Wednesday, November 12, 2025

 

Warm Bhutan India Ties Reinforced By Modi Visit

Strategically located but land-locked, Bhutan is bordered by both India and China, with the latter regularly negotiating land concessions from the tiny kingdom.

India has traditionally been a  non-predatory support to the kingdom with regular concessionary loans, electricity purchases, and a defence protection pact with it. India and Bhutan also have long-standing cultural ties, and at present has loaned it some sacred  Piprahwa relics of Lord Buddha for a 10 day period during a special Peace Prayer.

Bhutan has always favoured its autonomy and unique ways, including emphasis on its world famous ‘Gross Domestic Happiness’.

 In this current two-day visit, not postponed, despite an Islamic terror attack in New Delhi’s Red Fort area by JeM and ADuG inspired operatives, Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India and King Jigme Khesar Wangchuk, the fourth Druk Gyalpo, jointly inaugurated the 1020MW  Punatsangchhuu-II hydroelectric project. The occasion also marked the King’s 70th birthday.

The project inauguration was hailed as a milestone in the vibrant and growing mutually beneficial partnership between India and Bhutan. India also announced a new concessional line of credit of Rs 4,000 crores for Bhutan to fund other energy projects.

Bhutan currently produces all its electricity from renewable energy and has a negative carbon footprint. This latest hydroelectric project will increase electricity production from hydro sources by 40%. India will also assist in the resumption of work on the main dam structure of 1200 MW at Punatsangchhu.

To promote connectivity for Bhutan and give it easy access to India’s vast markets a new initiative is about to unfold. The Bhutanese border towns of Gelephu and Samtse will be joined with India’s vast railway network shortly. Bhutan intends developing the Gelephu Mindfulness City as a consequence. India will establish an immigration check post at Hatisar, just across from Gelemphu and develop infrastructure on its side of the border.

The two countries signed 3 MoUs during this visit of 11-12 November 2025,  on renewable energy, mental health services, and healthcare.

India had earlier also announced a contribution of Rs 10,000 crores in 2024, towards Bhutan’s Five-Year Plan of development in areas such as roads, agriculture, finance, healthcare.

The railway connectivity with buffer state Bhutan will also help strengthen infrastructure to protect the so-called Chicken Neck  and the Siliguri Corridor overseen by China from the Doklam plateau. India has already strengthened its military presence in the area of the Chicken Neck including the revival of a WWII airport in the area, the placement of troops, missiles, fighter aircraft and other items. It has also been conducting elaborate military exercises in all its border regions to ensure preparedness and smooth coordination between the different arms of the military

This is important because, in addition to China, Bangladesh and Pakistan have also been taking a renewed interest in the Chicken Neck and Siliguri Corridor area, vital for India’s communication and connectivity with its North Eastern States.

Bhutan is not very comfortable with Chinese attention and blandishments towards development and trade, because as a hereditary kingdom it is wary of the powerful Communist dictatorship. However, there are some in its population and political makeup that favour closer ties with China. Bhutan therefore has to perform a careful balancing act between India and China.

Matters have improved somewhat because of China’s rivalry with the US and the weakening of its economy. It is preoccupied with its own troubles and less interested with outside adventurism abroad. Much of the billions it has spent on its belt and road initiatives plus its string of pearls strategy has gone bad.

India, on its part, has identified two chicken neck like areas in Bangladesh with access to the Bay of Bengal in both cases, which makes it vulnerable to outside attack and capture. This could restrain its ability to seek any misadventure against India. India also controls much of the water that flows into Bangladesh and could cancel its water sharing arrangements just as it has with Pakistan. Likewise it is dependent on India for electricity to a large extent. A misadventure could nevertheless happen, because of jingoism and miscalculation, egged on by Pakistan and China.  However neither country may in the end get directly involved nor will any other Islamic country Bangladesh might count on, such as Turkiye.  Myanmar is also going through a troubled relationship with Bangladesh.  So if a military misadventure goes wrong for it, it could trifurcate Bangladesh territory as it stands.

The fact that India is rapidly improving its defences and aatmanirbhar defence preparedness is important. In a demonstrator by way of its highly successful showing in  the  short Operation Sindoor against the combination of Pakistan assisted by China, was most telling. Nobody in the neighbourhood including a China that prefers to use proxies in conflicts, is left sure of itself in any future conflict with India.

India’s exports of armaments and the demand for them has risen sharply since Operation Sindoor. Meanwhile new systems are being added that extend its range, speed, surveillance and technology. A possibility of Operation Sindoor 2.0 in kinetic mode is hovering in the air and could do substantially more damage to Pakistan than the earlier one. The Taliban in Afghanistan are already at war with Pakistan but have mended fences with India.

All this is also not lost on tiny Bhutan as it weighs its options.

(885 words)

November 12th, 2025

For: Firstpost/News18.com

Gautam Mukherjee

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