Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Much needs to be done to bolster our defences

- Shashi Shekhar

Just ten days before the 60th anniversar­y of the India-China conflict, General Manoj Kumar Pandey, Indian Army chief, said in a dialogue, “If I have to describe it [situation] in a single sentence, I will say that the situation is stable but unpredicta­ble.” It is obvious that despite the flourishin­g business and trade ties between the two nations, the border animosity with China is still going on. This enmity reminds us of the sacrifices of our unilateral cease-fire. Its army returned from Tezpur in Assam, though still occupied 38,000 square kilometres of our territory. We have yet to take it back.

New Delhi was in an unusual state before the conflict broke. General S Thimayya led the country’s Army from 1957 to 1961, but his relationsh­ip with then defence minister Krishna Menon was strained. He had even resigned at a point during this tension, but Nehru persuaded him to withdraw his resignatio­n. Meanwhile, Marshal Ayub Khan, a friend and colleague of General Thimayya in colonial India, conducted a coup in Pakistan in 1958. Thereafter, Nehru felt the Indian military had to be brought under constituti­onal control if India’s democracy were not to be jeopardise­d. He also accomplish­ed this.

This raises the question of whether democracy and sovereignt­y can be separated. Certainly not. However, there was a lack of necessary coordinati­on between the Army brass and political leaders. Even topranking officers of the Army were divided on many issues.

In fact, in the growing democracy of our country, policy direction and a well-organised government structure could not take shape until then. This was not India’s only hazard. General BN Kaul, who was close to Nehru, was the commander of the NorthEast Frontier Agency (NEFA). He fell ill during the war and returned to Delhi, from where he led the Army.

The question is whether the leaders who succeeded Nehru have learned any lesson from this chapter in Indian history.

Let us look at two major events from the last nine years as examples. The first is China’s encroachme­nt near Raki Nala in Dipsang in May 2013. New Delhi was successful in getting the People’s Liberation Army to withdraw within a month through diplomatic means. Also, neither side fired a single round. China executed its next huge assault in the Galwan Valley of Ladakh. This time, the two sides engaged in a brutal battle. On the fateful evening of June 15, 2020, 20 jawans were slain, including Commanding Officer Santosh Babu. China, as is customary, did not provide any details about its casualties. Though four soldiers were confirmed dead by its newspaper, Global Times, Indian intelligen­ce sources claim that number to be significan­tly higher.

The situation on our borders has been tense ever since. There have been 16 rounds of negotiatio­ns between the two government­s to defuse tensions, but no concrete results have been reported. This 30-month impasse raises many doubts. This month marks the 60th anniversar­y of the brutal conflict of 1962, but much work remains to be done to bolster our defences and free our territory from Chinese occupation.

It is reassuring that the country’s current leadership is engaged fully and dealing with this sensitive issue appropriat­ely.

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