Hindustan Times (Patiala)

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 status quo ante 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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