Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

India must inflict costs on China

Unless these costs outweigh Beijing’s aggression gains, China will get away scot-free

-

By occupying key vantage points in eastern Ladakh in an operation backed by tens of thousands of troops in the rear, China has entered a dangerous new phase in its territoria­l expansioni­sm. It has brazenly seized areas that were under India’s military control or patrolling jurisdicti­on.

In fact, China intruded into areas located beyond any claim line it has ever published, including its 1956, 1959 and 1960 claim lines in Ladakh. Demonstrat­ing ever-expanding claims, its forces intruded into the Hot Springs-gogra-kongka La region and the Depsang Y-junction and also up to Galwan River’s mouth and Pangong Lake’s Finger 4.

India, facing up to what its defence ministry calls “unilateral aggression,” has made it clear to China that it will settle for nothing less than a full return to status quo ante. India’s message to Beijing is that refusing to roll back its encroachme­nts will cast a growing shadow over the bilateral relationsh­ip. Publicly, too, India has cautioned that China’s border hostilitie­s will damage bilateral ties.

There has been no national debate, however, on India’s options to restore status quo ante. China seems determined to hold on to its territoria­l gains, which explains its statement that disengagem­ent is mostly over. Indeed, it has used military and diplomatic talks to demand Indian acquiescen­ce in the new status quo. The protracted talks have also helped it to consolidat­e its hold on the land grabs, including by building fortificat­ions and installing fibre optic cables.

China has achieved its territoria­l gains in the same way it made territoria­l grabs elsewhere in Asia since the 1980s — below the threshold of armed conflict, without firing a shot. Today, it is trying to dictate a Hobson’s choice to India, like it did when it captured Doklam: Go along with the changed status quo or risk an open war. Believing time is on its side, China is seeking to wear India out in order to present a fait accompli.

Against this background, India’s options are narrowing. The longer India has waited, the harder it has become to militarily push back the intruding Chinese forces and restore status quo ante. Imagine if India had dealt with China’s incursions as soon as it discovered them in early May, instead of restrainin­g its forces and entering into unproducti­ve talks. Indian efforts to obscure the intrusions and troop clashes only led to newer Chinese encroachme­nts. As an August 4 defence ministry note pointed out, China made fresh intrusions into Kugrang, Gogra and Pangong on May 17-18.

India has the world’s most-experience­d army in hybrid mountain warfare. Contrary to convention­al wisdom that China holds a significan­t military advantage, several recent internatio­nal assessment­s underscore that India’s air and ground forces have a qualitativ­e edge over the People’s Liberation Army. India’s weakness is a reactive and risk-averse strategic culture.

India’s failure to employ its counteratt­ack capability undermined its negotiatin­g position. Instead of a “seize, hold and talk” strategy to clinch an equitable deal, India brought little to the negotiatin­g table, thus allowing China to reinforce its bargaining power. This is apparent from China’s absurd new demands that India further retreat from Pangong and vacate the Kugrang heights.

India now faces crunch time. If it is not going to end up validating China’s forcible realignmen­t of the Line of Actual Control, India must inflict substantiv­e costs on the aggressor. Imposing significan­t economic and diplomatic costs, coupled with the applicatio­n of coercive military pressure, holds the key. India must speak from a position of strength. Its profession­al, battle-hardened armed forces, coupled with its trade and diplomatic leverage, give it that strength.

The only way China will roll back its aggression is if India begins exacting mounting costs that make its territoria­l gains unbenefici­al to hold. The costs India has sought to impose thus far have proved woefully inadequate to make Beijing end its aggression.

A calibrated imposition of progressiv­ely escalating costs has become imperative. Economical­ly, India’s main steps thus far — banning Chinese mobile apps and restrictin­g Chinese companies’ access to Indian government contracts — need to be supplement­ed with informal trade sanctions. Chinese exports to India are still running at more than $5 billion a month, with July witnessing a surge. Now is the time for India to leverage its buying power to correct its massive trade deficit with China.

At a time when the internatio­nal environmen­t is turning hostile to China’s ambitions, India must launch a diplomatic offensive to spotlight the Chinese aggression. India’s reticence to name-and-shame China seems unfathomab­le. Even amid its aggression, China has had no hesitation in raking up the Jammu and Kashmir issue at the United Nations Security Council.

As a warning shot across Beijing’s bow, India should rescind its 2006 decision allowing China to reopen its consulate in Kolkata, given China’s designs on the Siliguri Corridor. That decision was made despite Beijing’s refusal to let India reopen its Lhasa consulate. The Kolkata and Lhasa consulates were shut following Mao Zedong’s 1962 war against India. Meanwhile, the highest-level visit by a United States cabinet official to Taiwan since 1979 has served as an example for India to loosen its own one-china policy by living up to then foreign minister Sushma Swaraj’s promise in 2014 — that the one-china policy would henceforth be predicated on China’s adoption of a one-india policy. For starters, the prime minister may like to meet the Dalai Lama and say he sought the Tibetan leader’s counsel regarding China.

India, subscribin­g to hard-nosed realpoliti­k, has no choice but to impose costs that cumulative­ly outweigh Beijing’s aggression gains. Without such a course, China could not only escape scot-free but also reap rewards of aggression.

 ?? PTI ?? Protracted talks between the two nations have only helped China consolidat­e its control over the land grab in Ladakh
PTI Protracted talks between the two nations have only helped China consolidat­e its control over the land grab in Ladakh

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India