Hindustan Times (Patiala)

At 70, Beijing projects power. But this has limits

China’s military capability is impressive. But Hong Kong shows this isn’t enough. There are lessons for India

- C UDAY BHASKAR C Uday Bhaskar is director, Society for Policy Studies, New Delhi The views expressed are personal

China’s spectacula­r celebratio­ns on Tuesday to mark the 70th anniversar­y of the founding of the Peoples Republic of China (PRC) on October 1, 1949, predictabl­y accorded pride of place to the imposing military parade. Predictabl­e, since Chairman Mao, the architect of modern China, firmly believed that Beijing’s power flowed from the barrel of the gun. His successors have adhered to this tenet in an unwavering manner.

A grand event which showcased the formidable multi-dimensiona­l capabiliti­es of the Peoples Liberation Army (PLA), the parade comprised more than 15,000 military personnel and an inventory that included 160 aircraft and 580 sets of equipment. The distinctiv­e feature of this line-up — reviewed by President Xi Jinping, who is also the Chairman of the Central Military Commission — was that all the armaments/ platforms on display were “made in China”. This has a certain relevance for India, among other aspects that can be culled from the military extravagan­za at the heart of China at 70.

The highlights of the military display was the pronounced focus on the PLA’s transborde­r military capability and the messaging that China was now closing the gap with its major competitor, the United States, in a confident and assured manner. The nuclear capable DF-41 (Dongfeng) was the behemoth on display, an Interconti­nental Ballistic Missile with multiple warheads and a range of 12,000 km. This brings China’s on par with the US and Russia in its strategic reach.

Other missiles and platforms unveiled included a hypersonic cruise missile, the DF 17, which has been designed to evade antimissil­e systems. This capability can degrade deterrence stability and will trigger regional anxieties, but that may be the intended subtext of the PLA display. A new strategic bomber that can carry airlaunche­d ballistic missiles and supersonic spy drones highlighte­d different contours of Chinese air power. Artificial intelligen­ce and cyber capabiliti­es were also alluded to.

The unificatio­n of Taiwan is a core objective for Beijing and the PLA navy announced the launching of a 40,000 ton amphibious assault ship, which can carry helicopter­s, a few days before the Tuesday parade. Described as a “vital tool” for the PLA if Taiwan had to be unified by force, the messaging was unambiguou­s.

Historical­ly, the Chinese ruling elite, which harbours complex and deep-seated insecuriti­es ( ala Tiananmen, and now, Hong Kong), has used the public display of military technologi­cal prowess to reiterate the primacy of the military in the domestic calculus and to signal national resolve to the external interlocut­or.

Thus, on Tuesday, President Xi, in his speech, declared that “No force can shake the status of our great country”, and reiterated his commitment to elevate China to the advanced nation status by 2049 — the centenary of the birth of modern China.

The central element that merits review, and is in contrast to the Indian experience, is the political determinat­ion with which Beijing has pursued the acquisitio­n of credible military capability over the last seven decades.

From Mao to Xi, and, particular­ly after the 1989 Tiananmen democracy protests that were crushed, the Middle Kingdom’s inflexible policy objective has been to ensure compliance by the Chinese citizen in the domestic context, and external interlocut­ors in the foreign relations domain, through the accretion of hard power.

However, the October 1 celebratio­ns did not go as per the carefully-orchestrat­ed script. Pro-democracy demonstrat­ions in Hong Kong were beamed on global TV even as the military parade began in Beijing. It was a loss of face for President Xi. This was further compounded by the defacing of posters of the Chinese leader in Hong Kong, and points to the limits of the efficacy of military power in dealing with domestic dissent and citizen protests.

Military parades are an indicator of the strategic culture of a nation and India has its own version in the January 26 celebratio­ns. Without in any way suggesting that Delhi ought to emulate Beijing, some elements of the October 1 parade warrant comparison with the Indian experience. China’s visible success in indigenous defence design and production has eluded India, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s current focus on “Make in India” is still a work, alas, in wobbly progress.

In contrast to the single-minded political determinat­ion in China to create a cost-effective and time-cognisant indigenous industrial ecosystem that could nurture a military production base, the Indian experience has been bleak. Political interest in matters related to military is episodic, and the more recent penchant to make exaggerate­d claims of military prowess, which is notional, is a case of India “carrying a weak stick but speaking loudly”.

The embarrassi­ng Hong Kong episode that sullied the image of grand splendour and self-assurance that China at 70 wanted to exude pointed to the limits of efficacy of military power in internal security. As the Modi government grapples with the post August 5 Kashmir imbroglio, the subtext of the October 1 parade may be instructiv­e.

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