? The question that follows: Does military power guide Indian diplomacy and strategy is subservien­t to it, or is it the other way around? The first was a Cold War phenomenon, especially for the Soviet Bloc, and it is widely acknowledg­ed now that that ideologica­l and intellectu­al battle was lost simply because the Warsaw Pact power collapsed under the weight of its armies and militarise­d thinking. Noted historian Niall Ferguson has indeed argued that the Cold War ended not because Ronald Reagan’s America got the better of the Soviet Bloc, but because the latter succumbed to its Afghan (invasion) misadventu­re.

And third, if even after 60 years and in an altered world, our enemies and enmities still remain unchanged, as do our responses, does it not imply that our political leadership has failed on this most important touchstone of national interest?

Modern history also tells you no nation can successful­ly fight a two-front war and we aren’t just talking about Adolf Hitler’s Russian blunder. Diplomacy, therefore, has to have three priorities. First, avoid conflict while furthering the national interest. Two, achieve the desired resolution by the implicit leverage of military power without using it. And third, when war is thrust on you as in 1962 and 1965 or is tempting as in 1971, ensure that all other fronts are kept quiet, leaving your army free to deal with one.

There were fears of a new front opening in each one of our wars, and government­s used different methods to prevent that. In 1962, when India faced its first two-and-a-half front situation, Jawaharlal Nehru reached out to the US and Britain to lean on Pakistan to stay calm. The price for this was having to concede a high-level, serious (but insincere) negotiatio­n with Pakistan over Kashmir (Swaran Singh-Zulfikar Ali Bhutto talks, 196263) with plenty of “third party” interventi­on. A little footnote needs tobe added. In 1962, the fraction al front in the two-and-a-half was Nagaland. As the army retreated to the plains from NEFA (Arunachal Pradesh), Nagaland was abandoned for the time being. A second front was successful­ly avoided, and the half abandoned to focus on the bigger threat.

In 1965, yet again, the Lal Bahadur Shastri government was careful not to open a second front with Pakistan in the east. This, despite evident tactical superiorit­y there and Pakistan’s logistical challenges. The Chinese were not to be given an excuse to jump in.

And when they did, towards the third week of that 22day war as it wasn’t going Pakistan’s way at all it was time to accept ceasefire. My generation heard the word “ultimatum” for the first time when the Chinese accused the Indian army of having “kidnapped” four Tibetan graziers and“stolen ”59 of their yaks and 800 sheep and threatened dire consequenc­es if these weren’t returned forthwith, along with two bits of territory. There was a lighter side to India’s response too, when some younger Congressme­n took a “peace” procession to the Chinese mission in New Delhi, 800 sheep in tow, some with placards reading “eat me, but don’t destroy the world”. More seriously, of the lands Chinese wanted “returned”, one (Jelep La) was mysterious­ly abandoned. Indian accounts, including by Major General Sheru Thapliyal who served thereabout­s as a young officer, confirm that nobody quite knows who decided to leave this position and why. But since it was vacated, you could make an educated guess that the Shastri government took a tough call to avoid even the whiff of a second front at all costs. This, by the way, was in the same general Sikkim area in contention just now.

Our last big war ,1971, was the only one that India planned to fight in advance. And Indira Gandhi had the foresight to pre-emptively avoid the kind of Chinese threat that challenged her predecesso­r. Her treaty of “peace, friendship and cooperatio­n” with the Soviet Union guaranteed that one-enemy, one-front situation, leaving Sam Mane ks ha w’ s army to achieve all military objectives within just 13 days.

It is India’s historical and geographic­al fate that the end of the Cold War and the rise of global anger over Islamic terror have not altered its two-front situation. The China-Pakistan relationsh­ip has not only survived these changes, it has become stronger. As arising China challenges the new world’s wobbly post-Donald Trump unipolarit­y, Pakistan becomes a more useful ally as CPEC shows. India is therefore a unique nuclear-weapons power facing direct threat from two nuclear and contiguous powers.

Every Indian leader has tried to address it. Raj iv Gandhi and Atal Bihari Vajpayee made a substantiv­e outreach to China and it resulted in very useful thawing. But it hasn’t moved much further since in spite of some progress under Dr Manmohan Singh. His view was that China saw no urgency in settling with India because Pakistan was its cheap proxy to “triangulat­e” India.

His approach to break out of this triangulat­ion was radical:Find peace with Pakistan first. He also believed that the rest of the world, particular­ly the US had a strong interest in calming and changing the nature of the Pakistani polity. That’ s why he went out of his way to seek peace with Pakistan in spite of 26/11 and took a truly audacious leap of faith with the S harm el Sheikh declaratio­n. He was thwarted by his own party, and abandoned the project.

To his credit Na rend ra Mo di had a robust beginning with both Pakistan and China. Optimism flickered briefly on both sides and then disappeare­d. He, and his strategic team, need to an alyse why. I would submit that the Pakistan relationsh­iphas been messed up because of the in competence of the Jammu and Kashmir coalition, Bharatiya Janata Party’s own lack of conviction in this alliance of ideologica­l adversarie­s and then the weaving of the Pakistan factor in the party’s national politics.

China may be partly seizing an opening to help an old ally, and partly also responding to some of the recent actions and statements it finds provocativ­e: Increased presence of officials of the Tibetan government in exile and Taiwan in official and party functions (beginning with the swearing-in ceremony of the Modi government), a higher than usual pitch for Dalai Lama’s visit to Arunachal (with a minister present) and the odd statement like the one from Arunachal chief minister asserting he shared his borders with “Tibet, not China”. We don’t know if all these were well-thought-out and deliberate. But we need to reflect on the wisdom of a strategy that lights up both major fronts at the same time while a new one half smoulders in Maoist-hit east-central India.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA
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