India is now the belle of the ball, as most of the world and Asian regional powers make pilgrimages to New Delhi to flatter and flirt with India's dynamic Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Modi and India come with a certain amount of unpleasant baggage, which their suitors do their best to ignore. Modi himself is an unrepentant Hindutva cultural chauvinist whose attitudes toward Muslims (and convincing circumstantial evidence of his involvement in an anti-Muslim pogrom in Gujarat - so convincing, in fact, he was previously banned from the United States) trend toward the fascistic.
In regional affairs, India has not been a particularly responsible or constructive actor, having mixed it up with Pakistan (assisted the split-off of East Pakistan aka Bangladesh in 1971), Nepal (opened the door to the Nepalese Maoists with its ineptly executed deposition of King Gyanendra in 2008), and Sikkim (Sikkim, in case you noticed, doesn't exist anymore; it was annexed by India in 1975), and has presided over a bloody insurgency and brutal counterinsurgency in Kashmir that has claimed the lives of at least 60,000 people.
India birthed the horrific Tamil Tiger insurgency in Sri Lanka, and its intelligence services played what may have been a decisive role in organizing and executing the successful electoral challenge, on January 8, 2015, which ended the rule of the pro-Chinese (now-ex) president of Sri Lanka, Mahinda Rajapaksa.
And there's the People's Republic of China and the contested borderlands of Arunachal Pradesh in the northeast and Ladakh/Aksai Chin in the northwest.
Japan's Foreign Minister, Fumio Kishida, got himself tangled up in the Arunachal Pradesh issue during his recent visit to India.
China
today lodged a protest with Tokyo after Japan's foreign minister was quoted as
saying that Arunachal Pradesh was "India's territory".
India
v China: Border games
India is now the belle of the ball, as most of the world and Asian regional powers make pilgrimages to New Delhi to flatter and flirt with India's dynamic Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Modi and India come with a certain amount of unpleasant baggage, which their suitors do their best to ignore. Modi himself is an unrepentant Hindutva cultural chauvinist whose attitudes toward Muslims (and convincing circumstantial evidence of his involvement in an anti-Muslim pogrom in Gujarat - so convincing, in fact, he was previously banned from the United States) trend toward the fascistic.
In regional affairs, India has not been a particularly responsible or constructive actor, having mixed it up with Pakistan (assisted the split-off of East Pakistan aka Bangladesh in 1971), Nepal (opened the door to the Nepalese Maoists with its ineptly executed deposition of King Gyanendra in 2008), and Sikkim (Sikkim, in case you noticed, doesn't exist anymore; it was annexed by India in 1975), and has presided over a bloody insurgency and brutal counterinsurgency in Kashmir that has claimed the lives of at least 60,000 people.
India birthed the horrific Tamil Tiger insurgency in Sri Lanka, and its intelligence services played what may have been a decisive role in organizing and executing the successful electoral challenge, on January 8, 2015, which ended the rule of the pro-Chinese (now-ex) president of Sri Lanka, Mahinda Rajapaksa.
And there's the People's Republic of China and the contested borderlands of Arunachal Pradesh in the northeast and Ladakh/Aksai Chin in the northwest.
Japan's Foreign Minister, Fumio Kishida, got himself tangled up in the Arunachal Pradesh issue during his recent visit to India.
India is now the belle of the ball, as most of the world and Asian regional powers make pilgrimages to New Delhi to flatter and flirt with India's dynamic Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Modi and India come with a certain amount of unpleasant baggage, which their suitors do their best to ignore. Modi himself is an unrepentant Hindutva cultural chauvinist whose attitudes toward Muslims (and convincing circumstantial evidence of his involvement in an anti-Muslim pogrom in Gujarat - so convincing, in fact, he was previously banned from the United States) trend toward the fascistic.
In regional affairs, India has not been a particularly responsible or constructive actor, having mixed it up with Pakistan (assisted the split-off of East Pakistan aka Bangladesh in 1971), Nepal (opened the door to the Nepalese Maoists with its ineptly executed deposition of King Gyanendra in 2008), and Sikkim (Sikkim, in case you noticed, doesn't exist anymore; it was annexed by India in 1975), and has presided over a bloody insurgency and brutal counterinsurgency in Kashmir that has claimed the lives of at least 60,000 people.
India birthed the horrific Tamil Tiger insurgency in Sri Lanka, and its intelligence services played what may have been a decisive role in organizing and executing the successful electoral challenge, on January 8, 2015, which ended the rule of the pro-Chinese (now-ex) president of Sri Lanka, Mahinda Rajapaksa.
And there's the People's Republic of China and the contested borderlands of Arunachal Pradesh in the northeast and Ladakh/Aksai Chin in the northwest.
Japan's Foreign Minister, Fumio Kishida, got himself tangled up in the Arunachal Pradesh issue during his recent visit to India.
China
today lodged a protest with Tokyo after Japan's foreign minister was quoted as
saying that Arunachal Pradesh was "India's territory".
Japan's
Sankei Shimbun, a conservative
daily, quoted Fumio Kishida as having made the remarks in New Delhi on
Saturday.
Japan
played down the issue today, saying it could not confirm Kishida's reported
remarks. It added that it hoped India and China could resolve their border
dispute peacefully.
Kishida's
reported remarks drew an angry response from China, which called on Tokyo to
"understand the sensitivity of the Sino-India boundary issue".
A
Japanese foreign ministry spokesperson said "the statement was made
considering the reality that Arunachal Pradesh state is basically in reality
controlled by India and that China and India are continuing negotiations over
the border dispute".
China
disputes the entire territory of Arunachal, calling it south Tibet, especially
Tawang, a key site for Tibetan Buddhism. The historic town briefly fell into
Chinese hands during their 1962 war before Beijing retreated.
The Japanese
Foreign Ministry backtracked expeditiously, indicating that Kishida’s remarks
were perhaps a slip of the tongue and not meant to inject Japan into the
Arunachal Pradesh issue.
Ever since Prime
Minister Abe returned to office with an India-centric Asian policy, yearnings
have been expressed that Japan might openly side with India on the Arunachal
Pradesh issue. The PRC, was extremely
leery of previous PM Manmohan Singh and his overt diplomatic and emotional tilt
toward Japan and, with good reason, has expected the current officeholder,
Narendra Modi, to play off China, Russia, and the United States in a more
pragmatic manner.
Modi will
certainly keep the PRC off balance. President Obama’s decision to accept Prime
Minister Modhi’s invitation to attend the Republic Day extravaganza further
buttressed Modi’s prestige and popularity within India and elicited a wave of
“Mobama” triumphalism in the press, much to China’s discomfiture.
Modi averred to President Obama that he was angry and disappointed with the PRC over alleged border perfidy in Ladakh in 2014 at the time of Xi Jinping's visit, and Modi endorsed the US position on the South China Sea and efforts to upgrade the US-Japan-India-Australia security quadrilateral.
In the matter of the "border" incident (there is no accepted border or even a mutually understood Line of Control; there is an overlapping 20-kilometer wide band in which Indian and PRC local forces work within ill-defined "Lines of Perception" and engage in persistent envelope-pushing, patrolling, hut construction, and road-building that make it easy for either side to foment an incident) in the barren wastes of Ladakh, perhaps Xi Jinping thought he could get Sino-Indian relations on a solid footing by humiliating Modi before his army and his nation with a gratuitous provocation.
An equally plausible explanation for the otherwise inexplicable PRC affront--which recapitulated a previous incident in Ladakh that similarly overshadowed the decidedly unmartial technocrat Li Keqiang's state visit in 2013--was that it was engineered by hardliners in the Indian security establishment (who exhaustively backgrounded, briefed, and ballyhoo'd the incident to the receptive Indian press during Xi's visit) to balk PRC attempts to improve relations and negotiate the borders issue, and Modi grasped the opportunity to wrongfoot the economically and strategically overbearing PRC in order to advance his strategic agenda
In this case, perhaps Modi was putting the incident to further good use to tell President Obama exactly what he wanted to hear, provide a compelling narrative to underpin the important Sino-US relationship, and help extract various economic and security benefits, including the heightened intelligence cooperation that advocates of the US-Indian security alliance are promoting.
Per the Indian Express (which also revealed in passing that, in addition to the canonical "Five Eyes" intelligence sharing arrangement, the US has also midwifed "Nine Eyes" and "Fourteen Eyes" intel clubs in Europe in addition to pacts with Japan and South Korea), Indian intelligence priorities will include a) Pakistan b) China c) keeping the US at arms-length, not necessarily in that order:
The pact would enable India access to encrypted digital traffic its intelligence services are now unable to decipher. It would also make state-of-the-art western espionage technology available to the Directorate of Military Intelligence and the National Technical Research Organization...The US has provided a growing volume of information on planned attacks by Pakistan-based groups--helping India pre-empt at least two attacks on diplomatic facilities in Afghanistan.
....
There are, sources said, several formidable challenges to be overcome before India can begin purchasing cutting edge digital intelligence technologies from the US. For example, fearful that equipment can be used to eavesdrop on sensitive information, India insists on domestic security certification for purchases. However, no Indian firm currently certifies EAL7+, the most stringent standard for digital security.
...
Fears also exist that an intelligence-sharing agreement might allow penetration of its own secrets. The Vajpayee government (the first BJP national government--ed.) which saw the first warming in ties with the US, was deeply embarrassed by the disclosure that the US had recruited Research and Analysis Wing officer Rabinder Sing...
It remains to be seen who comes out ahead in the US-India tango and, in particular, how deep Modi is willing to follow the US down the China-containment rabbit hole. Modi's statements on China policy are, for the time being, cost-free lip service and in the end, Modi played true to independent form in the matter of climate change by publicly and bluntly rejecting President Obama’s call to limit India’s greenhouse gas emissions.
Modi averred to President Obama that he was angry and disappointed with the PRC over alleged border perfidy in Ladakh in 2014 at the time of Xi Jinping's visit, and Modi endorsed the US position on the South China Sea and efforts to upgrade the US-Japan-India-Australia security quadrilateral.
In the matter of the "border" incident (there is no accepted border or even a mutually understood Line of Control; there is an overlapping 20-kilometer wide band in which Indian and PRC local forces work within ill-defined "Lines of Perception" and engage in persistent envelope-pushing, patrolling, hut construction, and road-building that make it easy for either side to foment an incident) in the barren wastes of Ladakh, perhaps Xi Jinping thought he could get Sino-Indian relations on a solid footing by humiliating Modi before his army and his nation with a gratuitous provocation.
An equally plausible explanation for the otherwise inexplicable PRC affront--which recapitulated a previous incident in Ladakh that similarly overshadowed the decidedly unmartial technocrat Li Keqiang's state visit in 2013--was that it was engineered by hardliners in the Indian security establishment (who exhaustively backgrounded, briefed, and ballyhoo'd the incident to the receptive Indian press during Xi's visit) to balk PRC attempts to improve relations and negotiate the borders issue, and Modi grasped the opportunity to wrongfoot the economically and strategically overbearing PRC in order to advance his strategic agenda
In this case, perhaps Modi was putting the incident to further good use to tell President Obama exactly what he wanted to hear, provide a compelling narrative to underpin the important Sino-US relationship, and help extract various economic and security benefits, including the heightened intelligence cooperation that advocates of the US-Indian security alliance are promoting.
Per the Indian Express (which also revealed in passing that, in addition to the canonical "Five Eyes" intelligence sharing arrangement, the US has also midwifed "Nine Eyes" and "Fourteen Eyes" intel clubs in Europe in addition to pacts with Japan and South Korea), Indian intelligence priorities will include a) Pakistan b) China c) keeping the US at arms-length, not necessarily in that order:
The pact would enable India access to encrypted digital traffic its intelligence services are now unable to decipher. It would also make state-of-the-art western espionage technology available to the Directorate of Military Intelligence and the National Technical Research Organization...The US has provided a growing volume of information on planned attacks by Pakistan-based groups--helping India pre-empt at least two attacks on diplomatic facilities in Afghanistan.
....
There are, sources said, several formidable challenges to be overcome before India can begin purchasing cutting edge digital intelligence technologies from the US. For example, fearful that equipment can be used to eavesdrop on sensitive information, India insists on domestic security certification for purchases. However, no Indian firm currently certifies EAL7+, the most stringent standard for digital security.
...
Fears also exist that an intelligence-sharing agreement might allow penetration of its own secrets. The Vajpayee government (the first BJP national government--ed.) which saw the first warming in ties with the US, was deeply embarrassed by the disclosure that the US had recruited Research and Analysis Wing officer Rabinder Sing...
It remains to be seen who comes out ahead in the US-India tango and, in particular, how deep Modi is willing to follow the US down the China-containment rabbit hole. Modi's statements on China policy are, for the time being, cost-free lip service and in the end, Modi played true to independent form in the matter of climate change by publicly and bluntly rejecting President Obama’s call to limit India’s greenhouse gas emissions.
For the PRC, an
important area of anxiety is Arunachal Pradesh and the threat that India might
“internationalize” the bilateral border dispute by canvassing its actual and
would-be allies for support on the issue, perhaps even to the extent of going
tit-for-tat with Japan i.e. India backing Japan on the issue of Senkaku
sovereignty in return for Japanese aid and comfort on AP.
However, for the
time being it looks like Japan—like the Asian Development Bank, which ran into
a PRC buzzsaw when it tried to put an Arunachal Pradesh hydropower project on
its agenda in 2009—is not quite ready to mix it up on AP.
Let’s unpack the
Arunachal Pradesh issue.
Arunachal
Pradesh is a region controlled by India in its northeast quadrant, between
Bhutan and Burma, home to a variety of ethnic groups. One of those groups is Tibetan, centered on
the town and district of Tawang in the western end of AP at the border with
Bhutan.
The Arunachal
Pradesh dispute is bookended with Aksai
Chin, a blasted desert between India and the PRC in the northwest
that is controlled by the PRC. The
Indian claim to Aksai Chin is not terribly robust, since it is based on an
internal British Indian survey—the Johnson Line—which was never discussed or
agreed with China. The PRC built a
strategic road across Aksai Chin in the 1950s, and it took several years for
the Indian government to even find out it was there.
There is a third
slice of disputed territory, the “Trans-Karakorum Tract” bordering Kashmir,
geographically distinct from Aksai Chin, which India claims Pakistan illegally
ceded to the PRC in a land swap. For
some reason, the PRC and India aren’t arguing about this piece.
Both Arunachal
Pradesh and Aksai Chin territories have been openly disputed since before the
1962 Sino-Indian war. The PRC has at
times offered a grand bargain in which the two sides acknowledge each other’s
regions of effective control, by which India got AP and the PRC gets AC.
The official
Indian response has been Nothing Doing and all territory it lost in the 1962
war must be recovered i.e. Aksai Chin is not negotiable. It has decoupled the two issues, and has
focused its diplomacy on the insistence that its sovereignty over AP be
confirmed.
India’s claim to
AP is complicated in an interesting way.
In 1914, Great
Britain was interested in creating an autonomous Tibetan buffer—“Outer
Tibet”—between British India and Russia/China.
To this end, Sir Henry McMahon, the Foreign Minister of British India, invited
Tibetan and Republic of China delegates to the Indian town of Simla.
Tibet, eager to
be acknowledged as an autonomous power with its own rights to negotiate
directly with foreign powers (and not just through China), generously conceded
a delineation of Lhasa’s sphere of control—the McMahon Line--alienating Tawang,
a market town that interested the Raj, to British India.
However, the
Simla Agreement was negotiated between the Tibetan and British representatives
in a provisional sort of way after the Chinese representatives had packed up
and left. Since Britain’s Foreign Office
was protective of its China diplomacy and not interested in encouraging Tibetan
pretensions to negotiate as an independent sovereign power, the absence of the
Chinese representatives—and without a Chinese endorsement of the border
arrangement accepted by the Tibetan authorities--was a dealbreaker.
The Simla
Agreement was apparently treated as an aspirational document and was recorded
in the most authoritative compendium of British Indian treaties, Sir Charles Umpherston Aitchison's Collection
of Treaties, Engagements, and Sanads, with the notation that neither Great Britain nor
China had ratified the treaty. China,
indeed, never accepted the McMahon Line.
Since Tibet wasn’t recognized as a sovereign power, whatever it hoped to
achieve with the Simla Accord—and what it had tried to give away, namely
Tawang-- was, in the eyes of the British, moot.
Things
puttered along until 1935, when the detention of a British spy in Tawang by
Tibetan authorities awakened the cupidity of a diplomat in the Foreign Office
of British India, Olaf Caroe.
Caroe checked the files, found that Great Britain had
no ratified claims on Tawang, and decided to amend and improve the record.
He arranged for
the relevant original volume of the 1929 Aitchison compendium to be withdrawn
from the various libraries in which it was filed, discarded, and replaced with
a new version—but one that still claimed to be compiled in 1929, thereby
removing the need for awkward explanations or documentation concerning why the switch
had happened. The spurious version
claimed that Tibet and Britain had
accepted the treaty. Thereby, the unsurveyed McMahon Line was repurposed
as a sacrosanct British imperial border, and Tawang was slotted into the
British Indian side of the ledger.
The deception
was only discovered in 1964, when a researcher was able to compare one of the
last three surviving copies of the original compendium, at Harvard University,
with the spurious replacement.
Unfortunately,
that was too late for Nehru, who staked his security strategy and his
diplomatic exchanges with China to a significant extent on the fallacy that he
had inherited from British India a clear and unequivocal claim to its borders.
In 1962 Nehru
decided to move up military units to assert India’s claim to contested
territory in Ladakh/Aksai Chin and in Arunachal Pradesh under a gambit
optimistically named The Forward Policy. Unluckily for Nehru, Chairman Mao was itching
to stick it to India’s patron, Nikita Khrushchev, and the PLA attacked with
overwhelming force on both fronts. India’s entire strategy had been
predicated on the assumption that the PRC would not respond (shades, I think,
of Western confidence that Vladimir Putin would stay his hand in eastern
Ukraine out of fear of sanctions and the wrath of his impoverished and
disgruntled oligarchs) and the Indian Army, outnumbered, undersupplied, and
disorganized, was completely unprepared for a desperate fight on the remote,
high altitude battlefields.
India suffered a
humiliating defeat at the hands of the PLA.
After its victory, the PRC decided to take the high ground,
diplomatically as well as geographically. It withdrew its forces to behind the
McMahon Line and offered negotiations of the boundaries based on the status
quo, in other words a de facto swap of AP for AC.
No dice, as we
have seen. India clearly does not see
any need to credit Arunachal Pradesh—territory that the PRC abandoned—as any
kind of bargaining chip concerning Aksai Chin.
This is, perhaps, a cautionary tale to the PRC as to the geostrategic
minuses as well as pluses of trying to behave like Mr. Nice Guy.
This history is
officially persona non grata in India.
The report the Indian government commissioned on the 1962 war—the
Henderson Brooks Report--was so devastating to India’s position and its legal,
military, and diplomatic pretensions it was promptly banned and publication is
forbidden to this day. In an ironic
recapitulation of the case of the Aitchison compendium, it was assumed that
there were only two typewritten copies and they were securely buttoned up in
safes in New Delhi. However, the Times of London correspondent, Neville
Maxwell, promptly got his hands on a copy and used it to write an expose on the
tragedy of errors in 1962, India’s China
War, thereby earning himself the fierce hatred of generations of Indian nationalists.
Maxwell tried
several times to put the report into the public domain.
As quoted in Outlook India, Maxwell provided an interesting account of how
the freedom of expression sausage gets made when the information involved is
not necessarily a matter of national security (the report is classified Top
Secret, but its content—the minutiae of military decisions and movements fifty
years ago--has no current strategic or tactical significance) but is a matter
of supreme political embarrassment (to Nehru, the Congress Party, the Gandhi
political dynasty, and to the army).
My
first attempt to put the Report itself on the public record was indirect and
low-key: after I retired from the University I donated my copy to Oxford’s
Bodleian Library, where, I thought, it could be studied in a setting of
scholarly calm. The Library initially welcomed it as a valuable contribution in
that “grey area” between actions and printed books, in which I had given them
material previously. But after some months the librarian to whom I had
entrusted it warned me that, under a new regulation, before the Report was put
on to the shelves and opened to the public it would have to be cleared by the
British government with the government which might be adversely interested!
Shocked by that admission of a secret process of censorship to which the
Bodleian had supinely acceded I protested to the head Librarian, then an
American, but received no response. Fortunately I was able to retrieve my
donation before the Indian High Commission in London was alerted in the
Bodleian’s procedures and was perhaps given the Report.
In 2002, noting that all attempts in India to make the government release the Report had failed, I decided on a more direct approach and made the text available to the editors of three of India’s leading publications, asking that they observe the usual journalistic practice of keeping their source to themselves. … To my surprise the editors concerned decided, unanimously, not to publish… Later I gave the text to a fourth editor and offered it to a fifth, with the same nil result.
In 2002, noting that all attempts in India to make the government release the Report had failed, I decided on a more direct approach and made the text available to the editors of three of India’s leading publications, asking that they observe the usual journalistic practice of keeping their source to themselves. … To my surprise the editors concerned decided, unanimously, not to publish… Later I gave the text to a fourth editor and offered it to a fifth, with the same nil result.
Narendra Modi, a
determined foe of the Congress Party and the Gandhis (I had to chuckle when I
read these fawning articles about President Obama bonding with
Prime Minister Modi over their shared Gandhi love, despite the awkward fact
that Modi's Hindutva movement was and apparently still is the spiritual home of Gandhi’s
assassin), came to power promising to release the report...but didn’t.
And when Maxwell finally posted part of the report on his website in
2014, the site was symbolically blocked.
Here is a link to a scan of Maxwell’s copy of the
Henderson Brooks report..
The Indian
army, in particular, is wedded to a creation myth of PRC perfidy that is
infinitely more utile than acknowledging that the PLA attack, rather than
unprovoked, was a response to a strategically and diplomatically bankrupt
Indian border gambit compounded by non-stop miscues by India’s civilian leadership
and disastrous defeat for its military forces. This default presumption
of Chinese aggression against innocent India, which is still widely accepted in
India and abroad, also makes it easy for India to impose its narrative on murky
matters like the Ladakh incidents of 2013 and 2014--clashes which, when viewed
through the lens of 1962, invite the speculation that India has not abandoned
its border-pushing ways.
In 2005, the PRC
and India started negotiations over the borders issue. Here’s a nice explainer from the Daily Mail! in 2013
which signals that Aksai Chin might be on the table, but Tawang is off the
table, and unfortunately omits the significant complication of the Caroe
forgery.
India’s move
into Arunachal Pradesh in the 1950s is less than a slam dunk according to
international law, complicated in particular by the issue of Tawang.
Not only is
there the problem of the shakiness of the McMahon line, highlighted by Olaf
Caroe’s bibliographic hijinks, there is the awkward fact that India forcefully
displaced Tibetan theocratic rule in Tawang—nominally rule from Lhasa, actually
local rule by the immensely powerful monastery.
Lhasa had
apparently experienced cartographic remorse over Simla and implored India to
recognize Tawang as Tibetan territory in 1947.
Instead, India seized the district in 1951 in a
quasi-official/quasi-military “liberating the Tibetan serfs” operation rather
similar to what the PRC conducted in its part of Tibet.
In recent years,
the Dalai Lama has been forced into the unpleasant position of affirming Indian
sovereignty over Tawang, whose great monastery (the second largest in Tibetan
Buddhism) first gave him shelter when he fled PRC control in 1959, and which had
hosted the reincarnation of the 6th Dalai Lama way back when.
The Dalai Lama
apparently verbally acknowledged, if not in writing, that AP
and Tawang belonged to India on a couple occasions while he still served at the
apex of power in the Tibetan government in exile (a position he relinquished in
2011).
However, I
assume twisting the Dalai Lama’s arm to concede Indian sovereignty over Tawang
falls a little bit short, since the Tibetan government-in-exile lacks
international recognition (and with it the right to cede territory to India).
The PRC is happy
to harp on Tawang’s role in the AP situation, since it serves as a continual
reminder that India is occupying territory in AP that, however you slice it, is
a core component of the Tibetan homeland, thereby keeping alive a non-Indian
or, if you want, a PRC-cum-Tibet claim to at least part of the region
and attempting to balk India’s attempt to claim full sovereignty over Arunachal
Pradesh under international law.
To understand
how this relates to the Senkakus requires reflection on another piece of
suppressed history—that the United States returned the Senkakus to Japanese administrative
control not sovereignty in 1973 as part of the Okinawa
package with the stated expectation that the sovereignty of the rocks would be
negotiated between China and Japan.
My personal
opinion is that the PRC is in no hurry to unfreeze the conflict over Arunachal
Pradesh, and its insistence on sovereignty over Tawang—a district, I suspect,
that has extremely limited interest in reunification with the Chinese
motherland—is something of a pretext.
With the Simla
Agreement tainted and no subsequent cession of Tawang by Tibet or China, the
Indian position in Tawang is embarrassingly similar to that of the PRC in the
matter of its seizure of the Paracel Islands from Vietnam in 1974 i.e. having
expelled the previous rulers by conquest and achieved control of the territory
without attaining international recognition of its sovereignty. And it’s somewhat similar to the Senkakus,
where the United States effectively surrendered its sovereignty over the islands
when it returned Okinawa and the Ryukyus to Japan, but didn’t cede its claim to
anybody else.
Maybe Arunachal
Pradesh is another one of those Mexican-standoff situations like Kashmir vs.
Tibet (a.k.a. the Indian temptation to make mischief in the ethnic-Tibetan
areas of the PRC is inhibited by concern that the PRC, via Pakistan, might
light the fuse in Kashmir). The PRC
keeps the Tawang/AP issue alive to forestall thoughts by India of giving aid
and comfort to Japan on the Senkakus or, for that matter, Vietnam on the
Paracels.
Both the PRC and
India are bulking up their infrastructure and military on their respective
sides of the de facto McMahon-Line-based border, making it a virtual certainty
that India will never alienate any part of AP, including Tawang.
That’s good news
for reduced actual tensions (as opposed to defense ministry posturing) at the
shared border, but India’s heightened sense of security concerning Arunachal
Pradesh may encourage it to be less tentative vis a vis the PRC in its Japanese
and Vietnamese diplomacy.
So,
paradoxically, greater security along the PRC-Indian border may lead to greater
insecurity elsewhere.
N.B. For further reading, readers are welcome to review my previous pieces on Sino-Indian relations: China “pivot” trips over McMahon Line; China’s Flank of Discontent; India Places Its Asia Bet on Japan; Is Narendra Modi the Leader of the World's Largest Democracy...Or the World's Most Successful Fascist?
Peter Lee writes on East and South Asian affairs and their intersection with US foreign policy. His articles can be found on his blog site ChinaMatters.
Peter Lee writes on East and South Asian affairs and their intersection with US foreign policy. His articles can be found on his blog site ChinaMatters.
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