Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Modi’s surprise visit is a game-changer: Experts

MESSAGE Analysts say visit is an expression of India’s ‘resolve’ to beat Chinese aggression

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI:A range of experts and analysts believe that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Ladakh, and his speech to troops in the frontlines of the stand-off at the Line of Actual Control, is a possible “game-changer”, an expression of India’s “resolve” to beat Chinese aggression, a clear articulati­on of Indian redlines, and a message to China that since Beijing broke the relationsh­ip, it will have to fix it.

Brahma Chellaney, a strategic analyst, suggested that after a period “a concerted government effort to downplay the Himalayan border confrontat­ion and obscure China’s encroachme­nts”, Modi’s visit to the Ladakh front had helped shine a spotlight on the “war-like situation” India confronts. “His speech underscore­s India’s resolve to beat back the Chinese aggression. And his reference to ‘expansioni­sm’ echoes the mounting internatio­nal concern over China’s imperial overreach under Xi Jinping, who has simultaneo­usly opened multiple fronts.”

In a reference to PM’S speech at an all party meeting where he had appeared to suggest that there was no external intrusion (subsequent­ly clarified by the Prime Minister’s Office as only pertaining to the situation in Galwan valley), Chellaney said, “By going to Ladakh, Modi has made amends for the confusion he sowed with his June 19 televised speech on the border situation.”

Lieutenant General (retired) Syed Ata Hasnain said that the visit was a “game-changer”, and a part of India’s continuous “strategic messaging”.

“Measures to convey a strong resolve through economic and other domains get hugely supplement­ed when the PM personally appears at the frontlines. The PM spoke of India’s pursuit of peace and developmen­t but that should not be construed as lack of resolve to defend its territoria­l integrity. Besides the morale boost to troops, the visit will force a Chinese review of its strategy of coercion it has adopted.”

The message of the speech, Sushant Sareen of the Observer Research Foundation said, was clear. “The door to diplomacy is open and every effort will be made to solve the situation peacefully. At the same time, a redline has been drawn. PM’S address was a statement of resolve to not back down in face of Chinese bullying, threats and intimidati­on.”

Sareen also saw a longer-term shift in India’s posture in the speech. “Most importantl­y, it is clear that the PM, who invested a lot in trying to win over China, has now given up. India-china relations are broken, even if this situation gets resolved. It will now take a lot to bring normalcy in the relationsh­ip and, as far as India is concerned, all heavy lifting will have to be done by China because it is responsibl­e for damaging the relationsh­ip. They broke it, they must fix it.”

But there were also voices which suggested that there must be a more cautious reading of the speech and what it represente­d.

Christophe­r Clary, assistant professor of political science at the University at Albany, State University of New York and a scholar of South Asian security, said that the PM gave a “boilerplat­e speech”.

“His praise for the sacrifice and bravery of India’s jawans, while heartfelt, was also the least he could do after the events of the last two months. His assertion that the age of expansioni­sm was over perhaps suggests his earlier assurances that China had not expanded into Indian territory were incorrect.”

But, he added, that by going to Leh, the PM made “a modest implicit commitment”.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi interacts with soldiers who were injured in the recent Galwan Valley clash, at the Military Hospital in Leh, Ladakh, on Friday.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi interacts with soldiers who were injured in the recent Galwan Valley clash, at the Military Hospital in Leh, Ladakh, on Friday.

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