Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

The seas vs the mountains

There is a plan for the maritime front. But the Himalayas are much more vulnerable

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For the United States (US), and many countries in Asia, the key global threat at the moment is Chinese expansioni­sm. This expansioni­sm has been felt most acutely in the maritime sphere in the South China Sea. There is thus recognitio­n of the need to keep sea lanes and smaller islands in the region free of Chinese ingress and militarisa­tion. The coming together of four naval democracie­s in the form of Quad is an outcome of this assessment. And while Quad isn’t a military alliance, military exercises among partners are now a regular phenomena in the Indo-pacific. It is in this backdrop that India and the US have got to a stage where, from an era of distrust, especially in the defence realm, their respective naval chiefs now participat­e together in a joint exercise in the Bay of Bengal, as they did on Thursday. Their presence in the southern part of South Asia was meant as a signal to the power to the north of South Asia, and there is little doubt that China would have taken note.

On the very day that Delhi and DC sent a signal from the seas, Beijing sent its own signal from the mountains — as news broke of forward movement in China’s protracted boundary negotiatio­ns with Bhutan. To be sure, given the remarkably close partnershi­p between India and Bhutan and the Thimphu royalty’s clear strategic orientatio­n towards Delhi, Bhutan would have informed India about these negotiatio­ns in advance. China and Bhutan have also just agreed on a three-step framework, not an outcome. And India remains in a position to indirectly shape these talks. But despite these caveats, the fact is that the evolution of Bhutanchin­a boundary talks can have a profound impact on India’s security in the eastern Himalayas, and not necessaril­y positively.

In the same week that the India-us maritime partnershi­p got more robust, the India-china stalemate in Ladakh also deepened, with unusually harsh public statements after military-level talks failed to make progress. This indicates that China wants to stay put in the new areas where it has establishe­d its presence, and is not even bothering with the pretence of being constructi­ve. Beijing’s belligeren­ce comes in the wake of its new (brief) incursions both in the middle sector (Uttarakhan­d) and eastern sector (Tawang) over the past month, and polemics against Vice-president M Venkaiah Naidu’s visit to Arunachal Pradesh. India should use the seas to enhance leverage, but remember its greatest challenge is in the mountains.

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