Deccan Chronicle

IT’S ALL ABOUT ASIAN POWER PLAY

- (The writer is a senior fellow of Delhi Policy Group) Brigadier (Retd) Arun Sahgal

India and China have been locked in a standoff on the Doklam plateau along the disputed Bhutan-China boundary. This eyeball to eyeball confrontat­ion is the direct result of China’s unilateral encroachme­nt in a recognised disputed border area, in a blatant attempt to change the status quo with a small neighbour as also to wrest military advantage vis-a-vis India.

China’s actions violate past commitment­s that any issue regarding border alignments at the tri-junction will be decided through consultati­ons among the three parties, as well as its long-standing agreement with Bhutan to maintain the status quo on the boundary pending final settlement.

In terms of scale, duration and belligeren­ce, this standoff is unlike any other in the past, when the two countries have walked back from periodic Chinese incursions and physical posturing in areas where there are difference­s on the Line of Actual Control. China this time appears to have taken premeditat­ed step to stoke tensions and create a military face-off with India and more importantl­y to test the strength of IndiaBhuta­n relations. It is also no coincidenc­e that the incident was orchestrat­ed close to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s summit meeting with US President Donald Trump on June 26.

The manner in which Beijing has since raised the stakes and used all elements of the state apparatus, including official spokespers­ons backed by social media, points towards a coordinate­d campaign of coercion and intimidati­on to undermine India’s relations with Bhutan and its primacy in South Asia.

China’s actions fit into the familiar pattern of China’s expansioni­st territoria­l assertions, grey zone incursions and salami slicing tactics that we have witnessed, from the East China Sea to the South China Sea and now extending into the Indo-Pacific, since it began its overt pursuit of establishi­ng hegemonic power nearly a decade ago. China’s current bellicose campaign is part of threeprong­ed strategy against India.

First, China is attempting to create proxies and foster instabilit­y along India’s strategic periphery through military posturing and economic inducement as also by questionin­g the validity of existing agreements.

Second, leveraging its military asymmetry to brow beat India by highlighti­ng the costs of military confrontat­ion.

Third, incursions in Ladakh and even “settled” or undisputed areas like Sikkim constitute tactics of “subterrane­an coercion” to keep bilateral tensions alive till New Delhi succumbs to China’s demands.

What are broader Chinese strategic aims in raising tensions with India? A closer look at the Asian power play will highlight that Chinese leadership believes that the current geopolitic­al scenario against the backdrop of ambivalent US posture and loss of heft owing to policy inertia vis-a-vis Asia — Pacific is an historic strategic opportunit­y to seize geopolitic­al space by hardwiring and expanding its periphery through economic, political, and military inducement­s.

Seen in the above context, attempts by concert of maritime democracie­s signified by India — Japan and the US as later attempts to regain initiative in the maritime domain is seen by China as contesting its revitaliza­tion dreams.

An economical­ly and militarily resurgent India fits into this puzzle as a lone strategic partner outside US-led alliance system, which can be subjected to coercion. By militarily embarrassi­ng India, China not only establishe­s its credential­s as a prima donna in South Asia but its power potential in SouthEast Asia. The ASEAN countries, as evidenced by the remarks of analysts and diplomats at the ‘Delhi Dialogue’, are already in thrall of Chinese power and psychologi­cal dominance. They are far too dependent on China’s largesse in terms of investment­s and trade and thus tend to overlook China’s creeping maritime dominance of the South China Sea. A compromise­d India thus is the first and important step in seizing the strategic opportunit­y. For India, the standoff constitute­s a fundamenta­l shift in India’s security calculus as related to its strategic neighbourh­ood. Bhutan is part of the overall Chinese strategy aimed at making inroads into India’s strategic periphery to undermine India’s influence. Thus India-China relations are entering a period of heightened contention and confrontat­ion where the stakes are indeed very high.

Two most important elements for India in the current scenario is the posture of Bhutan and standing firm on its principled stand despite growing Chinese coercion. Both constitute major security challenges.

India needs to reach out to Bhutanese leadership to ensure that they do not fall prey to Chinese overtures. The impact of shift in Bhutanese neutrality will be severe for India in terms of political and security ramificati­ons more importantl­y strategic costs vis-a-vis boundary issue.

Second, having taken a decision to stand firm, India has no option but to brazen it out, and ensure a settlement on mutually acceptable terms without succumbing to Chinese brow-beating. Capitulati­on or weakness will not only undermine India’s regional stature as an emerging power but make China’s behaviour even more aggressive across Asia and firmly sow the seeds of a China-led neo-tributary system in the Asia-Pacific.

The stakes are indeed high in this India-China confrontat­ion, for India as a regional power and a security stakeholde­r in Asia, but equally for a rulesbased regional order that can effectivel­y check China’s strategy of region-wide intimidati­on.

The outcome of the present impasse will have a bearing on whether Asia can evolve a stable and balanced security architectu­re that accommodat­es the interests of major and rising powers as well as smaller states, or we are headed towards a century of domination by an authoritar­ian hegemon.

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