The LAC, while unquestionably disputed is far more stable and cooperative than the LoC
By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 18th Sept 12
Is the growing militarization of the Line
of Actual Control (LAC), the border between China and India, an invitation to
open confrontation between the Asian giants? Could the Sino-Indian border
become like the Indo-Pakistan border, a flashpoint where daily jostling between
bitter enemies carries the danger of armed clashes, even outright war?
This is an important question. India is
adding four new divisions, with some 80,000 soldiers, to reinforce the seven
divisions that already defend the north-eastern states of Arunachal Pradesh and
Sikkim. Simultaneously, the Indian Air Force (IAF) has beefed up the Tezpur and
Chhabua air bases with capable Sukhoi-30MKI fighters. The IAF is upgrading five
more air bases and a string of advanced landing grounds (called ALGs) that will
allow big helicopters, light fixed wing aircraft and unmanned aerial vehicles
(UAVs, or drones) to operate along the border. Six squadrons of the indigenous
Akash anti-aircraft missile system will soon guard India’s vulnerable air space
along the Eastern Himalayas. Ground troops remain short of artillery fire
support but batteries of the indigenous Pinaka multi-barrel rocket launcher
have been sent to the northeast. And now comes the news (reported in this
newspaper yesterday) that two armoured brigades, with more than 500 T-90 tanks
and BMP-IIs will be deployed to the LAC for the first time. One of these will
be stationed in Ladakh, while the other will operate in the north-east.
India’s boundaries, it would appear, is
drawn in abbreviations. The LAC is the 3,488-kilometre long, de facto border with China. The LoC, or Line of Control, is the unsettled,
776-kilometre de facto border with Pakistan
(distinct from the settled 2,308-kilometre border from Gujarat to Jammu). Then
there is the AGPL, or Actual Ground Position Line, which is the 110-kilometre
long de facto border between India and Pakistan
in the Siachen sector. The LAC has three sectors: the “western sector” between
Ladakh and the Aksai Chin; the “central sector” between Uttarakhand and Tibet;
and the “eastern sector” that divides Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh from Tibet.
Regardless of the force levels that India
deploys, the LAC will never become an unstable border like the LoC. The simple
reason: China is very unlike Pakistan. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP), for
all its ideological rhetoric, has inherited and absorbed the millennia-old
Beijing tradition of handling power and inter-state relationships. In contrast,
Islamabad and its alter ego, Rawalpindi, are self-perceived underdogs, beset by
a sense of siege.
It is notable that the LAC has not seen a
single casualty due to enemy action, since China and India stabilized their
borders with two ground-breaking treaties: the 1993 “Agreement on the
Maintenance of Peace and Tranquillity along the Line of Actual Control”, and
the 1996 “Agreement on Confidence-Building Measures in the Military Field along
the Line of Actual Control.” Chinese and Indian patrols routinely travel to
their respective claim lines, log pro forma complaints accusing each other of
border violations, and life goes on quite peacefully.
This is not to suggest there is complacence
on the LAC. Besides regular patrolling, both sides dutifully monitor each
other’s force levels, capabilities, exercises, training and morale. But that is
very different from the Indo-Pak LoC where, despite a cease-fire agreement in
2003, soldiers continue to die in cross-border firing and militants continue to
infiltrate into Jammu & Kashmir, supported by the Pakistan Army. In 1972,
senior Indian and Pakistani commanders exchanged maps jointly marked with the
exact alignment of the LoC. But the Pakistan Army thought nothing of violating
the LoC with the Kargil intrusions of 1999. China is a study in contrast: while
resolutely stonewalling the exchange of signed maps (and, therefore, leaving
the door open for expanding its holdings) the PLA has never militarily violated
the status quo.
This is not to suggest that the CCP is an
honourable organisation, or that China’s leaders are men of their word. The CCP
has consistently proved itself to be a brutal, heartless tyrant, whose leaders,
especially Mao Ze-dong, presided over the deaths of tens of millions of Chinese
citizens, some forty million in the self-created famine of 1958-62 alone.
Repression continues unabated in Tibet and Xinjiang, even today. But the Party
and its leaders have always demonstrated an exceptional understanding of the
dynamics of power. They calculate coldly and reach rational decisions that
minimise risk, unlike the bullying bluster of Pakistan’s mainly Punjabi
generals and leaders.
Because of these differences, Beijing is
unlikely to over-react to India’s enhanced force levels. Given China’s massive
military deployment in Tibet and Xinjiang, and its expanding road and rail
infrastructure that already allows it to concentrate 7-9 divisions within a
fortnight for an offensive against a chosen point in India’s defences, the
Indian army’s four divisions and two armoured brigades are mere pinpricks to
the balance of power. What will certainly change is the impression of Indian
military weakness. And, given that weakness breeds instability by inviting a
strike from a militarily superior enemy, India’s build up would go a long way
towards stabilizing the “eastern sector”. Were India not so poorly prepared in
1962, China might not have waged war so confidently.
Finally, unlike with Pakistan, there are
engagement mechanisms with China that stabilize the relationship. The two
navies cooperate daily in anti-piracy patrolling off the Gulf of Aden. There is
a military-to-military dialogue that, notwithstanding recent hiccups, organises
joint training, exchanges and visits. New Delhi and Beijing increasingly
collaborate in international negotiations, most recently taking closely aligned
positions in the climate change negotiations. Trade relations are growing
exponentially. Most importantly, India and China simply do not share the same
levels of animosity as India and Pakistan.
We often read about Chinese infringement on LOC on leading newspapers. Are these reports authentic ?
ReplyDeleteSincerely,
ReplyDeleteWhile the Chinese may not seek to have an extended campaign against India,they are known to make surprise and sudden moves to 'humiliate' and punish an enemy for any recalcitrance as perceived by them .
It is very important to ensure that we have enough demonstrated punitive capability in the area to deter any sudden or quick thrust by the Chinese to 'punish' us or 'teach a lesson'.
Mobile and effective firepower is the key and we should ramp up our combat and logistic capabilities ASAP.
how can we so confident that china will not attack us again. China is only waiting for a good opportunity and then they will show their true colours. China is facing shortages of raw materials for its growing industrial needs and hence they are looking for foreign territories of which island dispuite with japan is a clear example.
ReplyDeleteHindi... Chini... Bhai.. Bhai... till something like... cuban missile crisis... then the motto of chinkis... changes to... bye... bye...
ReplyDeleteIn 1962, indians were outnumbered by 1:6 and they also had better ammunition.
ReplyDeleteI don't claim to have understood china but IMO, if a war does occur, the indian army must actively focus on occupying tibet or liberating tibet. Both tibet and xinjiang are the ones actually vulnerable rather than the naxal territories in india as described in pak-china rhetoric.
A fire fight along the border is indeed a waste of man, money and resources. We need concrete objectives.
Bhaiyon aur Behno... Aur is saal ka award for "Explaining it in simple layman 's terms" award jaata hai...Ajai Shukla ko! ....Taaliyaan....
ReplyDeleteAjaiji manch par aakar do shabd kahen.... Other journalists please take note...