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Dragon’s Familiar Dance (Prof warns that China might invade India again)

Bl[i]tZ

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With the 50th anniversary of the 1962 invasion approaching, history is in danger of repeating itself.

Brahma Chellaney
The writer is professor of strategic studies
at the Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi
GUEST COLUMN
India Today, November 7, 2011


ChinaIndia_951129c.jpg


As the 50th anniversary of China’s invasion approaches, history is in danger of repeating itself, with Chinese military pressures and aggressive designs against India not only mirroring the pre-1962 war situation but also extending to Pakistan_Occupied_Kashmir (P o K) and the oceans around India. China’s expanding axis of evil with Pakistan, including a new troop presence in P o K, heightens India’s vulnerability in Jammu and Kashmir, even as India has beefed up its defences in Arunachal Pradesh.

By muscling up to India, what is China seeking to achieve? The present situation, ominously, is no different in several key aspects from the one that prevailed in the run-up to the 1962 war.

● The aim of “Mao’s India war” in 1962, as Harvard scholar Roderick MacFarquhar has called it, was largely political: to cut India to size by demolishing what it represented—a democratic alternative to China’s autocracy. The swiftness and force with which Mao Zedong defeated India helped discredit the Indian model, boost China’s international image, and consolidate Mao’s internal power. The return of the China-India pairing decades later riles Beijing.

● Just as the Dalai Lama’s flight to India in 1959 set the stage for the Chinese military attack, the exiled Tibetan leader today has become a bigger challenge for China than ever. The continuing security clampdown across the Tibetan plateau since the March 2008 Tibetan uprising parallels the harsh Chinese crackdown in Tibet during 1959-62.

● The prevailing pattern of cross-frontier incursions and other border incidents is no different than the situation that led up to the 1962 war. Yet, India is repeating the same mistake by playing down the Chinese intrusions. Gratuitously stretching the truth, Indian officials say the incursions are the result of differing perceptions about the line of control. But which side has refused to define the line of control? It speaks for itself that China hasn’t offered this excuse. The fact is that Chinese forces are intruding even into Utttarakhand—the only sector where the line of control has been clarified by an exchange of maps—and into Sikkim, whose 206-km border with Tibet is recognised by Beijing.

● The 1962 war occurred against the backdrop of China instigating and arming insurgents in India’s northeast. Although such Chinese activities ceased after Mao’s death, China has come full circle today, with Chinese-made arms increasingly flowing into guerrilla ranks in northeast India via Burmese front organisations. In fact, Pakistan-based terrorists targeting India also rely on Chinese arms.

● China’s pre-1962 psychological war is returning. In recent years, Beijing has employed its state-run media and nationalistic websites to warn of another armed conflict. It is a throwback to the coarse rhetoric China had used in its build-up to the 1962 war. Its People’s Daily, for example, has warned India to weigh “the consequences of a potential confrontation with China.” China merrily builds strategic projects in an internationally disputed area like P o K but responds with crude threats when others explore just for oil in the South China Sea.

● Just as India in the early 1960s retreated to a defensive position in the border negotiations after having undermined its leverage through a formal acceptance of the “Tibet region of China,” the spotlight now is on China’s revived Tibet-linked claim to Arunachal rather than on the core issue, Tibet itself. India, with its focus on process than results, has remained locked in continuous border negotiations with China since 1981—the longest and the most-fruitless process between any two nations post-Second World War. This process has only aided China’s containment-with-engagement strategy.

● In the same way that India under Nehru unwittingly created the context to embolden Beijing to wage aggression, New Delhi is again staring at the consequences of a mismanagement of relations. The more China’s trade surplus with India has swelled—jumping from $2 billion in 2002 to more than $30 billion now—the greater has been its condescension toward India. To make matters worse, the insidious, V.K. Krishna Menon-style shadow has returned to haunt Indian defence management and policy. India has never had more clueless defence and foreign ministers or a weaker Prime Minister with a credibility problem than it does today.

In fact, as it aims to mould a Sino-centric Asia, China is hinting that its real geopolitical contest is more with India than with the distant United States. The countries around India have become battlegrounds for China’s moves to encircle India. From a military invasion in 1962 and a subsequent cartographic aggression, China is moving towards a hydrological aggression and a multipronged strategic squeeze of India. China’s damming of rivers flowing from Tibet to India are highlighting Indian vulnerability on the water front even before India has plugged its disadvantage on the nuclear front by building a credible but minimal deterrent.

Whether Beijing actually sets out to teach India “the final lesson” by launching a 1962-style attack will depend on several factors. They include India’s domestic political situation, its defence preparedness, and the availability for China of a propitious international timing of the type the Cuban missile crisis provided in 1962. If India does not want to be caught napping again, it has to come out of the present political paralysis and inject greater realism into its China policy, which today bears a close resemblance to a studied imitation of an ostrich burying its head in the sand.

(c) India Today, 2011.

Dragon
 
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Brilliant article. :tup:
May be for you! I hope somebody in our MoD reads and understands the urgency of the situation.

We've a FM SMK who recently advised US to resolve its disputes with Pakistan by discussion. I wonder whose FM is he? :hitwall:

Our defense budget is 1/3rd that of China and MoD is hellbent on delaying contract negotiations for fighter aircraft for IAF and artillery for army.

We've a PM whose excuse for everything is that his office was not involved. I mean seriously? :frown:

Sad state of affairs! :(
 
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Bl[i]tZ;2237477 said:
May be for you! I hope somebody in our MoD reads and understands the urgency of the situation.

We've a FM SMK who recently advised US to resolve its disputes with Pakistan by discussion. WTF?:hitwall:
Our defence budget is 1/3rd that of China.
We've a PM whose excuse for everything is that his office was not involved. I mean seriously? :frown:

Sad state of affairs! :(

Does this sound something to you?

PLA holds first air and ground forces joint drill on plateau | The China Times ????

Of course, we have been prepared long time ago, even the war will not likely be happened, but being prepared is always better than being unprepared. :coffee:
 
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Forget India china war, a war between china and Taiwan too is not possible today or in the near future.
 
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Forget India china war, a war between china and Taiwan too is not possible today or in the near future.
US would interfere in the case of Taiwan - something that might not happen in case of Indo China war. One should be realistic while accessing threats.
 
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Chill Guys.

Beijing will not dare.

With regard to boundary incursion, our Army too regularly visit Chinese areas.....these are not reported by Chinese media as news are controlled in China and we will not report it ourself, isn't it. Indians on this forum should just ask their army sources for confirmation.

Just focus on Development and Tie-Ups with all the nations in this region. We will eventaully be a better country than China. Do remember that China took 20 years lead in liberalizing its economy ( what a contradiction, socialism to silence people and Capitalism to keep new class of rulers, richer) but like USSR, it will not sustain.

About Naxal movements..it will die off with more developments....and its hardly a worry it is being made out in media.
 
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War-Gaming: Study Contemplates Conflict Between India and China - Global Spin - TIME.com

China and India at War: Study Contemplates Conflict Between Asian Giants

There are plenty of reasons why China and India won't go to war. The two Asian giants hope to reach $100 billion in annual bilateral trade by 2015. Peace and stability are watchwords for both nations' rise on the world stage. Yet tensions between the neighbors seem inescapable: they face each other across a heavily militarized nearly 4,000km-long border and are increasingly competing against each other in a scramble for natural resources around the world. Indian fears over Chinese projects along the Indian Ocean rim were matched recently by Beijing's ire over growing Indian interests in the South China Sea, a body of water China controversially claims as its exclusive territorial sphere of influence. Despite the sense of optimism and ambition that drives these two states, which comprise between them nearly a third of humanity, the legacy of the brief 1962 Sino-Indian war (a humiliating blow for India) still smolders nearly five decades later.

And it's alive on the pages of a new policy report issued by the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses in New Delhi, an independent think tank that is affiliated with India's Ministry of Defense. "A Consideration of Sino-Indian Conflict" is hardly a hawkish tract — it advocates "war avoidance" — but, by spelling out a few concrete scenarios of how conflict may look between the two countries, it reveals the palpable lack of trust on the part of strategists both in New Delhi and Beijing. The report applauds long-term Indian efforts underway to beef up defenses along the Chinese border, but warns that Beijing may still take action:

In future, India could be subject to China's hegemonic attention. Since India would be better prepared by then, China may instead wish to set India back now by a preventive war. This means current day preparedness is as essential as preparation for the future. A [defeat] now will have as severe political costs, internally and externally, as it had back in 1962; for, as then, India is yet again contemplating a global role.

While a lot of recent media attention has focused on the likelihood of Sino-Indian clashes at sea, the IDSA report keeps its scope trained along the traditional, glacial Himalayan land boundary, referred to in wonkish parlance as the LAC, the Line of Actual Control. Since the 1962 war, China and India have yet to formally resolve longstanding disputes over vast stretches of territory along this line. Those disputes have resurfaced noticeably in recent years, with China making unprecedented noises, much to the alarm of New Delhi, over its historical claims to the entirety of the northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh — what the Chinese deem "Southern Tibet." The Chinese even rebuked Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh for having the audacity of visiting the Indian state during local elections in 2009.

Not surprisingly, it's in this remote corner of the world that many suspect a war could kick off, particularly around the historic Tibetan monastery town of Tawang. India has reinforced its position in Arunachal with more boots on the ground, new missile defenses and some of the Indian air force's best strike craft, new Russian-made Su-30 fighters. After decades of focusing its army west against perennial threat Pakistan, India is tacitly realigning its military east to face the long-term challenge of China.

The report speculates that China could make a targeted territorial grab, "for example, a bid to take Tawang." Further west along the LAC, another flashpoint lies in Kashmir. China controls a piece of largely uninhabited territory known as Aksai Chin that it captured during the 1962 war. Indian press frequently publish alarmist stories about Chinese incursions from Aksai Chin and elsewhere, playing up the scale of Chinese investment in strategic infrastructure on its side of the border in stark contrast to the seeming lethargy of Indian planners. Part of what fuels the anxiety in New Delhi, as the report notes, is the threat of coordinated action between China and Pakistan — an alliance built largely out of years of mutual antipathy toward India. In one mooted scenario, Pakistan, either with its own forces or terrorist, insurgent proxies, would "make diversionary moves" across the blood-stained Siachen glacier or Kargil, site of the last Indo-Pakistani war in 1999, while a Chinese offensive strikes further east along the border.

Of course, such table-top board game maneuvers have little purchase in present geo-politics. Direct, provocative action suits no player in the region, particularly when there's the specter of American power — a curious absence in the IDSA report — hovering on the sidelines. Intriguingly, the report seems to dismiss the notion that China and India would clash in what others would consider obvious hotspots for rivalry; it says the landlocked Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan would likely be treated as a neutral "Switzerland", while Nepal, a country of 40 million that entertains both Beijing and New Delhi's patronage, is more or less assured that neither of its big neighbors would risk violating its sovereignty in the event of war.

Moreover, the IDSA seems to rule out either side encouraging or deploying proxies in more clandestine struggles against the other. The restive border regions on both sides of the LAC are home to resentful minority populations and more than a few insurgent factions. India and China — unlike Pakistan — have little precedent in abetting militant groups and strategists on both sides would be wary of fanning flames of rebellion that no one can put out.

Yet what seems to stoke Sino-Indian military tensions — and grim prophecies of conflict — are precisely these feelings of vulnerability. The uncertainties posed by both countries' astonishing economic growth, the lack of clear communication and trust between Beijing and New Delhi and the strong nationalism underlying both Indian and Chinese public opinion could unsettle the uneasy status quo that now exists. Managing all this is a task for wooly-heads in New Delhi and Beijing. But don't be surprised if more reports like this one come out, drawing lines on the battlefield.
 
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as i always say. india need to watch for next 5-6 years or so.
By then India will be so strong that even US will have to think twice before attacking India.
We will be building few offencive & defencive capabilities during this period.
Also most of the contracts like MMRCA, scorpion sub, attack helies along with indian stuff as LCA, LCH will be reaching the users,
this will surly help to consolidate our position,

so till 2015-17 we need to be watchful.
 
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Chill Guys.

Beijing will not dare.

With regard to boundary incursion, our Army too regularly visit Chinese areas.....these are not reported by Chinese media as news are controlled in China and we will not report it ourself, isn't it. Indians on this forum should just ask their army sources for confirmation.

Just focus on Development and Tie-Ups with all the nations in this region. We will eventaully be a better country than China. Do remember that China took 20 years lead in liberalizing its economy ( what a contradiction, socialism to silence people and Capitalism to keep new class of rulers, richer) but like USSR, it will not sustain.

About Naxal movements..it will die off with more developments....and its hardly a worry it is being made out in media.

you have no idea what China is like but funny stereotype and ignorance
 
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Paranoia at it's best. I agree with author that we must be prepared for any eventuality but "China punishing India" is a complete BS. I'd like to remind the author and my fellow Indian posters here that after 1962, China tried to "punish" India twice and the result on both the occasions was an epic fail. Realizing it cannot inflict damage to India[unless China also suffers heavily] China then changed it's strategy by grooming it's puppies and started a proxy war.

Times have changed and India too is slowly making it's presence felt in the international platform, economy is booming and with this trend set to increase in future, hopefully, India too will fund the insurgencies in China and beef up the defences of countries hostile to China. Some of it has already started and the remaining will be depending on China's actions whether it wants to push India to it's limits or it wants to settle the pending issues peacefully. Not to forget, a hostile India [towards China] is in the best interests of US and this would make China more alarmed. India also can fuel the fire by agreeing for a NATO missile defence shield which means China will be surrounded from all the sides and nothing but MAD will be left for both the nations in case of an all out war.
 
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Crap article by US paid rat, everyone knows India is Nanga from China border what protection you have there 2 Squadrons 30-40 fighter jets and some 20,000 troops lol just one modern air strip where big planes can land, No proper road or railway networks for supplies, next war like 1962 will be suicide for India economic loss, huge number of casualties, and China will take their territory back without much fight.
 
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