India Is Now Working To Free Tibet
India Is Now Working To Free Tibet
The liberation of Tibet
2020 has claimed its first martyr, a 51 year old Company Leader, Nyima Tenzin,
of the Special Frontier Force (SFF). Founded in 1962, the SSF is a special commando
group of Tibetans in exile, integrated with, and working alongside the
Indian Army.
Tenzin, a father of
three, died, some reports say, after stepping on a Chinese landmine planted under
the snow, not now, but back in 1962. Other reports state he was shot in the
neck by the Chinese. His funeral, with full military honours will take place
today on the 7th of September. His body was draped in both the
Indian flag and the flag of free Tibet.
This death, and the outflanking of the entire LaC
issue it symbolises, is the new strategic landscape in Ladakh.
India has revamped its
military posture. The Rubicon has been crossed politically. By going up well
behind the LaC, over 4 km deep, capturing the territory and features in
between, India has turned the tables. The Chinese now have to contend with a proactive
India that has abandoned its defensive game.
India now controls as
many as 39 of the high points along the Pangong Tso. These give India oversight
and military advantages all along the Pangong Tso, South to North. There is
line of vision in other strategic directions as well.
These heights, connected
valleys, roads, and passes, have not been captured in a token sense, for the
purposes of exerting pressure on the ongoing negotiations. They are designed to
effect a military domination of the theatre of confrontation and are to be seen
as a signature to a new policy.
The initial capture of
the heights began on 29-30 August, after a Chinese attempt to unilaterally
alter the status quo on the South bank of the Pangong Tso. It was reinforced
with heavy armoured vehicles, tanks and missiles, some of it in place within
hours. These took up position in the valley overlooking both Pangong Tso and
Chushul.
This rapid deployment
has taken away the initiative from the PLA and the Chinese leadership in the
CCP back in Beijing. Four months after the latest Chinese intrusions began in
May, the ground situation has been radically altered.
All Chinese positions
after the intrusions, and even in the massed areas behind the front lines have
been rendered vulnerable. In fact, the recapture of territory lost in 1962 has
begun.
India is no longer
acting for a restoration of the status quo as it was in April 2020. There will
be no Indian pullback, no giving back of captured territory. The changed
scenario has put the focus on the reclamation of over 1,000 sq.km in Ladakh encroached
upon since the late 1950s.
By using the SSF as the
spearhead, India is gaining from its legendary ferocity, prowess, its
considerable knowledge of the terrain, and ability to fight at elevated heights
in extreme conditions.
Underlining the new
thrust which has cut through the stalled talks, is a bid to free Tibet and undo
a historical wrong from the 1950s.
India has always had a
peaceful Indo-Tibetan border for centuries. And the disruption, destruction,
murder and humiliation wrought by Chairman Mao’s China will have to be
obliterated if India is to see peace along its northern borders once more.
India has begun a
process that apparently has the full diplomatic backing of the United States.
This, given the bellicose stand taken by President Xi Jinping with multiple
countries simultaneously, in the region, and the world. Both The NATO allies
and the EU are now clear they will have to resist Chinese imperialism.
Meanwhile President Xi
Jinping has unleashed a new wave of repression in Tibet as China fears a groundswell
of rebellion.
India will have to free
the occupied territories in Siachen, Akshai Chin and Ladakh first. And this is
the face of hysterical threats from the Chinese.
But India’s priorities
have changed beyond going back and forth on an undefined LaC. China is fond of
citing obscure historical and cultural precedents, even as it refuses to honour
treaties or recognise any of the older or colonial era protocols.
India has now moved on.
It has decided not to engage with ever changing Chinese maps of the LaC region,
all 4,000 km or so of it. The Chinese, on their part, think the LaC is only 2,500
km. long, because they claim Arunachal Pradesh as theirs, calling it South
Tibet.
China has also advanced
unsustainable claims in Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, and the
Sikkim/Bhutan areas. These have become
ever more aggressive over the years, and made a mockery of negotiations at all
levels of interaction. In addition, China is playing a predatory role in PoK ,
Gilgit-Baltistan directly, and via Pakistan as well.
India has no choice but to
outflank existing Chinese strategies and tactics. To place China on the mat the
best course is to put Tibet, captured by Red China as recently as the 1950s,
back into contention.
This will no doubt see
India foraying across the LaC regularly, and at various points along it, to
create military advantages and pursue the broader objective. Every excursion
will hopefully result in gain of territory that will not be returned to China.
All this cannot happen
without a fight or perhaps many skirmishes to come. But China is already aware,
judging by its agitation at its Defence Minister level, that it is a battle
ignited out on the fringes of its empire that it will find hard to sustain and
win. The hostile Tibetans, armed and trained by India and its allies, will do
everything to help themselves.
It could turn into a
debacle for China going forward, no less humiliating than the defeat of the
USSR in Afghanistan. Certainly, the dragon is not likely to see a day’s rest
from now onwards.
(971 words)
September 7th, 2020
For: WIONEWS
Gautam Mukherjee
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