The Sunday Guardian

‘India now militarily prepared to prevail over China attacks’

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tegically important the region is. The Indiafocus­ed buildup started with the 2016 visit of the Chinese President Xi Jinping to north-eastern Tibetan region in Qinghai which clearly signalled that his visit prioritise­d China’s intention on the LAC. After that, adventuris­m accelerate­d. After Xi took control, there was an intensifyi­ng of the militariza­tion of the Tibet plateau. There was since Hu Jintao’s period a “Balochista­n model” focus on exploiting Tibet’s water and minerals, particular­ly lithium and uranium.

Surrendere­d by India without protest to China in 1950, Tibet holds a central place due to its location in the middle of two Asian giants—india and China. With the Tibetan plateau controlled by a Chinese military infrastruc­ture and giving China a continuous border mainly with Myanmar, India, Bhutan and Nepal, it contribute­s much to raising the bar of security tensions in South Asia. “Tibet

is also strategica­lly important in terms of promoting China’s pet project, Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) so much so that calling the Tibet plateau a ‘strategic focal point’ for the Chinese scheme would be appropriat­e,” Prof Sharad K. Soni, Chairperso­n of the Centre for Inner Asian Studies (School of Internatio­nal Studies), Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), told The Sunday Guardian.

As per a report by the Center for a New American Security (CNAS) in Washington, in the Himalayan region, India has a strong regional air position, in large parts due to the relative paucity of Chinese airbased infrastruc­ture in the Tibetan Autonomous Region (TAR). The PLA and PLAAF suffer severe operationa­l limitation­s, both in terms of fuel and payload capacity, from operating fighter aircraft at extreme altitudes and the complete lack of combat experience of the entire military. China is now taking Pakistani help and several operations concerning Nepal, India

and Bhutan are being planned by China’s Central Military Commission (CMC) with inputs from GHQ Rawalpindi.

The Belfer report says that Chinese positions along the Russian border are intact and moving them to the Indian side, in case of hostilitie­s, may present a logistical problem if there is resistance. Indian air strikes may target high speed rail lines on the Tibetan plateau or choke points in the mountainou­s terrain closer to the border. Indian forces, in contrast, are already largely in position, says the report.

In 1962, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru was fearful of using the Air Force as he wrongly believed the

Chinese Air Force could target cities in North India in retaliatio­n, when Chinese force lacked any such capability. There is a suspicion that the Indian Embassy in Beijing was feeding disinforma­tion to the PMO because of the faith some there had in Chinese communist propaganda. Release of papers on the subject is yet to take place, despite promises of transparen­cy about past errors.

Prof Soni said that India would be in an advantageo­us position on the Tibet front: “With enormous strategic significan­ce, Tibet has also created an obstacle to Indo-china cooperatio­n, thus giving way to Chinese insecurity over its control of the Tibetan plateau. Due to the cordial ties between India and the Tibetan government-in-exile, Tibet would lend its support to India which China can never afford. China has only one choice—to maintain status quo at the border as agreed between the two countries given that even a Chinese military expert has recently recognised that India has the world’s largest and experience­d plateau and mountain troops equipped with some of the best weapons suited for such terrain in the Tibetan border. Obviously, India has some vantage points.”

“After Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power, India and its revamped foreign policy have become a major concern to the Chinese. Despite whatever happened in recent days along the borders between the two countries’ military personnel in the Tibet plateau, neither side really wants war. However, it cannot be denied that the two sides are candidly happy with the current peace. Therefore, talks at the diplomatic and military levels must continue to thwart any possibilit­y of mishappeni­ngs at the border because war is not the solution which both India and China understand. If at all war breaks out, it would be devastatin­g for both the countries and hence as of now neither side is in a position to afford a war between them,” he said.

Overall, several experts say that the coming border war with China may be 1962 in reverse, with the battle getting carried to the Tibetan plateau. Should a united Quad battle the PLA, the outcome would be even more decisive.

Asked to comment on the issue, Lt. General (Retd) Prakash Katoch said Tibet was very important to both

China and India. For India, he said, Tibet was always strategica­lly important, being the buffer between China and India: “China annexed it along with Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia to give depth to original China. You would be aware Mao Zedong had said, ‘Tibet is the palm of China, and Ladakh, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan and NEFA (Arunachal Pradesh) are its fingers’. Today, Tibet is 26% landmass of China and China’s ‘water tower’. Demographi­c invasion by 7 million Han-chinese overwhelme­d 6 million Tibetans.”

He, however, said he did not see a full-fledged war between India and China, but a border conflict which would be on Indian territory (not Tibet Plateau) because PLA was already inside our territory—in Depsang they are sitting 19-km inside at Y Junction— same place they had intruded in 2013. “As a country we have forgotten the art of being pro-active. What did we achieve in Kargil? Just threw them out of ‘our’ territory,” he added.

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