Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

At LAC, continue to ramp up infrastruc­ture

The Modi government has done well in prioritisi­ng border infra and patrolling. This has rattled China

- Mata”.

Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi recently stated that 20 jawans were martyred but not before they taught a lesson to those who had dared to raise an eye towards “Bharat

PM assured the nation that, today, it has the capability that no one could eye even an inch of its territory. He suggested that the infrastruc­ture in the border areas had improved greatly, leading to heightened patrolling and close monitoring of movements at the border. PM also made it clear that India would respond firmly to any attempts to transgress the Line of Actual Control (LAC).

China has always made a creeping annexation part of its policy towards India. The Congress, when in power, turned a blind eye to the encroachme­nt on India’s territorie­s by the Chinese through continuous transgress­ions and border violations. Though the country entered into as many as six bilateral agreements in 1988, 1993, 1996, 2005, 2012 and 2013, it did not address the dispute over LAC. When the Chinese intruded and pitched tents deep inside India’s territory at Depsang, in 2013, the then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh merely spoke in Parliament about the Chinese having a different perception about LAC. Confidence-Building Measures (CBMs) were misused by the Chinese to resort to psychologi­cal warfare and “salami slicing”. This is because, after 1962, defence forces were neglected and infrastruc­ture was shoddy.

After Modi assumed power, strengthen­ing infrastruc­ture became a national priority. Today, there has been a great leap in infrastruc­ture developmen­t at the Indo-China border on the Indian side which has served as a deterrent to China. Had the infrastruc­tural developmen­t started in past regimes, India would have been in a more dominant position today. After 2014, India created a strong road network through the Border Roads Organisati­on and the Central Public Works Department despite the small window, during the year, for constructi­on, due to the harsh winter. The Border Area Developmen­t Programme (BADP) has been allocated ~784 crore in the fiscal year 20202021. BADP stipulates that “10% of the total allocated funds will be additional­ly allocated to the states/Union territorie­s abutting Indo-China Border (Arunachal Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Ladakh, Sikkim and Uttarakhan­d) for taking up works in the districts abutting Indo-China border”. The creation of infrastruc­ture “would help integrate these area with the hinterland, create a positive perception of care by the country and encourage the people to stay or in the border areas leading to safe and secure border” as per the ministry of home affairs.

Infrastruc­ture has developed on all borders through the comprehens­ive Integrated Border Management Systems — be it border out posts, border fencing, mobile towers, the use of technology at the border and lighting. On the Indo-Tibet border, roads, helipads, tunnels and bridges have been built.

At the same time, there has been an increase in patrolling — be it long-range patrols, short-range patrols or joint patrols by the Army and the Indo-Tibetan Border Police. India has held its ground in several face-offs. Regular patrols also enable us to assess China’s activities, identify features of tactical importance, dominate infiltrati­on routes, corroborat­e inputs and assert our presence. Post-2014, our patrols have been actively engaging, confrontin­g and preventing any incursions. We have not allowed any constructi­on activity in our territory within LAC. In Doklam, India stalled the constructi­on of a road by the Chinese, which would have adversely affected the nation’s strategic interests. It is only after this that China became more wary of India’s diplomatic and military might.

Work on a link road, part of an infrastruc­ture project of a strategic road in Ladakh, is one of the factors which seems to have pushed China into its misadventu­re on June 15. They were given a bloody nose by Indian soldiers. Another reason which could have irked China is the fact that India did not support the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), which was not advisable from the country’s security point of view. BRI was to establish China’s dominance in global trade. This included the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, which is not acceptable to India as it goes through Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. Other factors which angered China could have been the friendly relations between India and the United States and the formation of the two Union territorie­s of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh as well as the abrogation of Article 370. This reflects China’s vulnerabil­ity and the Galwan Valley aggression seems to be the desperate act of a frustrated country.

PM Modi’s policy towards China has been a judicious mix of diplomatic, military and economic options. He and President Xi Jinping have had as many as 18 summit meetings over the past six years, including two informal meetings at Mamallapur­am and Wuhan. Several meetings have been held at different levels. The 15th meeting of the Working Mechanism for Consultati­on and Coordinati­on, was held on June 24, where India stressed on respecting LAC and both sides agreed to expeditiou­sly implement the understand­ing on disengagem­ent and de-escalation.

While diplomatic parleys should continue, it is imperative to continue the PM’s policy to strengthen both the nation’s infrastruc­tural and military build-up to contain the Dragon if it challenges us again. No one can challenge a determined India. Though India is a peaceful nation, we will negotiate only from a position of strength. And this can happen when strong leadership under PM Modi is guiding India’s security policy based on national interests. RK Pachnanda is a retired director general, Indo-Tibetan Border Police The views expressed are personal

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RK PACHNANDA

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