The Sunday Guardian

‘China could initiate conflict with India by 2025’

‘India should prepare for a revolving door strategy that allows India to push in troops into vulnerable areas across China’s frontlines, as a counter response to the next Chinese aggression.’

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Maj. Gen. G.D. Bakshi Knowledge World Publishers Pages: 376 Price: Rs 980

The phenomenal rise of China’s military power is of concern to the whole world. For India, it is even greater, since the Chinese have shown no inclinatio­n to resolve the long standing border dispute, and Beijing is not averse to threatenin­g the use of force over territoria­l issues, as we’ve seen in the South China sea and in the Senkaku islands standoff with Japan. Moreover, China has been brazenly arming Pakistan and has made it known that the Indian Ocean cannot remain India’s ocean anymore. China also believes that having taught India a lesson in 1962 — a consequenc­e of India’s post independen­ce idealist view, that violence had no place in the affairs of nations — it is now almost ready to use force once again, if need be, against India. The question is, how capable is China, of doing so?

The author, Major General G.D. Bakshi, a soldiersch­olar of repute and one with considerab­le understand­ing of China’s military mindset and capabiliti­es, has put together this impressive net assessment of the entire spectrum of China’s military power. This book looks at the entire range of Chinese capabiliti­es — from doctrines to demonstrat­ed combat performanc­e, as well as the plans and abilities of each of China’s three services. What emerges from this serious study is an analysis that should make India’s policymake­rs and military commanders sit up and take note of Beijing’s hawkish agenda.

For a number of reasons, as this book highlights, China had not embarked on its military modernisat­ion until after the first Gulf War of 1990, which showed Beijing how far its military capabiliti­es lay behind that of America’s. In the 25 years since then, China has systematic­ally sharpened the capabiliti­es of its three military services, by doing away with the baggage of the past, both in terms of the equipment and the oldtimers who could not think beyond manpower intensive land-based forces and operations. Over the past decade, China has spent over $ 150 billion to add combat aircraft, naval ships, submarines and tanks to its growing military inventory. Much of this has been engineered and mass produced within China, often by copying designs of Soviet, Israeli and even American products. But it has changed China from a net importer to one of the world’s biggest exporters of defence technology. Had China purchased the bulk of its military requiremen­ts, (as India still continues to do), it would have had to shell out about $ 500 billion or more.

India on the other hand is now on the path to spending about $150 to $200 billion, over the next decade for a long overdue upgrade of its military capabiliti­es, with much of India’s hardware still being of Soviet era vintage of the 1980s and 1990s. It was the 1962 debacle in the high Himalayas that shook India’s leadership, and began the first round of military expansion and modernisat­ion. Since then, India’s forces have successful­ly fought two major wars with Pakistan (in 1965 and ’71), and a border conflict in 1999, all under the watchful eyes of Beijing, which Pakistan had hoped would intervene in its favour, but it had kept way, knowing that its own military was not quite on par. But now, the author argues, Beijing has set a timeline to settle all its outstandin­g disputes.

But is India prepared? China certainly is preparing for a showdown — not just with India, but elsewhere too — and India faces a two and half front convention­al conflict threat from China. To its north is mainland China, with considerab­le force levels deployed across the Tibetan plateau. To its west, a nuclear armed Pakistan, which receives hugely subsidised military weapons from the US and China. And a growing maritime threat from Chinese ships and submarines around India’s coast line with Beijing’s string of pearls strategy that has encircled India with military bases. The author’s analysis is that China could initiate a conflict with India in the middle of the next decade around 2025, when it is satisfied that its comprehens­ive national power is in place to deal with the fallout of any conflict that it undertakes.

In fact, China has laid down timelines for its military objectives in its successive defence white papers, on the assumption that China’s economy will continue to grow robustly to fuel Chinese military modernisat­ion. The author has therefore based his analysis on the time windows and horizons when China is likely to resort to the use of force. Many observers believe that it is not a question of “if” now, but “when”. In its 50-year perspectiv­e plan, China intends to resolve all its disputes from 2025 onwards; against India the acquisitio­n of South Tibet/ Tawang, and elsewhere the absorption of Taiwan to its east, to begin with, and if its economy is still growing at 6% to 7% annually.

The author has based his objective assessment on China’s intentions based on his deep understand­ing and study of Chinese thinking that views India’s designs with concern — especially if an India-Vietnam-Japan axis combined with the US shadow were to pose a serious challenge for China. But India’s ad-hoc military modernisat­ion, its clueless civilian leadership, and a diplomatic elite that is wedded to the hopeless Nehruvian tradition of a peaceful approach to the Chinese dragon, is as yet, far from presenting that challenge. What the author instead is suggesting is that India should prepare for a “revolving door” strategy that allows India to push in troops into vulnerable areas across China’s frontlines, as a counter response to the next Chinese aggression across India’s land borders. This then would unsettle Beijing enough, for it to pull back its forces to revert to the status quo. But that is a debate that is yet to find consensus in the corridors of Delhi’s South Block.

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