Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Has China bitten off more than it can chew?

- Shyam Saran Shyam Saran is a former foreign secretary and senior fellow, Centre for Policy Research The views expressed are personal

Ihave argued before that in advancing its territoria­l claims, China uses carefully calibrated tactics. Each move it makes may not be threatenin­g enough to invite a significan­t military response, but several incrementa­l actions cumulative­ly lead to a material change in the situation. Small nibbles lead to a giant bite.

We have seen this unfold on our borders. It has been practised with success in the South China Sea (SCS). In earlier track-2 meetings, Chinese interlocut­ors would say that they did not claim the whole of SCS but only the various islands and waters around them. When asked about the nine-dash line, they said that it was a legacy of the Guomindang government. It will be recalled that when Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru had pointed out to Chinese premier Zhou Enlai that Chinese maps were showing large chunks of Indian territory as part of China, Zhou explained that these were old Guomindang maps that had not yet been revised. Sounds familiar?

Chinese interlocut­ors later began to assert that SCS were “historic waters” where China had certain legacy rights, but did not explain what these were. They still maintained that China was not claiming the entire stretch of waters as sovereign territory. Once formal submission to this effect was made to the United Nations, the obfuscatio­n could no longer stand. The process of actual occupation, dredging and militarisa­tion then began in earnest and still continues. At each step of this creeping process of occupation, neither the Associatio­n of South East Asian Nations (Asean) nor the United States (US) felt threatened enough to take countermea­sures. Reversing the changed facts on the ground will require large-scale military action, which is not realistic.

The lesson to be drawn is that the counter must come swiftly and at an early stage before the map has been redrawn through such tactics. India changed its pattern of response to Chinese nibbling with the Doklam operation in 2017. There is no doubt that this came as a rude surprise to the Chinese side. The sharp and aggressive official reaction and the flood of vituperati­ve Chinese media commentary reflected that. Here was a nibble that had invited an unexpected and out-of-character “disproport­ionate” response. The impasse lasted for over two months, but was eventually resolved. The Brazil-Russia-India-China-South Africa (BRICS) summit hosted by President Xi Jinping at that time was an important reason for the resolution.

In contrast to Doklam, the operations in eastern Ladakh were not the usual nibbling kind, but backed by deployment of a large number of troops and weaponry. The aim would have been to substantia­lly change the alignment of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) to China’s advantage, making any Indian effort to reverse the gain a risky and costly affair. The skirmish at Galwan with unpreceden­ted loss of life may have been unexpected and not necessaril­y part of the original script. This is why the rhetoric on the Chinese side, compared to a smaller incident at Doklam, was much more muted and remains so.

The plan would have been to occupy territory falling within the category of “differing perception­s” of LAC and prevent any Indian presence and patrols in these areas. Another aim would have been to neutralise any Indian advantage from improved border infrastruc­ture such as the Darbuk-Daulat Beg Oldi (DBO) road and revived Advance Landing Grounds (ALG) at DBO, Fukche, Chushul and Demchok.

What China did not expect was that India would not confine its response to managing the border dispute but would extend it to attacking Chinese commercial interests in India and aligning itself more closely with its Quad partners. The Indian side has upped the ante by taking two steps, one military and one economic — occupying the heights in south Pangong and by permanentl­y banning 59 Chinese apps. Earlier, the signal given was that these commercial actions could be reversed if relations came back on an even keel. The onus is now on China to escalate both on the border, but importantl­y in other dimensions of the relations. Should China seek to push India out of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on? What about India’s membership of the Asia Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank or the BRICS Developmen­t Bank? Should it lead in disbanding BRICS which may bring it into conflict with Russia and other members? Should it retaliate commercial­ly, which it has not done so far?

There have been multiple rounds of talks at the military-to-military level, which have not registered any progress towards disengagem­ent of troops. External affairs minister S Jaishankar acknowledg­ed as much in a recent statement.

The fact that both sides find continuati­on of talks useful is positive, but it appears that the initiative is no longer on China’s side. Jaishankar has stated quite unambiguou­sly that other aspects of India-China relations could not be insulated from the disturbanc­e to peace and tranquilli­ty on the border. The reaction from the Chinese foreign ministry spokesman was to urge that the border situation should be delinked from other aspects of bilateral relations, knowing full well that this is no longer possible. China has miscalcula­ted and does not know how to extricate itself. Has it, for a change, bitten off more than it can chew?

JAIPUR: Chief minister Ashok Gehlot on Tuesday countered the charges levelled by Union minister Smriti Irani during her visit to Jaipur on Sunday against the state government on farm loan waiver in Rajasthan.

“Smriti Irani falsely alleged in the press conference (in Jaipur) that Rahul Gandhi promised loan waiver in 10 days but that promise was not fulfilled. Irani did not do full homework on the facts, so she has given such a factually incorrect statement. On December 17. 2018, two days after taking oath as chief minister on December 19, I held a press conference and announced the debt waiver for farmers,” Gehlot said.

He said Rajasthan government waived of all outstandin­g crop loans of 20.56 lakh farmers taken from the cooperativ­e and land developmen­t banks till November 30, 2018.

Reacting over Gehlot’s statement, state BJP chief Satish Poonia said that farmers were

lured by the announceme­nt of Congress that they will make complete loan waiver, but now they are just finding ways to save themselves. “The government should have made specific announceme­nts that they will only waive co-operative bank loans,” he said.

Meanwhile, a Cabinet meeting was held at the CM’s residence, in which strategy related to the Budget session was formed. “Many major decisions, including the new Ayush policy of the state and formation of forest corporatio­n, were approved by the Cabinet,” said a minister, who didn’t want to be named.

 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? China did not expect that India, in response to the border crisis, would attack its commercial interests in India and align more closely with Quad
SHUTTERSTO­CK China did not expect that India, in response to the border crisis, would attack its commercial interests in India and align more closely with Quad
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? CM Ashok Gehlot.
CM Ashok Gehlot.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India