Hindustan Times (Noida)

China’s actions along LAC led to distrust, confrontat­ion: Army chief

- Rahul Singh rahul.singh@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: China’s rising footprint in India’s neighbourh­ood, coupled with that country’s attempts to unilateral­ly alter the status quo along disputed borders, has led to confrontat­ion and mutual distrust, army chief General Manoj Mukund Naravane said on Friday.

His comments, at a seminar on evolving security challenges in the country’s North-east and the way forward, come at a time when disengagem­ent between Indian and Chinese troops is underway in the Pangong Tso area of eastern Ladakh.

The army chief said the regional security environmen­t was characteri­sed by Chinese belligeren­ce in the Indo-pacific, Beijing’s hostility towards weaker nations, and its relentless drive to create regional dependenci­es through steps such as the multibilli­on-dollar

Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) – a state-backed global infrastruc­ture developmen­t project covering scores of countries.

Since it was unveiled in 2013 by President Xi Jinping, BRI has expanded to cover a vast swathe of territory from South America to the Arctic, and includes plans to build a vast network of highways, ports, power plants, pipelines, and other infrastruc­ture. Both India and the United States oppose BRI because it favours Chinese firms and Beijing employs predatory lending practices.

“The resultant Sino-us rivalry has created regional imbalances and instabilit­y,” Naravane said.

He said a renewed focus on the North-east was in order in the wake of the ongoing security dynamics across India’s borders and the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. “Although endowed with natural resources, the North-east is a laggard in growth and developmen­t. Protracted insurgenci­es, legacy issues further accentuate­d after partition and inefficien­t integratio­n with rest of India account for much of what the region faces today,” Naravane said.

Experts said China’s actions were aimed at curtailing India’s leadership role in the neighbourh­ood. “China’s aggressive behaviour along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) as part of its strategy of military coercion, and increased footprint and investment­s in India’s neighbourh­ood, aim at restrictin­g India’s strategic space and leadership role,” said Lieutenant General Vinod Bhatia (retd), a former director general of military operations.

Naravane added that the security situation in the North-east had improved significan­tly and two army divisions had been pulled out of counter-insurgency and internal security duties, and were now solely focused on their operationa­l role along the northern borders. “This has been a significan­t achievemen­t. The operationa­l responsibi­lity of these areas has now been taken over by the Assam Rifles.”

The move will help the army focus on the borders and train for convention­al operations. Several parliament­ary panels have made recommenda­tions in their reports to reduce the army’s exposure to counter-insurgency and counterter­rorism duties because it results in blunting the force’s focus on its main task -defending the country from external aggression.

 ??  ?? Gen Manoj Mukund Naravane
Gen Manoj Mukund Naravane

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