Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Reset ties with China

Beijing crossed a threshold. India must be strong

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With its aggression in the Galwan Valley, Ladakh, China has crossed a threshold and pushed the relationsh­ip with India to a dangerous low, with long-lasting consequenc­es. Chinese soldiers used the opportunit­y of a negotiated withdrawal operation to viciously attack a supervisor­y Indian contingent. The first Indian military casualties along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in 45 years, and the seeming manner of their deaths, are a tragedy. While the present crisis in Ladakh was unusual in terms of the number and size of Chinese intrusions, it appeared to have similariti­es with past patterns of intimidati­on. Beijing would intrude; there would be some pushing and shoving; then it would withdraw, feeling a message had been sent. Not this time. Galwan Valley indicates there has been a dramatic shift in Chinese tactics, one that will require an equally drastic re-evaluation of India’s position. First, it is important to diagnose the roots of Beijing’s behaviour. At the macro-level, it is clear that China — under President Xi Jinping — believes the time has come to assert its power on the internatio­nal stage. This has translated into China violating internatio­nal norms and law (South China Sea); engaging in predatory, almost colonial, economic practices (Belt and Road Initiative); being brazen, rather than introspect­ive and transparen­t, about its role in causing crises with global impact (the coronaviru­s pandemic); encroachin­g upon the sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of neighbours (Japan and India); intervenin­g in the politics of democracie­s (from European nations to Australia); exporting its own ideologica­l worldview to other countries (especially in South Asia); and becoming even more repressive at home (Xinjiang, Tibet and Hong Kong) . In this backdrop, China wants to limit New Delhi’s power and ambition; it wants India to accept Beijing’s primacy in Asia and beyond; it wants to impose costs on India for deepening ties with the United States (US); and it wants to continue using Pakistan, which has now becoming almost its client State with the ChinaPakis­tan Economic Corridor, to inflict terror on India. Concerned about India’s upgradatio­n of border infrastruc­ture and motivated by a desire to change facts on the ground, with its recent actions, China has violated every border pact signed in the last three decades to maintain peace and tranquilli­ty and engaged in unacceptab­le aggression. India will have to respond. But it must do so strategica­lly, not emotionall­y. There have to be two layers of response. The first priority has to be to restore at the border as it existed in April. This will require both a display of military strength at the border by standing up to Chinese aggression, and diplomatic work by making it clear to Beijing that its interventi­on will lead to heavy costs across all spheres of the relationsh­ip. The political leadership, while providing strategic guidance, must give all the support the armed forces need at this moment and carefully examine the possibilit­y of inflicting costs on China in other theatres (including business and trade) while keeping the conflict within limits. It must also mobilise internatio­nal opinion to expose Chinese aggression at a time when a humanitari­an, economic and health crisis (originatin­g in China) has engulfed the world. But more fundamenta­lly, India will have to reconsider its entire geopolitic­al posture. Engagement with China is essential and should continue. But there can be no appeasemen­t. Policymake­rs need to go back to the drawing board and examine ways to build leverage against Beijing. India should consider taking a stronger position on Tibet. It must double down on its partnershi­p with the US, make Quad (which also includes Japan and Australia) a more permanent arrangemen­t, and be a part of any club that seeks to contain Chinese power. India needs to economical­ly re-examine its trade, technology and investment ties with China, for all these appear to have benefited Beijing more than Delhi. It needs to ramp up its military modernisat­ion, identify vulnerabil­ities across sectors, and prepare for a two-front situation — which may have seemed unthinkabl­e some years back but will need to be considered now. India will also have to invest more in South Asia, ensure there are friendly government­s in neighbouri­ng capitals, and push back on Chinese efforts to encircle Delhi. The government will also, domestical­ly, need to take the Opposition into confidence (an all-party meeting scheduled for Friday is a positive developmen­t) and prepare public opinion. As India battles the coronaviru­s pandemic and a recession, the security threat from China has added to the challenge. But India has to display strength and wisdom and defend itself.

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