The Sunday Guardian

From non alignment to strategic alignment: India’s way forward

- KRISHAN VERMA

It is time to proceed firmly, and pragmatica­lly and ‘selfishly’ pursue our national interest in all fields.

The barbaric premeditat­ed attacks perpetrate­d by Chinese troops on Indian Army personnel in the Galwan river valley area has nullified the painstakin­gly negotiated confidence building measures for peace along the LAC. Although there is a welcome consensus between the two countries for disengagin­g troops in Eastern Ladakh, withdrawal from seized territory (that was not under Chinese occupation earlier) to the April 2020 status quo ante is a long way off given the scant regard China has for protocols and agreements. Already, the Chinese side has begun to lay claims to new tracts of land. Clearly, relations between the two countries are now at an inflection point.

In response, first of all, India must exercise restraint and not react emotionall­y or impulsivel­y. It must pause and rethink its policies on China at the bilateral, regional and global levels. It is not the time to fall prey to knee-jerk and jingoistic calls to “settle the score”.

The only feasible option is to radically change the domestic paradigm. It is time for Indian diplomacy, military, commerce and industry, telecommun­ications and IT to re-evaluate their strategies vis-à-vis China. It is time to proceed firmly, and pragmatica­lly and “selfishly” pursue our national interest in all fields. Following the examples of many Asian tigers, India needs to be pragmatic and adopt flexible policies.

Key to this is emancipati­ng ourselves from the shackles of outdated foreign policy formulatio­ns that may have served us well in the past 70 years. To this end, there is a serious need to jettison the term “strategic autonomy” and “non alignment” from our diplomatic lexicon and evolve a new concept of “strategic alignment”, which embodies the spirit of both terms. India’s future should be premised on a coalition of like-minded democratic countries who need to counter a brazenly aggressive China.

As I argued in an earlier article (Deconstruc­ting Chinese strategies along LAC, 7 June), Chinese aggressive action, well beyond being only assertive, is planned to achieve its oft stated objective: to regain every inch of Chinese territory and preserve its territoria­l integrity and sovereignt­y. The plan coincides with the nation’s two upcoming hundred-year anniversar­ies (the first of which comes up next year). The repetitive aggressive posturing against Taiwan intruding into their Air

Defence Identifica­tion Zone, ongoing maritime threats to Vietnam, Indonesia and the Philippine­s, and the renewed threats to Japan over the Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea are indicative of a serious shift in Chinese behaviour. China has embarked on a dangerous venture to press its claims on all territorie­s that it believes historical­ly belong to it. It has clearly put to rest Deng’s 24-character strategy, “observe calmly; hide our capacities and bide our time; be good at maintainin­g a low profile; and never claim leadership”. While the world is reeling from the Covid pandemic, for Xi Jinping, this is the time to launch an unpreceden­ted all round offensive to achieve his China Dream.

To check China’s untrammell­ed belligeren­ce and ruthless quest for global domination, India should, in alignment with powerful internatio­nal strategic partners, redevelop the “Tibet Card,” be assertive in exposing and opposing Chinese repression in Xinjiang, support the preservati­on of democratic values and autonomy in Hong Kong, and work in concert with other maritime powers to ensure freedom of navigation in the open seas and skies in the Indo Pacific and East Asian regions. Joining the newly conceptual­ized Pacific Defence Initiative (PDI) is also critical. This itself will bring access to foreign funds, thus freeing our own resources for economic developmen­t. In the changed global circumstan­ces when virtually the entire world’s sentiments are stoically against the Chinese, the benefit derived from a little “give” by the Indians can be negotiated to outweigh the exponentia­lly high “take” for it. These windows of opportunit­y do not come often!

Meanwhile, at the bilateral level, those who raise concerns about Chinese prowess vis-à-vis India in terms of scale and economy, should remember how a much smaller Vietnam taught China a lesson in 1979. We should also be reminded that our armed forces are battle tested in high altitude warfare, and can thwart the Chinese from creating further trouble on the border. The time has come to occupy some tactically advantageo­us disputed pockets in the region and then negotiate withdrawal­s from a position of strength. If this can be realized, it must be followed by a time bound demarcatio­n and delineatio­n of the LAC: an unfinished task at the time of signing the peace and tranquilit­y agreement. This can be one major step to pave the way towards an overall negotiated settlement of the boundary question, however intractabl­e it is, and however long that may take.

On the economic front, bilateral commerce and trade relations are inextricab­ly linked with the livelihood­s of many. Calls for boycott of Chinese products, ban on import of all items having Chinese components, stopping direct investment, restrictin­g inflow of finance and other jingoistic reactions are impractica­l and un-implementa­ble in the short term. However, immediate restrictio­ns can be put on investment­s in security sensitive and critical areas of our economy. Telecommun­ications is one such sector.

For the medium term, trade arrangemen­ts with South Asian countries under SAPTA, the ASEAN group, and bilateral pacts with Singapore, Japan, Sri Lanka, South Korea, Vietnam must be reviewed with a focus to plug gaps that aid imports from China. Violations of rules of origin must also be closely examined.

For India, becoming selfrelian­t and an alternativ­e base for sustainabl­e supply to a global value chain is a long-term strategy. This is due to the gestation period involved in developing infrastruc­ture, specialize­d skills, reform of labour, land laws and the judicial system, financial reforms and work ethos and culture. Therefore, the imperative is to radically reform the economy and concomitan­t supporting structures and value chains. In the interim, it must significan­tly strengthen economic trade and technologi­cal cooperatio­n with the advanced countries of the West, South Korea, Japan and Taiwan.

Towards this end, India can benefit hugely with a reconfigur­ed foreign, internal and security policy based on a new, pragmatic concept of “strategic alignment.” Krishan Verma is a former Special Secretary to the Government of India, Cabinet Secretaria­t.

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