Millennium Post

ENCROACHME­NT UNABATED

Following the South China Sea model, Chinese designs encroachin­g dangerousl­y close to Arunachal Pradesh will worry India

- BARUN DAS GUPTA

AHong Kong-based English daily reported last week that the Chinese are digging for gold and other minerals at Lhunze, which is right on the border of Arunachal Pradesh that the Chinese call ‘South Tibet’. Nobody can object to the Chinese prospectin­g for minerals in their own land. But, what is a matter of immediate concern for India is that developmen­t of infrastruc­ture etc. is taking place at a breakneck speed at Lhunze, which is a garrison town of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army.

That gold is available in the waters of some of the rivers of Arunachal like Noa-dihing was known as far back as 1881. But the amount was so infinitesi­mal that it could not be commercial­ly exploited. Whether the gold struck by the Chinese on their side is sufficient to be commercial­ly exploited is not known.

What has added to India’s anxiety is that the report quotes a Chinese academicia­n at the University of Geoscience­s in Beijing saying that the Chinese troops had to retreat from Arunachal in 1962 because “we had no people there to hold the land.” But now, with the ‘significan­t increase’ in the Chinese population in the Himalayas, there would be stable, long-term support for any military operation aimed at gradually driving out the Indian forces from Arunachal. “This is similar to what has happened in the South China Sea,” the academicia­n explained, where China has backed up its territoria­l claim by building artificial islands and increasing its naval presence.

Another academicia­n, a researcher at the Institute of Geodesy and Geophysics in the Academy of Sciences in Wuhan, spoke in a similar vein. He said that what China had achieved now in the South China Sea was unthinkabl­e a decade ago and he was sure that the same thing would happen in Arunachal also in the coming years. He quoted President Xi Jinping as saying that “not a single inch of our land will be or can be ceded from China, which definitely includes South Tibet.” Those familiar with Chinese strategic thinking and achieving strategic objectives will agree. For all their protestati­ons of friendship with India, the Chinese will never waver from the path of attaining their long-term objectives.

This means that though there is not a possibilit­y of the Chinese mounting a military offensive against India, in the immediate future, it is very much on the cards at a time and location of China’s own choosing.

There is no doubt that we have been unconscion­ably remiss in fortifying our borders and improving our road and rail communicat­ion along the 4,057 km long Sino-indian border despite the military humiliatio­n we suffered in 1962. To give an example, during the UPA-II regime, a decision was made to build border roads in Arunachal, Ladakh, and Uttarakhan­d. But it is as recently as April 4, that the Minister of State for Railways told the Parliament that the Defence Ministry had ‘identified’ four strategic railway lines along the Sino-indian border. ‘Identified’, at long last! When will the constructi­on begin, pray, and when it will be completed?

The MOS volunteere­d the informatio­n that the lines would be Missiamari-tenga-tawang (378 km), Bilaspur-manali-leh (498 km), Pasighatte­zu-rupai (227 km), and North-lakhimpur-bame-silapathar (249 km); that the Ministry of Defence had ‘provided funds’ to the Railway Ministry “for carrying out final location surveys” and that “the undulating terrain of the young Himalayas and difficult geological conditions are affecting the pace of surveys undertaken.” The MOS did not explain how the Chinese could overcome the same difficulti­es on their side of the border and build a network of railways and roadways in Tibet.

In 2013, the Manmohan Singh Government made the decision to raise a Mountain Strike Corps (MSC) at a cost of Rs 64,700 crore, for defending our borders with China. The troops in the Corps were to be trained for crossing the border and taking on the Chinese in Tibet if the need arose. The raising was to be completed within seven years. The new government that came to power the next year initially thought that raising the cost was too high and needed to be pruned. Then it was said that the raising of the Corps was going on as scheduled. Last year, the Army announced that the raising of the second division of the MSC had just started.

Meanwhile, New Delhi seems to have realised that overdepend­ence on the United States and its ally Israel for our defence needs will be imprudent. Washington wants us to import all our defence hardware from the Western powers. The dangers inherent in this policy seem to have been realised. India has turned, once again, to her traditiona­l and all-weather friend Russia. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s current visit to Russia for an informal summit with President Putin points to that realisatio­n. New Delhi’s decision to go ahead with the acquisitio­n of the S-400 Triumf anti-missile system from Russia, overruling Washington’s demur, is a positive indication. In an actual war, dependence on the US is very risky, as was proved during the Kargil war of 1999, when the US withheld supply of some spare parts of naval helicopter­s urgently needed by the Indian Navy.

In the field of indigenous production of military hardware, however, India is far away from realising Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s dream of Make in India. One instance will suffice. The Kolkata Class stealth guided missile destroyers have been proudly shown up to have been indigenous­ly built. What is not known to many is that only the vessel has been made indigenous­ly. The wide variety of equipment it is fitted with is all imported. Its main gun is from Italy, the gas turbines are from Ukraine, LR-SAMS are from Israel and the Brahmos missiles are jointly developed with Russia.

Over the years, China has built a vast defence-industrial complex. We are lagging far behind. We have to redouble our efforts to attain a credible degree of self-dependence in manufactur­ing military hardware within a definite timeframe. (The views are strictly personal)

President Xi Jinping said that “not a single inch of our land will be or can be ceded from China, which definitely includes South Tibet.” Those familiar with Chinese strategic thinking and achieving strategic objectives will agree; the Chinese will never waver from the path of attaining their long-term objectives

 ??  ?? Chinese encroachme­nt close to Arunachal will bother India
Chinese encroachme­nt close to Arunachal will bother India
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