nang2
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I see. Maybe it is his job to be paranoid.
Speaking of threat from China, it is often pulling everyone back to 1962. This thread pointed me to some online resources and provided some good reading materials. One paragraph caught my attention and it appears to be a good summary on what leads to Forward Policy.
"While there were obvious breaks with the British Indian legacy at the
diplomatic and rhetorical level, the geopolitical dimension of early India–
China relations revealed significant continuity with the colonial past. There
was no geopolitical tabula rasa, despite the euphoria of independence.
The territorial parameters within which the new relationship was shaped
were inherited from the Raj. In practical terms, India came to defend
nineteenth century colonial frontiers in the Himalayas, while China re-
conquered its erstwhile imperial possession after a century of humiliation.
Independent India inherited the geopolitical legacy of the Great Game,
but refused to continue playing it by the rules of Curzonian realpolitik.
To Nehru, Sino-Indian friendship was still too important to be derailed
by ‘petty issues’ like the desolate Himalayan borders. It is within this
inherently unstable combination of pan-Asian optimism and post-Great
Game geopolitics that the contextual origins and the root causes of the
1961 Forward Policy decision can be found."
http://www.idsa.in/system/files/jds_6_4_JohanSkogJesen.pdf
This article also mentioned that the military takeover of Tibet (though mostly considered as peaceful by China) and the revolt in later years had some impact on Nehru's view of Sino-Indian relationship. Actually, the revolt started not in Tibet but in neighboring provinces that had certain Tibetan population and religious presence. It is more of a clash between land reform/redistribution driven by the Communist government and longtime feudalistic Tibet landowners. It is not so much a religious oppression though Communists have innate distrust in religions. It just so happened that the Tibet Buddhist temples happened to be the biggest land owners as well. Not sure why someone renounces the mundane world would want to own so much land. But that is a completely different subject.
The survival instinct we inherit from our cave-dwelling ancestors often times creates trouble for us in the modern world. The world just progresses too fast for human evolution to keep up."Only the paranoid survive"- said Mr. Finch of Person of Interest.