The Trijunction Stand-Off: Raking in Gains For India
The real and diplomatic gains are pouring in for India for taking on the mantle
of checking China, at least in South Asia.
The fresh developments have resulted in a quick flurry of reciprocal
diplomatic moves from the US, Canada, South Korea, Japan, Vietnam, Australia,
and some favorable media commentary from the US too.
These broadly favour India vis a vis Pakistan's designs on the Kashmir
Valley. And by proxy, they undermine China and its other belligerent dependent,
North Korea.
Very significantly, there have been absolutely no calls for India to stand
down unilaterally at the China, Bhutan, India trijunction near Sikkim.
America has instead pointedly begun to get a move on its military relationship and support of India.
This is taking place legislatively in the backdrop of the recently
concluded Malabar Naval exercises with India,the US, and Japan participating.
This time the Malabar, that had Australia and Singapore in it earlier in
addition, emphasised anti-submarine warfare.
This is in counterpoint to China, which has deployed its large fleet of
submarines in addition to its battleships, including an aircraft carrier of its
own.
Australia is most concerned about restrictions on the use of the South
China Sea, as more than sixty percent of its trade passes through it.
It has recently overcome its reservations on supplying Uranium to India,
joining Canada in doing so.
Singapore, with enormous commercial shipping using its ports, is also worried
by China’s attitude.
Other countries affected by Chinese highhandedness, with rapacious trade
deals, over-priced infrastructure, claims on international waterways, include
Vietnam, the Philippines, Borneo, Japan, Indonesia, Myanmar, Laos, Sri Lanka,
Thailand and a number of African nations.
The latest addition overground, is Mongolia, with a newly elected leader
opposed to Chinese domination whom India has invited to visit.
Russia, though not yet affected by Chinese imperialism, and working with
both Pakistan and China, is clear it wants to continue to partner India's
military modernisation.
The US, apart from expediting the sale and joint-venturing of high technology
military equipment, has sanctioned, in the US House of Representatives, a hefty
budget running into over $ 600 billion.
This is to be spent on military cooperation with India, and the US is
drawing up plans on how to best to go about it.
The enabling Bill, to be processed via the Senate and the President, is
unprecedented in terms of its scale and intent.
India, on its part, is rapidly overcoming its reservations on military
participation alongside the US in Afghanistan, and the mutual access to each
other's military bases and ports.
Calls for direct military help to India are growing louder in the US from leaders
such as former Senator Larry Pressler and current Congressman Ted Poe, amongst
others.
As America reviews its Afghanistan-Pakistan-India South Asia policy, there
is a compelling case for encouraging the restive independence movements of
peoples along the Durand Line.
Balochistan has an 1100 km border with Afghanistan, and would-be
Pakhtunistan, accounts for the remainder of the porous 2,430 km
Afghanistan-Pakistan contiguity.
America has, in addressing the problems of terrorism emanating from
Pakistan, stopped $350 million in reimbursement of military aid, citing that
the latter has not done anything to reign in terrorist organisations, naming
several, operating from its soil.
Elsewhere, the US is asserting the international right to freely use the
South China Sea by way of overflights and US ships passing through it.
China has ignored the adverse ruling against it by the arbitrators at the
International Court of Justice and continues to maintain an aggressive posture.
Canada has, at last, stopped the funding of Pakistani terrorist outfits
acting against India, from its soil, and South Korea has cancelled its plans to
work on hydropower projects in Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK).
Vietnam has invited India afresh to explore for oil and gas in the South
China Sea, despite Chinese threats.
China's huge debt burden, amounting to 250% of its Gross Domestic Product
(GDP), and massive industrial and
infrastructure-building over-capacity, has also prompted it to embark on a grandoise,
if frantic course.
It seeks to dominate countries and whole continents, with offers of
projects in road, rail, and industry, in
the name of a seemingly visionary, but in truth spurious,
"connectivity".
Spurious, because China under President Xi Jinping actually seeks to kick
the can of imminent collapse of the Chinese economy, already slowed to half of
its peak, down the road.
It is attempting to cleverly embroil the account books of scores of other
countries in the process.
China has also developed a strange way of refusing to adhere to negotiated
agreements, going back on them, introducing new elements by referring back in
time to obscure premises, or flouting them altogether.
This has made it clear, at least to India, that the only way to persuade it
to behave, is to resist it militarily.
Despite bilateral Indian overtures and at fora like BRICS and the G20
recently, China chooses, almost every time, to react with arrogance.
It seeks to expand BRICS, to take in several more countries, including
Pakistan, to do away with any possibility of much Indian influence. It has blocked
the Indian bid to join the Nuclear Suppliers’ Group (NSG), and has refused to allow Pakistani terrorist masterminds
be named at the UN.
But now, India has at last taken the other tack, and stood up to China.
It has done so, much to China's amazement, unilaterally, confidently, and
very visibly - three times in quick succession.
The first time was in April this year, then again in mid-May, and yet again
at end-June.
The last China has found particularly astounding, because it is an eyeball
to eyeball confrontation, at the trijunction.
Meanwhile, during the stand-off there have been highly successful Indian
bilateral visits to the US and Israel, also unsettling for China.
It is this stand-off at the trijunction however, that has made the
strategic establishment around the world sit up.
The first of the recent unilateral Indian actions was when it allowed the
Dalai Lama's visit to Arunachal Pradesh and the Tawang Buddhist Monastery
there, in April, ignoring vehement Chinese objections.
A subset of this development took place in early July, when the Tibetan
Government in exile in India was allowed to perform religious ceremonies and
unfurl the Tibetan flag on the Indian side of the Pangong Lake in Ladakh, in
full view of the TV cameras.
In May, India ignored China's mega summit over the One-Best-One-Road (OBOR)
initiative, citing violations of its sovereignty in PoK, general opacity, and
lack of wider consultations.
Towards end-June, in reaction, to China's attempt to change the status quo,
yet again, because this is the scene of earlier land grab attempts too, came
the stand-off at the trijunction.
India's National Security Adviser, Ajit Doval is in China as I write this,
meeting with his counterparts from BRICS on the 27th and 28th July.
There is intense speculation, and therefore an outside chance, that Doval
would hold discussions on the matter.
But equally, because a climb-down is not on the cards for India, he may
choose to delink the BRICS visit from the stand-off altogether.
That Prime Minister Modi is also expected in Beijing in early September for
the BRICS Summit, is adding grist to the mill.
There is a compelling case for the Chinese to maintain a status quo and
treat the stand-off in the minor key- better for the Chinese Communist Party
Summit in November, when several members of the Politburo will be changed.
Besides, Chinese trade with India tops $70 billion, and it does not make
much sense to imperil it.
However, from the domestic point of view, will Chinese pride in its
military prowess, allow it to let India go unpunished?
India is confident on its part, that, at least at the trijunction, it has
the military advantage.
In addition, China has not only ignored the Indian position on PoK by building
a road through it, but has now issued a threat of military intervention in the
Kashmir Valley too. This, on the back of unsolicited offers to mediate.
The face-off at the trijunction, apart from its strategic military
objectives, is a struggle for broader credibility for both countries.
China wants to be taken seriously as the rising dominant. And India, with
its alternative narrative, has invited the leadership of 10 ASEAN countries, to
its next Republic Day celebrations. It is determined to call the Chinese bluff.
For: The Sunday Guardian
(1,398 words)
July 27th, 2017
Gautam Mukherjee
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