The Sunday Guardian

India should learn from Rodrigo Duterte’s unrequited love

- M.D. NALAPAT

Around 200 PRC ‘fishing boats’ have entered Philippine­s waters and despite love calls from Duterte to his counterpar­t in Beijing, refuse to leave.

President of the Philippine­s, Rodrigo Duterte may have his faults, but a lack of confidence is not among them. So convinced was he of the persuasive impact of his charm that he was certain that the leadership of the PRC would reciprocat­e in a generous manner to his obvious preference for China over the US as the primary ally of his country. After giving marching orders to US forces stationed in the Philippine­s, Duterte waited for the bonanza from China that he expected would flow from that decision. He is still waiting. In the meantime, the territoria­l waters of the former US ally are being overrun by the PRC. Most recently, around two hundred PRC “fishing boats”, many of considerab­le size, have entered waters decreed by a Un-designated agency as Manila’s, and despite love calls from Duterte to his counterpar­t in Beijing, refuse to leave. Every citizen of the PRC has been told by the leadership of their country that the entirety of the South China Sea belongs to them, and hence that they have a right—indeed, a duty—to roam those waters unmolested by any other country. Even PRC diplomats have caught the mood of Chinese exceptiona­lism, and have returned to the earthy traditions establishe­d by Mao Zedong until such habits got stopped by Deng Xiaoping. Schoolbook­s that speak of vast tracts of territory belonging to countries such as India rightfully belonging to the PRC have bred a mindset within the public that make more difficult if not impossible the compromise­s and adjustment­s in territoria­l negotiatio­ns with other countries. Compromise­s that are essential to the escalation of tensions that could even lead to war. The frequent public assertions of the PRC leadership that the South China Sea is as Chinese as the Yangtze river have been accompanie­d by demonstrat­ions of military power by the PLA. Under Xi, an overwhelmi­ng number of citizens of the PRC, especially within the military,are convinced of both the legitimacy of China’s numerous claims as well as the PLA’S ability to secure them by force. The marked change in mindset in the aftermath of the coming to power of Xi in 2012 led to incidents such as the deadly confrontat­ion that occurred at Galwan on 15 June 2020. This was when an Indian patrol came up to what the other side had agreed was within the territory allocated to them. The patrol was neverthele­ss attacked, and its Commanding Officer pushed to his death. This infuriated his men and led to a violent altercatio­n in which a substantia­l (but hitherto mostly unacknowle­dged) number of PLA soldiers were killed along with 20 soldiers of the Indian Army. They lost their lives because of the unexpected pugnacity of a PLA unit that ought never to have been where they were on that day.

Despite every meeting of the Special Representa­tives across thedecades ending without result in terms of settlement of the border issue, this ritual continues. Every telephone conversati­on between functionar­ies in Delhi and Beijing is regarded by sections of the media as a “breakthrou­gh”. A recent consequenc­e of the multiple interactio­ns that have taken place has been the withdrawal by India from vital positions that came under the control of the Army in the Pangong Tso sector. This was on the understand­ing that the PLA would reciprocat­e in the other sectors that were discussed during talks between the two sides, both military and civilian. Rather than opening talks on “dis-engagement” in a sector where conditions on the field conferred an advantage to India, such talks should preferably have focussed on sectors where the other side had seized an advantage. The withdrawal from other sectors by the PLA has yet to take place, which ought not to be much of a surprise, given the change in tone and tactics by that military in the era of General Secretary Xi Jinping. Successive government­s in India have expended a considerab­le amount of time in seeking better relations with both Pakistan and China. Given the unimpressi­ve yield from such efforts, perhaps a more productive use of time would have been to work harder in other ways. This would be geared towards ensuring that in the event of a single or two-front kinetic conflict, India would not face its attackers alone as in past wars but would reap the benefit of a previously agreed logistics chain bringing the material needed to ensure that on both fronts, the armed forces of India prevail. Also needed is to work towards a situation where any such attacker would face the consequenc­es of escalation dominance from newfound allies of the world’s most populous democracy. Planning with present and prospectiv­e partners needs to be meticulous for these requisites to be met, and those who have supported Narendra Modi from the time he was CM of Gujarat remain confident that such a process must be taking place under his (now national) watch. The next conflict will show this. Given the overall situation where China under Xi is concerned, those wagering on “peace in our time” are likely to be proved wrong, that too before the next Lok Sabha polls in 2024. The impression of a melange of confusing and sometimes conflictin­g policy moves on the crafting of a “worst case” security matrix needs to be replaced with public awareness that the Modi government has been planning in a manner designed for

India to prevail in a future contest. More than anything else, such an outcome would give citizens the energy and confidence needed to ensure rapid progress across a variety of fronts. Among the reasons why Narendra Modi is much more popular than Rahul Gandhi is that in interactio­ns with the public, the former implants hope within the people, the latter despair. Success would promote hope, failure despair.

While he was in the opposition, the current President of Seychelles was opposed to a naval base that would be built by India. He needs to reflect on the swarm of Chinese “fishing boats” plying the waters of the Philippine­s, and on the intrusions and occupation by the PLA of waters that in Un-sanctioned law belong to the other members of ASEAN. The naval base proposed by India would protect the Seychelles and nearby island countries from a Philippine-style invasion of their space. Such a violation would of course be in violation of UN convention­s that Wang Yi once again recently swore to abide by. Keeping the Indo-pacific free and open would benefit each of the littoral countries of those waters, and this explains the warm response from them to PM Modi and EAM Jaishankar’s vigorous diplomacy throughout the Indo-pacific Rim.

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