Friday, July 10, 2020

India’s National Security Strategy 2020 Inescapable Imperatives-- “China Containment”

 

China presented itself as India’s ‘Implacable Enemy’ when a China Occupied Tibet obliterating Independent Tibet as a centuries old buffer state in 1950,  China imposed  its borders with India on India’s Himalayan Watershed  raising irredentist claims against India on centuries-old established geographical frontiers.

China in 2020 with its military adventurism in Eastern Ladakh sequentially and relentlessly following seven decades of similar military provocations violating multiple China-India Border Agreements, emboldened by “China Appeasement’ and ‘Risk Aversion’ policies of past Indian Governments leaves no political or strategic space for India other than adopting a firm policy of “China Containment”.

China foisted a militarily adventurist borders dispute on India which China has perpetuated for 70 years defying all reasonable solutions. Chi has deliberately impeded solution of China Occupied Tibet-India Himalayan Border Dispute as any demarcation resulting from satisfactory solution would rob China of leverages against India of political and military coercion.

Fast forwarding history of China-India conflictual relations and border turbulences inflicted by China ‘Slow Creep’ of nibbling away at Indian Line of Actual Control on pretext of ‘Perceptional Differences” on alignment of the demarcated Line of Actual Control, interspersed with the Sino-India War 1062 and the 1967, 1975 and 1986.87 major China-India militany standoffs the picture in Mid-May 2020 is “Grim”.

China –India Military Confrontation in 2020, as I have reflected in my Book ‘China-India Military Confrontation: 21st Century Perspectives’ in 2015 and my various Papers and Lectures thereafter is that China-India Military Confrontation is no longer a mere “Boundary Dispute” but has graduated into the realm of Asia’s most pronounced and defining geopolitical rivalries with long term strategic implications.

Geopolitical rivalries draw-in other Major Powers with stakes in Asian Security and more pointedly in the new geopolitical construct of Indo Pacific, and especially when Asia’s two Major Powers are militarily jostling each other on their contested borders with massed military strengths.

Contemporaneously, it needs to be highlighted that in the backdrop of the current intensifying China-India Military Confrontation in 2020 is marked by two major factors—one geopolitical, and the other military.

Geopolitically, China in 2020 is geopolitically weakly placed, both regionally and globally. This arises from global concerns of Major Powers that China is on a wild aggressive rampage across Indo Pacific reminiscent of Hitler’s unchecked rampage across Europe on eve of World War II in late 1930s.

The military factor that pervades and rattles China in 2020 is that especially in the period 2014-20 under current Indian PM Narendra Modi, India has fast-tracked its border defence infrastructure in Eastern Ladakh in terms of roads, bridges and forward airfields in close vicinity of Indian Territory of Aksai Chin militarily usurped by China in 1050s to build the Chinese Highway through it linking China Occupied Tibet with China Occupied Xingjian. China perceives that India’s developed border infrastructure makes both the Aksai Chin Highway and China’s flagship Pakistan project of CPEC Highway passing through Pakistan Occupied Kashmir.

Additionally, India in the last six years India has started closing in the asymmetrical differentials in its military power with China in conventional military power. India has achieved credible nuclear deterrence with China with Beijing under India’s missiles ranges.

it is against this geopolitical and military backdrop that the current Galwan Military Clashes and Standoff needs to be viewed and analysed.

India after 70 years has finally shed its ‘Political Timidity’ in facing China’s relentless mix of political and military coercion on the Line of Control, China’s relentless offensive to downsize India and to impede India’s emergence as an Emerged Power.

In Mid-2020, India’s relations with China can be characterised as one of intense “Strategic Distrust” of China, and to use the Chinese phrase applied by China to its friendship with its ‘Iron Brother’-Pakistan’ that India’s ‘Strategic Distrust’ of China is as “High as the Himalayas and as Deep as the Indian Ocean”.

Seventy years of ‘China Appeasement’ and ‘Risk Aversion’ policies of past Indian Governments has resulted in India reaching a ‘Tipping Point’ in post Mid-May 2020 Eastern Ladakh military clashes inflicted by PLA Chinese Army resulting in PM Modi assertively declaring that “Era of Expansionism is Over”

 This assertion was made by PM Modi on his visit to HQ 14 Corps and troops of Ladakh Garrison facing China’s massed Army formations in China Occupied Tibet. The Indian Prime Minister without naming China but abundantly and unmistakeably aimed this expression at China made in context of Galwan clashes.

 The assertion ‘Era of Expansionism is Over’ and that India’s Sovereignty will be defended at every inch was putting China on notice of India’s intent that henceforth in relation to Chinese military misadventures against India on the Line of Actual Control will be militarily contested with matching Indian military force.

The ‘Expansionism’ reference was very apt and timely because China in the period 2004-14 of Congress Government had nibbled away at Indian Territory in Ladakh to expand its military presence in Eastern Ladakh contested space on Line of Control claimed by China as per their perceptions.

The Indian Prime Mistier has given full control to Indian Army Commanders along India-China Occupied Tibet Borders to deal with PLA Chinese Army military provocations, intrusions and transgressions displaying an unprecedented political trust in India’s Military Commanders facing Chinese Armed Forces might.

Where does India go from here in terms of its National Security Strategy in face of China’s intensifying military escalation along the Line of Control and its stubbornness in not agreeing to disengage and deescalate and respect the military status quo ante as it existed in Eastern Ladakh as it existed on May 05 2020 when China first clashed with Indian Army in Galwan Area and which led to two weeks later of the May 15 clashes in which Indian Army lost 20 soldiers lives and China had 43 soldiers killed by ferocity of Indian Army troops foiling the Chinese Army attempts to enlarge its presence in Galwan Valley.

At the time of this writing, it is being reported that China has reluctantly started making token withdrawals from the clash-points in Eastern Ladakh but not from the Pangong Lake area.

 China under contemporary geopolitical pressures may seemingly be giving up its stubbornness of not restoring status quo ante by token and partial disengagement and de-escalation. But that should only be deemed as a politically expedient step but not a credible change in China’s implacable hostility or cessation of its military adventurism and brinkmanship in times to come.

The Indian Republic has to guard against unnecessary hype with such developments as stated above or celebrate any forthcoming Chinese disengagement of troops in Eastern Ladakh or de-escalation.

The Indian Prime Minister with the contextual backdrop of May-July 20202 Chinese military adventurism should finally recognise and concede that China despite his political outreaches to the Chinese President Xi Jinping in Wuhan Informal Summit 2017 and Chennai Informal Summit 2019 is lathe to give up Chinese military adventurism on India’s Borders with China Occupied Tibet.

Objective analysis by even impassioned political observers would concede that in 2020 viewing the geopolitical dimensions that now dominate China-India Military Confrontation, no political or strategic space exists for India to hope that “Expansionist China” would be amenable to any Conflict Resolution or Confidence Building Measures.

India in 2020 has now seriously deliberate and consider that contextually in terms of Indian National Security Strategy India has only one prudent policy option to undertake, and that is one of “China Containment”

India’s ‘China Containment” will obviously be frowned upon in Indian policy establishment and diplomatic circles but wisdom should dawn on them that historically “Revisionist Powers” bent on imposing an “Expansionist Template” need to be checked by “Containment Strategies” by all Powers---Major or Small-= - in unison before Indo Pacific security and stability is irretrievably fractured.

India cannot be a back-bencher and shy away from “China Containment” when China seemingly and demonstrably by its military adventurism is inviting such a reaction.

India’s “China Containment” strategy would necessarily be multi-pronged—political, economic and military and architectured with long term perspectives in view and more importantly unmindful of and independent of any politically expedient Chinese policy reach- outs to wean away India from India’s adoption of the Indo Pacific Security Template by the multilateral “QUAD” Initiative.

Detailed recommendations for “China Containment” strategy that India should put it motion would be the subject of analysis of a separate Paper.

Concluding, it needs to be asserted that with a case for “China Containment” policy by India having been established above, despite the opposition of India’s ‘China Apologists’ and ‘;Non Alignment Gladiators” of yore, the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has the onerous task of finally dispensing India’s decades old ‘China Appeasement’ and ‘Risk Aversion’ policies of past Congress Governments. China’s Expansionism can only be curtailed by headlong push-back with a National Security Strategy of “China Containment.

 

 

 

 

 

The Indian Republic has to put in motion the process of a devising a new National Security Strategy. Inherent in such a new Strategic Blueprint would be a realisation that the ‘China Threat’ is LIVE and unlikely to fade away. It also entails incorporating in such a new Strategy the inescapable strategic imperative of “China Containment”.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, June 30, 2020

INDIA SQUARELY FACES CHINA IN MILITARY CLASHES IN EASTERN LADAKH BORDERS WITH CHINA OCCUPIED TIBET

China in mid-May 2020 indulged in military escalation at multiple points on India's borders with China Occupied Tibet in Eastern Ladakh Sector in tandem with its escalation in South  China Sea and East China Sea against Japan.
 
Unlike past border confrontations, China's aggression against India was squarely met by military force by India. This resulted in loss of 20 Indian soldiers lives but China paid the price in terms of 43 or more Chinese soldiers dead in clashes. China was initially hesitant to concede loss of Chinese soldiers lives in military clashes with India.
 
Significantly and symbolically, this is a tipping point in the nature and dimensions of India's responses to Chinese military provocations generated from massed Chinese military forces deployed in China Occupied Tibet.
 
Today, India reportedly has reinforced its military deployments in Ladakh and along the entire stretch of the 4,000 km long India-China Occupied Tibet Himalayan Borders mostly lying in high-altitudes of over 12,000 feet.
 
India seems to be signalling to China with near-matching military deployments opposite Chinese military forces  that it intends to "squarely" face any Chinese attempts to alter the status-quo of the existing Line of Actual Control (LAC) anywhere on the India-China-Occupied Borders.
 
China in the last 70 years has consistently refused to settle the territorial boundary dispute with India and has kept tensions alive to perpetuate its attempted political and military coercion of India.
 
India in 2020 in terms of its political will of its leadership and India's war-preparedness to meet the China Threat is unlike the 1962 Sino-Indian Military Conflict where a military debacle was foisted on the proud and highly professional Indian Army due to failure of war-preparedness by political leadership of India's first PM Jawaharlal Nehru with his starry-eyed illusionary attachment to Communist China's emergence and its military intentions.
 
Significantly, it has to be observed that China in keeping with its strategy employed all over the Indo Pacific once again demonstrated its propensity to resort to military aggression and conflict on territorial disputes and also renege on past Agreements signed with India---at least half a dozen since 1996--- to maintain peace and tranquillity on the borders.
 
China may have got away by bullying its way and coercing militarily its smaller ASEAN neighbours in the South China Sea territorial disputes but in case of India the picture is different.
 
India today is a Sub-Continental Emerged Power with high economic growth rates and  modern Indian Armed Forces.
 
India under PM Modi in the last six years has been seriously engaged in reducing the military differentials with China and also fast-tracking its development of defence infrastructure in its border regions with China Occupied Tibet.
 
The above has rattled China along with India's growing geopolitical stature in the world coupled with a substantive US-India Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.
 
The India-China Occupied Border territorial dispute perpetuated  by China, going by present portents, has all the ingredients to emerge as the most combustible military flashpoints in Indo Pacific Asia and in which the Major Powers of the Indo Pacific would not have the luxury of passive spectators.
 
 
 
 

Thursday, June 18, 2020

INDO PACIFIC SECURITY AND US PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS 2020

The United States will soon be engulfed in US Presidential Elections and campaign politics and it needs to be emphasised that the US political contenders adopt a bipartisan approach to the challenge of maintaining security and stability in the Indo Pacific Region.

Peace and stability in the Indo Pacific stands threatened by China on all its peripheries. China is also engaged in an unremitting US-China Trade War which prompts China to generate added turbulence in the region,

China can be expected to target US audiences by digital means to ensure that incumbent US President Trump is not elected for a second term as US President.

China's targeting of President Trump emerges from a visceral hatred of President Trump for his hard-line policies against China extending from Trade Wars to intensifying US Navy FONOPS in South China Sea and co-opting India as a major partners of United States in Indo Pacific security and the QUAD which existentially will apply brakes to China's unbridled aggression in South China Sea.

The main challenge to disturb or disrupt Indo Pacific security contextually would therefore emanate from China which could possibly attempt to exploit any political divisiveness that at times erupts in heated electioneering campaigns. 

China perceptively has already commenced the process by creating heated turbulence in the South China Sea and the Northern Borders of India with China Occupied Tibet.

In both of the above strategic locations, the United States in 2020 has legitimate security stakes by virtue of its commitments to East Asian security or the security of the Western Pacific wherein the United States is a 'Resident Power' by virtue of its security treaties.

India matters high in 2020 United States geopolitical calculus and relevant to United States strategic template for Indo Pacific Security. This is anathema for China which views this strategic development as upsetting the balance of power against China.

Both Republican Party and Democratic Party Presidents in the past have stood committed to the larger issue of South China Sea security as security of the "Global Commons' and with varying nuances challenged China's aggressive misadventures in this critical maritime expanse.

Similarly, India has received bipartisan support of Republican and Democratic Party Presidents in terms of building up India as a Major Global Player and pivotal partner of United States in contributing towards Indo Pacific Security.

Contextually, therefore, in the coming US Presidential Elections campaigns South China Sea security and India's pivotal significance as the Free World's existential counterweight against China need to be politically be respected by both US political parties.

Concluding, it needs to be highlighted that China will attempt an intrusive digital influencing strategy in coming US Presidential Elections. China will make an all-out effort to sway election results away from President Trump's bid for a second term.

China in mid-2020 has emerged as a potent threat to United States security and the security of its Allies and Strategic Partners.  The China Threat to United States is even more than the Former Soviet Union was ever was.

The United States at all levels has to be therefore be vigilant to China's interference in US domestic policies in the run-up to Presidential Elections 2020.



Thursday, June 11, 2020

UNITED STATES CHINA POLICY THRUST-"CHINA CONTAINMENT" NOT "CONGAGEMENT

The United States has faltered grievously in its China-policy thrusts for the last two decades by dithering on facing China squarely when all indicators portended that China was in a calibrated strategy under-mining United States vital national security interests in the Indo Pacific Region.

The United States ignoring strategic imperatives for 'China-Containment' strategies shied away in arresting China's growing military adventurism on all its peripheries in the Indo Pacific.

The United States over-weighed by its 'China Hedging Strategies' and 'Risk Aversion Strategies' gave a flawed veneer to its faltering thrust on China by terming that the United States will adopt a policy thrust of "Congagement" with US strategists espousing the 'mantra' of 'Trust but Verify' and that the United States would make a cocktail of its China-policy thrust by blending part 'Containment' and part 'Engagement'.

The United States China-policy therefore can be asserted to be one of fudging the China Threat and its potent potential to challenge US predominance in the Indo Pacific.

Contextually, therefore in 2020, what stands proven is that United States China-policy of the last two decades with its misperceived notions that China would change with time into a benign power has miserably failed.

China has not only refused to change its  legacy aggressive stripes but gone headlong into a wild military aggression pattern all over the Indo Pacific combined with political, economic and military coercion against virtually all its neighbours excepting Pakistan. 

In the above process, he United States till lately suffered a serious dent in US image in Asian countries raising doubts that the United States was the guarantor and Nett provider of Indo Pacific security against China bent on claiming for itself "Strategic Frontiers" as opposed to well defined historical "Geographical Frontiers".

In 2020, when China now feels militarily empowered to challenge United States traditional predominance and hold on Indo Pacific Security, can the United States afford to still pursue its misperceived "Congagement" China-policy thrust? 

Surely, the United States cannot afford to pursue his China-policy thrust any longer as what would then be at stake is the United States continued embedment in Indo Pacific with all its attendant national security implications of a crumbled "Outer Perimeter of Defence" of US Homeland.

Post China Wuhan Virus19 Pandemic China today stands politically isolated with even Asian fence-sitters no longer enamoured by China.

This is an opportune moment for the United States in the Indo Pacific to adopt an active 'China Containment" policy thrust and galvanise Indo Pacific nations behind its leadership to send an unequivocal signal to China that Indo Pacific Nations with the United States in the lead will henceforth "PUSHBACK" China's military adventurism and all political, economic and military coercion.






 

Saturday, June 6, 2020

SOUTH CHINA SEA-GLOBAL OPTIONS TO FORCE CHINA TO VACATE ILLRGAL OCCUPATION

China has been in illegal military occupation of islands, reefs and shoals in the South China Sea belonging to Vietnam and the Philippines for virtually two decades. In recent weeks its aggressive propensities to enlarge its hold over the South China Sea has now touched Indonesia and Malaysia.

China's sovereignty claims over the South China Sea were dismissed in 2016 by the International Hague Tribunal which ruled China's sovereignty claims over the entire South China Sea based on dubious Pre-BC maps as null and void and without legal basis.

China thereafter has not only defied The Hague Tribunals ruling but redoubled its aggressive enlargement of control over South China Sea by construction of artificial islands which are heavily fortified with missiles, radars, naval jetties and airstrips capable of operating Fighter Planes of the Chinese Air Force.

Contextually, arising from the above, the following logical deductions emerge:
  • China has no intention to vacate its illegal military occupation of South China Sea maritime expanse. Its intentions are not benign. It seeks further expansion of its hold over the South China Sea.
  • Chia will not honour any international awards ruling against its illegal military occupation nor open to any Conflict-Resolution processes initiated globally or regionally.
  • China's long term intention is to transform the South China Sea into an 'Inland Sea of China' denying global access to maritime global commons and also the airspace above it.
  • China considers the South China Sea as its "Core Interest" and will not shirk from armed conflict to maintain its illegal hold and dominance over the South China Sea expanse.
Since China in pursuance of its expansionist impulses can hardly be expected to retreat or resile from its illegal occupation and sovereignty claims over the South China Sea, the Major Powers have to prevail over the global community, as a first step to adopt measures 'short of war' to make China's continued hold over the South China Sea "untenable".

Short of war, and war should be the last step, Major Powers  and global community as a united entity should devise multiple options against  Chinese aggression to comprehensively incorporate  political, economic, and China-containment Naval options without further delay. 

Politically, China needs to be "isolated" in all global and regional forums till such time China visibly and by demonstrated actions projects its earnestness to 'adhere to a rule-based international order respecting international laws and conventions'.

Politically, it is high time the Permanent Members of the UN Security Council strongly send a message to China that it cannot continue as a Permanent Member of UNSC when it wantonly indulges in endangering regional and global peace and stability.

Economically, and this is where China will be hurt most and damaged, is to impose economics sanctions against China. China's supply chains from all over the world which sustain China's economy and tangentially its military expansion need to be disrupted.

Economically, the United States has already initiated a US-China Trade War which needs further intensification and a follow-on spiral by other Major Nations and ASEAN in particular as the region most grieved by Chinese aggression in South China Sea.

Economically, countries like the United States, Japan, South Korea and Western Europe which have made significantly high FDIs in China should re-locate their companies and industries  from China to South East Asia and India.

In the military field, since China's aggression in South China Sea is predominantly naval and maritime based, the first priority is for Joint Naval Patrols of the type of US Navy FONOPs in South China Sea by Navies of all Major Powers and ASEAN Navies.

In the military field, since the next provocative step by China would be to declare a China-ADIZ over the South China Sea, a declaration of intent by Major Powers that in that eventuality they would be forced to military intervention to lift the China-ADIZ needs urgent declaration.

China is on a Hitlerian path that Hitler adopted in the run-up to Second World War with Nazi military formations on a wild aggressive rampage al over Central Europe without checkmating by the leading Powers of the day

 Do the Major Powers of the 21st Century wish to repeat 20th Century history of  permissiveness against a 'Revisionist Power' and not checkmating China in a Hitlerian-mould  on a wild rampage of aggression from the Western Pacific to icy-heights of India's borders with China Occupied Tibet?

South China Sea is only a symptomatic eruption of the larger disease that afflicts 21st Century China today----domination of the Indo Pacific Region as part of its expansive 'Great China Dream'.