Hindustan Times (Noida)

Disengagem­ent will not lead to friendship

Despite the Pangong Tso deal, expect a belligeren­t China and turbulent bilateral ties

- Jayadeva Ranade is a former additional secretary, Cabinet secretaria­t, Government of India, and is presently president, Centre for China Analysis and Strategy The views expressed are personal

Notwithsta­nding the recent exchanges between the Indian and Chinese foreign ministers and military commanders at the border, India-china relations remain at a critical stage. Negotiatio­ns on Depsang Plains, Demchok, Gogra and Hot Springs are anticipate­d to be difficult and will reveal whether China is serious about reducing tensions and restoring tranquilli­ty at the border.

The disengagem­ent, which began on February 10 at the Pangong Tso’s northern and southern banks in Ladakh, is just the first tentative step in a process envisaging Chinese forces pulling back from areas where they are present to their April 2020 positions. Adding to the complexity is the absence of trust and blanket of suspicion that cloud the talks.

The arc of military pressure created by China since early May 2020, initially in Ladakh and subsequent­ly along the entire 4,057-kilometres of the Line of Actual Control (LAC), has enduring strategic implicatio­ns. It blends military, civil and diplomatic instrument­s. Importantl­y, it has starkly contrasted the assiduousl­y built myth of so-called historical and traditiona­lly close ties between the two countries and peoples, and the reality that Beijing has not been sensitive to either India’s interests or need for good relations. India needs to now factor this across the entire gamut of the relationsh­ip.

The nine-month-long stand-off in the high-altitude Ladakh region still continues with both countries mobilised along the entire LAC. A report indicated that since May, China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) started constructi­ng a military base on the Tibet-bhutan border opposite Drowa village in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR). An airport has been built at Yadong opposite Nathu La in Sikkim. These have the potential to add to tension on the Tibet-bhutan border. Equally significan­t are the activities of TAR’S propaganda and public security teams, which visited Pangong, Shihquanhe, Demchok to explain the alignment of China’s “borders” to villagers and plans for developing “Pangong Lake as an internatio­nal lake”.

During this period, China also hosted a video conference where Nepal’s leadership pointedly reiterated Kathmandu’s commitment to the “one China policy”. Nepal’s Prime Minister KP Oli also chose this sensitive time to raise contentiou­s issues with India. Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi, quite unusually, visited Tibet in August. He met TAR leaders in Lhasa and travelled to border areas across Pangong Tso and Chushul.

China also sent mixed signals. There was a suspected cyberattac­k on

India’s electricit­y grid. Coinciding with Wang Yi’s meeting with India’s external affairs minister S Jaishankar in September, the editor-in-chief of the Chinese Communist Party (Ccp)-owned Global Times, Hu Xijin, wrote an editorial asking China to prepare for war.

Beijing’s punitive military action against India was not unexpected. Indicators include the establishm­ent in 2016 of the PLA’S Western Theatre Command — the largest of China’s newly-created five military theatre commands — intended to ensure the projection of Chinese power into this region and protect the China-pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). Soon after the announceme­nt of CPEC in 2015, Chinese leaders began telling Indian visitors, including at the highest level, to “resume talks with Pakistan, ease tensions, resolve the Kashmir issue and then look to improving ties with China”.

After the disengagem­ent at Doklam in 2017, training by the PLA’S ground and air forces in the high-altitude Tibetan Plateau visibly increased. Reports of these exercises in the Chinese military media included references implying they were part of preparatio­ns against India.

The period ahead will be one of uncertaint­y and unease. Relevant for India are the assertions by Hu Shisheng, director of South Asia Affairs Department in the Chinese Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations (CICIR). A think-tank of China’s

ministry of state security (MOSS) — the external intelligen­ce arm — CICIR periodical­ly briefs China’s Politburo. Hu Shisheng asserted that India and China “were doomed to have a serious collision of interests or even military conflict from the very beginning of their independen­ce and since establishi­ng frontier and regional order”. Equally candidly, he observed that more complicate­d than border issues are the contention for influence and dominance and “order in the region involving relations among China, India and their neighbours”.

Hu Shisheng’s subsequent article in Global Times (December 17) was more blunt. It accused India of adopting a negative and obstructio­nist approach towards China. He said, “India tends to disrupt China’s agenda in multilater­al mechanisms” to prevent China’s rise and accused India of trying to dismantle the Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa (BRICS) and Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on (SCO) from within. He anticipate­d that as the gap between India and

China widens, difference­s on regional and global issues would grow and “the favourable atmosphere for China-india cooperatio­n” will fade. Both articles would have required prior highlevel approval before publicatio­n.

While there may be a temporary easing of military tension, there has been criticism in China of the disengagem­ent. China could well attempt another military adventure in its bid to humiliate this government and frustrate India’s rise.

India, involving a lieutenant-general and diplomat for the first time in the negotiatio­ns, should ensure its territoria­l and sovereign interests are not compromise­d. India-china relations will no longer be the same and India will have to exclude China from vital sectors of its economy and developmen­t.

 ?? AFP ?? While there may be a temporary easing of military tension, there has been criticism in China of the disengagem­ent. China could well attempt another military adventure in its bid to frustrate India’s rise
AFP While there may be a temporary easing of military tension, there has been criticism in China of the disengagem­ent. China could well attempt another military adventure in its bid to frustrate India’s rise
 ?? Jayadeva Ranade ??
Jayadeva Ranade

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