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Chinese Chequers at LAC: Is India making the right moves?
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MAJOR GENERAL (RETD) S.B. ASTHANA | 13 Oct, 2020
The current China-India standoff in Eastern Ladakh has seen multiple
rounds of talks failing to ease tensions, with continued troop build-up
under the shadow of talks. While negotiations roll over to the seventh
military-level talks amidst an environment of deep mistrust, there is
very little hope that the promise of not sending additional troops to
the borders will get implemented, despite logistics during winters
making standoff even more complex.
India should not accept that
China, having marched in areas where it was not supposed to be, junking
all CBMs as part of the overall 'Incremental Encroachment Strategy' to
unilaterally alter the status quo along the Line of Actual Control (LAC)
in its favour and expecting India to accept nominal disengagement while
Chinese troops continue to be sitting in Depsang, Finger 8 to Finger 4
and some other areas. The Chinese are also not comfortable with Indian
proactive gestures of effective domination of some Chushul
heights/Kailash Range, in areas South of Pangong Tso and some heights
North of Finger 4; hence the game of posturing and muscle flexing
continues with either side refusing to blink first.
Chinese strategic and tactical intent
The
Chinese political aim in the Asian context has always been to have a
China-centric Asia, for which forcing Indian subordination has been its
goal. The Chinese strategic aim to pick Eastern Ladakh is to provide
depth to its highway NH G-219, Karakoram Pass and CPEC, redraw LAC as
per its perception and negotiate the border thereafter. China does feel
threatened by Indian dispositions in India's Sub Sector North (SSN)
including DBO, infrastructure development including DSDBO road, and the
Indian resolve to reclaim its territory of Jammu and Kashmir, posing a
threat to the crucial Tibet-Xinjiang-Pakistan connectivity and BRI
prospects. The PLA's centre of gravity of military operations is Eastern
Ladakh and the build-up/intended gains in the rest of the LAC are
efforts to pick up bargaining chips.
The PLA's tactical aim is to
launch probing actions to gain some tactically significant features
sensitive to Indian defence before heavy snowfall, which can
collectively improve its strategic posture or bargaining position. The
Indian military is well aware of these intentions; hence the reluctance
of Chinese verifiable withdrawal could lead to probing actions/reactions
to
improve tactical posture. Some more incidents of tug of war
between two forces can't be ruled out every time the Chinese try to
probe into Indian territory. The standoff is likely to roll over to
winter for which the Indian military is fully prepared, providing an
option to decision makers not to hurry up disengagement on terms
unsuitable for long-term security of India.
Chinese existing concerns
Strategically,
President Xi Jinping miscalculated global anger against himself while
trying to make the best of Chinese early recovery from COVID-19. Having
made an unwarranted aggressive move in Ladakh, along with similar
activities in South and East China Sea, President Xi Jinping now faces
major democracies standing up against China's overambitious aggressive
design, with few bankrupt countries standing by its side to handle
multiple engagement points. The gross violation of CBMs in Ladakh by
China has opened all military options for India, besides responses in
economic, diplomatic and other domains, with international opinion in
its favour. A pullback has a heavy domestic political cost for Xi
Jinping, besides the threat of occupation of vacated areas by India.
Pushing the PLA to make some quick gains before the winters and engaging
in talks to freeze the situation thereafter to retain its gains is the
Chinese game plan.
What should be Indian responses?
The
speedy mobilisation and proactive military actions of India surprised
China. The Indian response in multiple domains (including economic and
diplomatic) has triggered a hard global stance against the unfair
adventurism of China. No country wants war; hence India too would like
to have peaceful borders, but not at the cost of Chinese unilateral
occupation of areas or changed LAC in favour of China. Talks alone are
unlikely to make the PLA recoil. India will have to raise the cost of
PLA's presence in unauthorised areas like Depsang even if it amounts to a
long haul on LAC and some military options besides what is being done.
India
needs to avoid any quick fix diplomatic solutions like five-point
agreement, seeking fresh CBMs, mutual disengagement and ideas like
buffer zones which help the Chinese agenda like many other historic
errors in the past. Pulling back from freshly occupied heights south of
Pangong Tso will be a strategic disaster for India. This requires
political, diplomatic and military decision makers to be on the same
page. The Indian strategic aim should be to insist on proper
delimitation and demarcation of the LAC (which is difficult but doable),
pending settlement of the border issue. Any softer stance will lead to
reoccurrence of a similar situation which is not in India's security
interest.
What should be the global response?
The world
has to realise that China has got emboldened with the success of
incremental encroachment of territory without fighting in the past,
especially in the South China Sea. This prompted Xi Jinping to open
multiple fronts for territorial gains amidst the pandemic, diverting
domestic and international criticism against himself/CCP. With multiple
fronts, exposed sea lanes of communications and isolated bases,
China soon finds its vast inventory of military assets too meagre to
cover all its vulnerabilities.
Chinese aggression on multiple
fronts has necessitated the need for an Indo-Pacific alliance of
democratic countries which can be built up by strengthening Quad, by
converting it to a military alliance on the lines of NATO. With global
economic and population fulcrum shifting to the Indo-Pacific, it has
become inescapable for lasting peace in the region, because if Chinese
assertiveness and encroachment is not controlled now, the democracies
will have to face a much more aggressive threat from the Chinese
authoritarian regime, and punishments such as choking of the global sea
lane of communication like South China Sea.
(Maj Gen S.B. Asthana
is a veteran infantry general and strategic analyst. The views
expressed are personal and of the author, who retains the copyright. He
can be reached at shashiasthana29@gmail.com and @asthana_shashi on
Twitter)
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