Padma Awards Farce

The late P.K. Iyengar, former chairman of the atomic energy commission, head of the theoretical group at BARC and father of the implosion-triggered fission device tested in May 1974 — incidentally, still the only proven weapon in the country’s nuclear arsenal, and responsible, moreover, for seminal work in the field of neutron scattering done in partnership with the Physics Nobel Prize Winner B.N. Brockhouse, was awarded the Padma Bhushan.  Scan the list of Padma Bhushan awardees in recent years to go no further back in time, and one discovers all kinds of people of dubious merit being similarly rewarded, including a number of media-persons. Can it reasonably be contended that any of these worthies have touched the heights even in their own field that Dr. Iyengar reached in his, let alone served the national interest, or contributed to a national cause, in any critical way? No doubt, standards have plunged since 1975 when Dr. Iyengar was so recognized. Even so, the Padma awards, prima facie, are beginning to resemble patronage gongs that well-placed political leaders or governments-of-the-day choose to hand out liberally to those who have, by whatever means, been helpful, which aspect will be borne out again when another awards list is announced  come Republic Day. This is travesty that is fast becoming a farce with the clamour, not so much among the people at-large, as in the ruling party circles beset by political troubles, for conferring Bharat Ratna on Sachin Tendulkar – a cause the Sports Minister Ajay Maken has also taken up.

That politicians are enthused by the “Ratna for Sachin” campaign is not surprising, geared as they are to riding whatever “feel good” wave presents itself. It is, moreover, a populist gesture and costs the government nothing compared to the expensive giveaways (such as the Rs one lakh crore free food scheme) and similar entitlement programs that will push the country into a downward deficit spiral and rob the Indian economy of what little buoyancy it has so far been able to muster despite the absence of second generation economic reforms Prime Minister Manmohan Singh keeps promising.  It is anticipated that the prospective elevation of the celebrated “Tondulkar” will generate some slight goodwill if not real electoral dividend. But it will open up a can of worms.

For one thing, the question will arise whether Sachin is a good citizen. Whatever his achievements on the cricket field, he has been handsomely compensated for it with hundreds of millions of dollars in advertisement revenues and generous player contracts. Nobody grudges him these avenues of personal pecuniary gain. But his basic instincts seem to be that of a spoilt and greedy person wanting more, grabbing more, not from the Corporate world which hires him to peddle their wares, which is excusable, but from the State exchequer, which is always under financial duress, in part because less than five percent of the population pays income tax and the rest inventively avoid paying their legitimate dues. It is not known if Sachin pays all the taxes on his vast income that he is supposed to, but recall that some years back he moved heaven and earth to get out of paying customs duty on an imported Ferrari sports car gifted to him. He succeeded in having friends in high places persuade the tax authorities to zero out the tax demand. The same Ferrari he later sold, apparently pocketing the sale price-qua-profit without any qualms. What does that say about Sachin Tendulkar, the man, except that he is a petty tax shirker and far from model citizen. Even if this were the only kink in his record, it would be enough to disqualify him from receiving any consideration, let alone the Bharat Ratna. After all, the least one can expect from a person conferred the country’s highest civilian award is that he is civic-minded enough to adhere to the same rules his fellow-countrymen do.

The other thing Sachin’s Ratna will do is open the door wide for a horde of other sportsmen claimants. Already, the other major sports bodies, not to be out-shone by BCCI, are preparing lists of every Indian hockey player, wrestler, boxer, shooter, sprinter, swimmer, and kabbadi player, living or dead, who ever donned India colours with some distinction, to join Sachin in the pantheon of the nation’s greats, and who is to say they don’t deserve this honour any less than Sachin does? Now notables of the film, light music, and television worlds are stirring, making the case that they consistently provide far more joy and upliftment for the sagging and demoralised masses than do all the sportsmen with their episodic successes put together. Cricket and sports generally are ultimately only entertainment, not rocket science. Spectators spending a day watching Sachin bat perhaps draw as much, if not more, satisfaction from spending three hours in darkened cinema halls seeing Shahrukh Khan sing and dance and over-act. For the nation, this sort of activity while adding to its “soft power” is worth little in substantive terms, and certainly is no criterion for Bharat Ratna which, in theory, at least, goes to the rarest of the rare persons for the same reasons that a Second Lieutenant Arun Khetrapal posthumously wins the coveted Param Vir Chakra for conspicuous gallantry in war, not some run-of-the-mill soldier catching a stray bullet on the battlefield and even less a ketchup colonel. Sportsmen and entertainers do wonderful things and laurels come their way in the form of awards meant for their specialist achievements, such as the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna and the Dadasaheb Phalke award. Sachin has won that, been there, and it may be best to leave him and his ilk from the sports arena, to get on with their lives undisturbed by any brouhaha about whether their public recognition needs further embellishment.

Much of public life in India is already so debased that dragging the Bharat Ratna award down may be considered no big thing but it will amount to an egregious assault on the nation’s good sense and perspective.

[Published in the New Indian Express on Friday, December 30, 2011; available at http://www.newindianexpress.com/columns/article312711.ece

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A few fatal flaws

When does a flawed system of government become a threat to the security of the state and the wellbeing of the people? This is a question that must now concern all citizens witnessing the country’s dangerous decline in certain salient aspects, even as those at the helm, far from taking corrective measures such as the Lokpal Bill with teeth, are worsening the situation.

The Constitution Review Commission headed by former Chief Justice M.N.Venkatcheliah, established in February 2000, to suggest amendments to the Constitution in light of five decades of experience, submitted its report to the NDA Government two years later. Among other things, it recommended the scrapping of the “first past the post” election system — the source of the biggest ills afflicting the country, including the proliferation of regional and caste-based parties, and perpetual political indiscipline and instability at the centre and in the states. The near anarchy that eventuates as a result can be obviated by a system of a runoff between the two highest vote-getters. The need to secure 50 percent plus one vote, will compel all parties to moderate their election planks and messages to attract majority of voters and, once in government, to eschew policies favouring their vote-bloc, and prevent the kind of absolute paralysis we see in UPA-II today.

Were the Constitution to be rectified in the above manner, the problem of a bureaucratically stifled state would still remain. It is the root cause of rampant corruption, maladministration, opacity in government, and viscousy decision-making processes. Bureaucrats actually make policies and Ministers are content with this arrangement so long as they are alerted to the possibility of loot. In this respect, the bureaucrats — as diviners of incomprehensible rules and regulations and as guardians, moreover, of the discretionary power – are the prime facilitators, mentors to politicians intent on diverting public monies into private bank accounts here and abroad, and in writing up vendor contracts with inbuilt channels to siphon off government funds. The best evidence for this are the thousands of lakhs of crores of rupees routinely allocated to infrastructure development and meeting the social welfare needs of the people: Do the people at the grassroots remotely enjoy the scale of benefits worth this much expenditure, and where exactly is the quality infrastructure promised by the humungous levels of public investment in it over the years?

A system manned by those single-mindedly keyed to self-aggrandizement, specialises in protecting its own through institutional means. So, the Central Bureau of Investigation, controlled by the government, is tasked with investigating ministers and government officials and, in the era of slim and unstable majorities, to keep troublesome coalition partners in check with threat of unleashing corruption cases. How convenient is that? It is too great a risk to put an independent Lokpal in-charge of such an agency, leave alone permit it genuine autonomy. The Central Board of Direct Taxes, for the same reasons, shields the more egregiously erring officers of the Indian Revenue Service, known for its extortionist ways. The Administrative Tribunal, on its part, safeguards the interests of even jailbirds, recently restoring the pension of the convicted child molester, the former Director-General of Police, Haryana, SPS Rathore. There’s greater sensitivity where political heavyweights are involved. Human Resources Minister Kapil Sibal is prepared to sacrifice the Constitutional Right of Freedom of Speech just so Sonia Gandhi is not called names on the internet, and Manmohan Singh is convinced of P. Chidambaram’s innocence in the case of the Delhi hotelier because, he said, the Home Minister claimed so. Using this standard there will be no wrong doers and, hence, no need for judges, judicial process, and jails. Corrupt judges are not hauled up as their peers render verdict. Unaccountable government, legislature and judiciary are the hallmarks of an authoritarian state, and also, it turns out, of Indian democracy.

The extraordinarily venal and inefficient Soviet-style leviathan state is the most enduring legacy of socialism, and a millstone around the Indian people’s neck. Hoping to fast-forward economic development, Jawaharlal Nehru oversaw the growth and spread of the public sector in the economic sphere until now when, cancer-like, it threatens the private sector-fuelled economic progress – the last best bet for the country to realize its promise and potential. Meanwhile, the government run enterprises — the Ashoka Hotel chain, Air India, etc., staffed by a mind-bogglingly inefficient labour force, are a massive financial drain and, compared with their commercial competitors, an embarrassment. The pillars-cum-beneficiaries of the extant system, moreover, seem in no doubt about the business they are in. When a lowly municipal office peon in Indore is apprehended for unaccounted wealth to the tune of Rs 10 crores, and a clerk is caught with Rs 40 crores worth of property, imagine the opportunities for limitless plunder available to higher ups in the hierarchy. The occasional senior bureaucrat or politician, such as former telecommunications minister, A. Raja, found with his hand in the cookie jar of contracts worth thousands of millions of dollars could well plead, as Lord Clive of Plassey did at Westminster, that he was “amazed” at his own “modesty” considering that “the wealth of Hindoostan” lay for his taking.

The most damaging consequence of the statist ideology, however, is that it has reinforced the debilitating habit of mind of the Indian people, something the British colonial overlords, for obvious reasons, reinforced – looking to, and relying on, the state as mai-baap to provide them sustenance. With the Nanny state as provider of food and employer of first and last resort, the politics of competitive populism and quotas, on the one hand and of identity politics and patronage, on the other hand, reign. It has reduced even the proud Jat community, for instance, to seeking “backward caste” status.

When a system promises so much to so many but is essentially geared to serving the politician and the state functionary, what eventuates is a government that can easily be commandeered by a few beholden to crony capitalists, foreign interests, and extra-territorial powers. There is no graver threat to national security.

[Published in Asian Age and Deccan Chronicle on Dec 22, 2011 and available at www.asianage.com/columnists/few-fatal-flaws-932 and at www.deccanchronicle.com/columnists/bharat-karnad/few-fatal-flaws ]

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Playing hardball with China

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh once again pooh-poohed the threat from China, this time on Dec 14 in Parliament which undercuts the raison détre  for the India-Japan-United States strategic discussion. Originally planned for mid-October, it was postponed at the eleventh hour because, predictably, the Indian Government felt queasy about angering China.  An alternative explanation is that, in order to multiply Beijing’s apprehensions, this trialogue was deliberately slated for December 19 to serve as curtain raiser for the state visit by the Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda. It suggests a Machiavellian or, more appropriately, Chanakyan move of a kind Manmohan Singh has, by and large, foresworn. Last year, it may be recalled, the former Japanese premier, Shinzo Abe, had pleaded with the Indian government not to feel “shy” about cooperating with Japan and the United States to prevent a “strategic void” from developing in Asia that, he feared, China would fill.

It is, alas, not so much shyness as the prospect of militarily having to tangle with China that buckles the knees of Indian political leaders and our military brass, who alike have been accustomed to the huffing and puffing against Pakistan that passes for this country’s security posture, but which is plainly inadequate to meet the real security challenges posed by the no-nonsense Chinese People’s Liberation Army, Navy and Air Force. It is a forlorn hope that even at this late date, the Indian Government and Armed Services will begin seriously to reprioritise defence expenditures and capabilities to enable India to “act east” rather than merely “look east” as it has done for the last twenty years.

At the heart of the Japanese and American importuning, and also of the Indian wariness, is the recognition that China may be impossible to handle by any one country alone, but major states working together can prevent Chinese hegemony in Asia-Pacific. Except, the “panda huggers” running Delhi’s China policy are, for dubious reasons, convinced that tippy-toeing around the trialogue would fetch better returns. This is to assume that the strategically ruthless Chinese policymakers will not capitalize on Indian weakness and, worse, it is to believe that India has less at stake in this tripartite military engagement than Japan or the United States. Such thinking indicates a disconnect from reality, considering that the threat to India’s energy interests — ONGC Videsh Ltd partnering OilVietnam in exploring and developing oil fields in the South China Sea falling within Vietnam’s territorial claim line, is immediate. While the Chinese Navy feels it is in no position yet to take on the might of its US and the Japanese counterparts, it feels confident of giving the Indian Navy a drubbing. This much can be gleaned from an authoritative commentary published by Xinhua news agency which talked of dealing harshly with an “ambitious” but “immature” India should it dare cross, what it called, “an insurmountable red line”. The red line, presumably, refers to the expansive Chinese claims in the South China Sea, and the implied punitive action to the capabilities of the powerful South Seas Fleet assembled on Hainan Island. This development, moreover, is in the context of President Hu Jintao’s recent exhortation to the Chinese naval commanders to be ready for war.

With the Indian Navy apparently doubting its own capacity to tackle China, a trilateral arrangement is obviously in India’s interest. MEA can make peaceful noises even as the country generally follows a two-pronged strategy of the kind Beijing has specialised in. Simultaneously talking peace and taking every possible action to strategically discomfit and politically and militarily to neutralize China, makes sense. Dissuading and deterring China is best accomplished by firming up a bloc of nations bothered by China’s rise. As far back as January 2000, NDA defence minister, George Fernandes, talked of a strong India as a “very solid agent” to ensure “that the sea lanes [in the South China Sea] are not disturbed and that conflict situations are contained”. Given the UPA government’s “appease first” tendency, this commitment has not gained momentum. China has since grown too powerful and joining up with Japan and the US will afford this country a measure of safety and policy latitude. Japan is the trump card. Beijing respects America’s military muscle but is hugely disconcerted by the emergence of an assertive Japan, one that in the future could be nuclear-armed. After all, Japan by its own reckoning is ä “para-nuclear state” — its vast holdings of fissile material being easily convertible, as Ichiro Ozawa, president of the Liberal Party, reminded everybody in 2002, into “thousands of nuclear warheads”. It is an eventuality to chill the hearts of even the most bellicose PLA Generals marinated in tales of excesses, such as the Nanjing massacre, by Imperial Japanese forces during the Second World War. It is a visceral Chinese fear of Japan that India needs to psychologically unsettle Beijing. To this end, playing up the prospective collaboration with Japan in nuclear, space, and military high technology fields, and engaging in more frequent military exercises with the Japanese Self-Defence Forces, helps.

It is time to play hardball because that is what China does. Delhi so far has neither shown the foresight nor the stomach for it. Nevertheless, India has triggered concern in Beijing by its initiative in consolidating the Buddhist nations and peoples at the Global Buddhist Conference against Tibet’s oppression. Delhi should now ramp up its security ties with Taiwan by immediately rescheduling a visit by Dong Kuo-yu, Adviser to the Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou that was planned for mid-October but abruptly cancelled by MEA, arm Vietnam and Indonesia with the Brahmos cruise missile that can later be replaced by the nuclear warheaded version, and begin diplomatically to equate “genuine autonomy” for Tibet with Chinese claims on Arunachal Pradesh. The collective security scheme with Japan and the US, that Australia is keen to be part of, will, moreover, reassure ASEAN and firm up an Asian consensus that a China, strategically and militarily subdued by whatever means, is the best bet for long term peace, security, and stability in the continent.

[Published in the ‘New Indian Express’, Friday, December 16, 2011 at www.newsbuzz.com]

 

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A Big Deal

The eventually twenty-two billion dollar (not ten billion dollar, as has been reported) deal for the Medium-range Multi-Role Combat Aircraft could become a Bofors-like political liability for the ruling Congress Party, if it fails to get it right. Inordinate amounts of political capital and financial resources, will be invested in it, and the Indian taxpayer has a right to expect that the numerous contracts will be unlike any contracts signed by the Indian government in the past. Enough Indian money has been spent without any enduring benefits for India, for the people to be wary of the Defence Ministry’s Price Negotiation Committee (PNC) that will be talking soon with the vendors of the shortlisted aircraft – Rafale and Eurofighter. The PNCs constituted for earlier deals emptied the treasury but settled meagrely for only licensed manufacture of planes. This sort of deal will be unacceptable hereon. Especially because the high stakes for Dassault and EADS means India can ask for anything and get it.

The trouble is the status quo serves the interests of all concerned very well. The ruling Party at the centre – Congress Party, owing to its long years in power, has signed most of the major military acquisitions deals to-date — and its leaders, invariably gain from commissions reportedly channelled their way. The Indian Air Force, which has scrupulously shied away from developing in-house aircraft design and development skills and competences, values only imported aircraft because, the Service brass claim, these are top-of-the-line and reliable. Consequently, it has gone out of its way to stymie indigenous aircraft development programmes. It deliberately killed the Marut-HF-24 Mark II – successor to the Mark I version, widely hailed as aerodynamically the best combat aircraft of its time. Created by Kurt Tank, the great German designer of Focke-Wulfe warplanes for the Luftwaffe in the Second World War and hired by Jawaharlal Nehru, the HF-24 programme, had it been nursed to maturity, would have resulted in a flourishing aircraft industry in the country by the 1970s. Learning nothing from that episode, the IAF today is delaying the series production of the Tejas Light Combat Aircraft. This is so, notwithstanding the fact that, avionics-wise, the LCA is at the 4.5 generation level, more capable than any fighter aircraft currently in the IAF inventory. Supposed to gain from technology transferred to it, Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. is, like the country, a classic under-achiever. Restricting itself to “production engineering”, HAL capability has calcified at the Meccano-type skill sets-level. Meccano was a toy assembly kit available up until the Sixties for seven to ten year olds who, following simple instructions, could screw this part on to that one and come up with a crane or some such thing! Meccano no more made the child an engineer than license manufacturing makes HAL an aircraft design and development Company. But, dog in manger-like, it is permitted to veto technology being transferred by foreign suppliers to private sector Companies that are in far better position speedily to absorb and utilize the advanced technologies, something HAL is manifestly incapable of doing. With all the players in the game eager to retain the present arrangement, it is little wonder that India gets shafted every time. The onus is on Defence Minister A.K. Antony to ensure that this doesn’t happen ever again and to instruct the PNC accordingly.

The criteria to judge if the MMRCA deal serves the national interest will be, firstly, whether Indian industry obtains, without hitch, source codes (millions of lines of software) for every aspect of the aircraft as also comprehensive flight control laws. Secondly, the contract ensures that, as a result of the deal, India is hoisted into the cutting edge technology ranks and seeds a globally competitive aerospace industry in the country. And, lastly, India secures access to critical technology outside the combat aircraft field. Contracts will have to be so written as to index large payments against the meeting of technology transfer benchmarks, such as the full and timely delivery of the codes and the laws, and the entrenching of advanced technologies in the country.

By way of offsets, both Dassault peddling Rafale and EADS the Eurofighter, have promised to set up R&D centres here. Their research agendas will have to be competitively fixed, systems of oversight established, and the extent of Indian contributions to the ongoing production and service support of Rafale/Eurofighter for global sales and to any future manned and unmanned aircraft projects, pre-determined. Dassault and EADS are both willing to part with single crystal blade turbine technology (which allows the aircraft engine to generate more power at higher temperatures), but collaboration in developing the follow-on ceramic turbine blade technology for even more enhanced aircraft engine performance, will have to be insisted upon. Manned fighter aircraft, as this analyst has repeatedly stressed, are becoming obsolete. In order to firm up future air warfare options, direct Indian involvement in the advanced Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicles being developed by Dassault in its Neuron project and EADS in its Barracuda programme is a price both vendors would happily pay to engage India in other high-technology ventures the French Company and the European consortium are exploring.

Rafale seems to have an edge, owing to its Active Electronically Scanned Array radar for air-to-air missions, whereas EADS has it only as prototype. This is fortuitous in a way because France can, as an inalienable part of the MMRCA deal, be persuaded to allow Indian nuclear weapons designers access to its Megajoule inertial confinement nuclear fusion facility near Bordeaux, to help rectify the thermonuclear weapon design that proved a dud on testing in 1998, and to work on other fusion weapons configurations.  This will not obviate the need for physical tests in the future, but inspire some confidence in the Indian strategic nuclear arsenal in the interim. Such access is a must and it can be extracted, howsoever painfully, from Paris now when it is really desperate to keep a combat aircraft design and development capability alive in France. It is an opportunity not to be missed.

[Published in my ‘Security Wise’ column in ‘Asian Age’ and in ‘Deccan Chronicle’, Thursday, Nov 8, 2011 and available at www.asianage.com/columnists/big-deal ]

Posted in Defence Industry, Great Power imperatives, India's strategic thinking and policy, Indian Air Force, Military Acquisitions, Nuclear Policy & Strategy, Nuclear Weapons, Strategic Relations with the US & West | 4 Comments

Japanese slow-burn on China, even the US

In a small group interaction at the USI this afternoon with a Japanese team led by retired Lieutenant General Noboru Yamaguchi, former head of Training and Doctrine-development Command of the Japanese Self-Defence Forces, and presently Director, Center for National Security & Crisis Management, National Defense University of Japan, the Japanese team surprised us with an unvarnished take on the US and China and the kind of apprehesions the latter generates among the Japanese. Among other things, General Yamaguchi, for example, said that the US swings between extremes on China — “panda hugger” to “dragon slayer” and one “cannot put too much weight on US’current policy” whichever it is. Regarding China, he said Japan “does not trust” Beijing’s nuclear ‘No first use’ promises, and that “good economic relations” alone “cannot guarantee peace”. And that countries like India and Japan should work together  to “ïnfluence” China into moderating its policy. One of the ways of moderating Chinese assertiveness, the General said, was military cooperation and, curiously, referred in this respect to the use during the Second World War by the Imperial Japanese Forces of “land-based air” to sink two Royal Navy warships near South China Sea!

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Faint Hearts and Pre-emptive Kowtow

For a brief moment it seemed the Indian Government had sprouted a spine, shown strategic imagination, when it became known that the Ministry of External Affairs had cancelled the forthcoming border talks with China. One had hoped that this was because Premier Wen Jiabao had registered one slight too many at the East Asia Summit in Bali for even the insult-proof Manmohan Singh to stomach. But the truth emerged and it was familiar stuff. Far from telling the Chinese where to get off, the MEA, it turned out, was its usual self — all shaky hands, buckling knees, and apologetic, backpedalling furiously to keep the border talks and the Annual Defence Dialogue scheduled for December 8-9 on track, in the wake of the storm in the Chinese teacup created by the all-world Buddhist Meet in Delhi. This conclave was an inspired Intelligence project, surprisingly approved by MEA, to light a fire under the Tibet issue, mobilize the Buddhist peoples and nations of the world against China and its sustained attempts to extinguish Tibetan-Lamaist religious traditions and culture, and to publicize Chinese efforts at violently suppressing the Tibetan people.

The trouble is the Indian Government is easily spooked by China, enough any way to get it to do a preemptive kowtow, which is what happened. In the real world though, it is China that is facing a difficult situation, with most countries on its periphery pushing back, and relying on overlapping strategic partnerships and treaty alliances with regional powerhouses, like India if only it can muster the wit and the will to act the part, and outside great powers, such as the United States, to restrict Beijing’s ambition and expansive policies. Delhi is ambivalent — building up military muscle but also continuing with its traditional approach that is full of fear and so risk-averse, it has made an art form of faint-heartedness and back-flips. Earlier this year, Delhi negatived a strategic “trialogue” with the United States and Japan so as not to upset Beijing. The annual Malabar exercise with the US Navy with Australian naval ships also participating sent shivers of apprehension down Delhi’s back because it feared an adverse Chinese reaction. There is, it seems, not a thing India can do or has in mind to do in the military and foreign policy spheres that China cannot veto. This is willfully to dance to Beijing’s tune.

The question to ask is what is India getting out of the border talks? Nothing has transpired to date as a result of the interminable rounds of talks, earlier in the Joint Working Group and, in the past three years or so, between the National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon and the Chinese representative Dai Bingguo. So it’s absence is no great loss. And why, pray, the hullaballoo regarding the Defence Dialogue? Can anything remotely substantive be expected from a “dialogue” involving the Indian Defence Secretary, Shashikant Sharma, a generalist civil servant, and a Chinese combat pilot and PLA Deputy Chief of General Staff, General Ma Xiaotian? What will they talk about? There’s always the weather. I mean, shouldn’t this be a conversation between like military officers, Ma going up against, say, the Head of Integrated Defence Staff, presently, Vice Admiral Shekhar Sinha? This would make more sense if the intention, for instance, is to discuss, in some technical depth, ways to maintain peace on the border and to alight on rules of engagement on the high seas and in the air.

Our over-eagerness to jaw-jaw is counterproductive. It is clear from its negotiating strategy that Beijing believes it is advantageous to keep the border issue stoked by hostile actions in the field and by enlarging its claims (Tawang as “southern Tibet”), and leverage Delhi’s desire for closure on the border issue to extract terms adverse to Indian interests. Indian impatience is Beijing’s asset. In the event, it would be advisable if Delhi turned the tables by adopting Chinese negotiating principles and strategy: Postpone talks and official interaction of any kind with Beijing at the slightest hint or even suspicion of provocation, behave as if any delays in resolving the border dispute will only benefit India, and, most importantly, re-frame India’s position on Tibet.

Delhi should point out that India’s acceptance of Chinese “sovereignty” has always been conditional on the Tibet Region enjoying genuine autonomy, and because that is manifestly not the case, there is no Indian obligation to accept China’s presence in Tibet as other than illegitimate, leave alone negotiate the India-Tibet border with it. This is not hair-splitting – though splitting hairs is the stuff of diplomacy, but a legally-maintainable position. For too long, Beijing has been given a free pass, courtesy an Indian Government wearing a defeatist attitude on its sleeve. In any major war, the Indian military believes that the three Services can more than adequately take care of business. But such confident military posturing cannot piggyback on a political policy reeking of appeasement. Whatever logic has so far animated Indian policy, it has not nudged China a centimeter toward conciliation. If anything, it has made Beijing more obstreperous and inclined to deliberately show India down.

India has been a punching bag for China. Should it remain one in the future as well?  Delhi cannot allow Beijing to sustain various insurrectionary Movements in the North-East without responding in kind. Clandestine training, arming, and assisting highly motivated young Tibetans from the exile community to wage a “liberation war”, would be an apt riposte. It will, moreover, be in line with the setting up in India of the International Buddhist Confederation to pressure China in Asia and at the United Nations. A tit-for-tat policy will also require India to nuclear missile arm Vietnam, as a belated counter to Beijing’s equipping Pakistan with nuclear weapons and missiles. It will compel the Chinese leadership to rethink the not inconsiderable wages of belligerence and induce more respect for India. To be immobilized by one’s fears or, worse, by one’s supposed weaknesses, is a policy liability that cannot easily be overcome. Whence India’s “Tibet card”, “Vietnam card”, and all the other cards, remain un-played.

[Published as “A Tit for Tat with China” in the ‘New Indian Express’, Dec 2, 2011, at http://expressbuzz/op-ed/opinion/A-tit-for-tat-with-china/339104.html ]

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GOI’s noodle spine

At the recent USI National Security Seminar, Nov 17-18, on ‘Peace & Stability in Asia-Pacific Region: Assessment of the Security Architecture’, retired Taiwanese Major General Liu Kuang-Chung informed me that a visit to Delhi scheduled for end-October by Dong Kuo-Yu, Adviser to Taiwan President Ma, was cancelled virtually at the last minute, perhaps for fear of  adverse Beijing reaction. Another  example of the Indian government’s noodle-spined approach to China. 

Posted in India's China Policy, India's strategic thinking and policy | 1 Comment

http://www.fileswap.com/dl/9i6XY9ojlq/Dr._Bharat_Karnad_at_NJ13_2011

This was a talk delivered to “something billed as an “NRI Jirga” — almost all of them active bloggers  at the bharat-rakshak.com, on Nov 13, 2011

http://www.fileswap.com/dl/9i6XY9ojJq/Dr._Bharat_Karnad_at_NJ_Nov_2011_complete_mp3.html

Posted in Great Power imperatives, India's China Policy, India's Pakistan Policy, India's strategic thinking and policy, Indian Air Force, Indian Army, Indian Navy, Nuclear Policy & Strategy, Nuclear Weapons, Strategic Relations with South East Asia & Far East, Strategic Relations with the US & West | Leave a comment

Bharat Karnad at Heritage Foundation, Wash DC

Bharat Karnad at Heritage Foundation, Wash DC

Posted in Great Power imperatives, India's China Policy, India's Pakistan Policy, India's strategic thinking and policy, Indian Air Force, Indian Army, Indian Navy, Military Acquisitions, Nuclear Policy & Strategy, Strategic Relations with South East Asia & Far East, Strategic Relations with the US & West | Leave a comment

Strategic and Nuclear Balancing of China in Asia-Pacific

United Service Institution National Security Seminar on “Peace & Stability in Asia-Pacific Region: Assessment of the Security Architecture”, Nov 17-18, 2011

Nov 17, 2011 – Paper presented by BHARAT KARNAD in Session 1 on ‘Strategic & Security Environment in the Asia-Pacific Region with  focus on Nuclear Issues’

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­                   Strategic and Nuclear Balancing of China in Asia-Pacific

Introduction

 The new millennium is turning out to be everything nobody expected it to be. The international power shift from the Atlantic world to Asia has spawned uncertainty and deepened insecurities and mistrust, even as terrorism and economic blight have spread virally. It has fuelled, in some Asian countries, paranoia, and in others, the resolve to protect national interests with whatever mix of political and military policies that promise a modicum of order and stability in the region. The convergence of the two streams has led to enormous flux in policy where every country is at once hedging and maneuvering for slivers of advantage.  

      These developments, moreover, are in the larger context of an economically vibrant China throwing its weight around, so far mostly in Asia, while playing the banker to a heavily indebted United States as well as the European Union (EU); an exhausted America, apparently drained of self-confidence and resources, trying desperately to hang on to its dominant status even as it attempts to deal with the massive war-expenditure induced economic recession and attendant high rates of unemployment;[1] an increasingly irrelevant and diffident EU, habituated to riding the US coattails in all areas, is contributing marginally to the US-led NATO missions (Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya), while many of its members (Greece, Italy, Spain, and Portugal) face bankruptcy and a future in which, not Washington, but Beijing is the economic “savior”;[2] and, the countries in East Asia, South-East Asia, and in the Indian Ocean littoral, face a China that is not a distant entity, even less an abstract ‘celestial economy’,[3] but a relentlessly driven power, hungry for hegemonic substance, standing and recognition, and perceived by almost all other Asian states as imperiling their security and peace of mind and, therefore, requiring counter-balancing with a cautiously willing United States and a hesitant India.[4]

      In such a milieu, what the majority of Asian countries are looking for is reassurance, overlapping guarantees of security from whatever credible sources may be available. Countervailing strategic alliance or partnership with the United States and/or India, both countries nuclear-armed and with strategic heft, and ostensible rivals of, and in sometimes tense relationship with, China, is the policy choice of most of these states. A few of them, while tacking to these winds, are also surreptitiously nursing the capability to produce nuclear weapons just in case it is ever needed.[5] The nuclear-armed regime of Kim Jong Il in North Korea, by successfully warding off the US for over a decade, has proved that the Bomb guarantees its owner protection from molestation by a big power in all circumstances.

      This paper will briefly analyze a couple of inter-connected issues: (1) the attitude and posture vis a vis China of the United States and of India, as perceived by Asian states on the Chinese periphery; smaller Asian countries hope to rely on these two powers to blunt China’s growing power, and (2) considering the difficult security situation Japan, Taiwan, and Vietnam and other ASEAN states find themselves in, the strategic policy choices they are making in terms of cultivating and strengthening politico-military ties with the United States and India. The paper concludes that the strategic and nuclear counter-balancing of China will be the background in which inter-state relations will play out in Asia in the foreseeable future.

 Litmus Test States

 Japan and Taiwan are among the oldest and staunchest allies of the United States, in Asia – their links forged at the start point of the Cold War between Soviet Russia-led Communist bloc of nations and the so-called Free World headed by the US. The security of these two states, both cowering in the shadow of a growingly aggressive China, has been the lynchpin of America’s Far East policy. Any perceived weakening of the US security commitment to either country is seen as bellwether of Washington’s lack of resolve to stay anchored in Asia. As it is Taiwanese and Japanese confidence was shaken by the entente engineered by the Nixon-Kissinger duo and the Shanghai Declaration that eventuated in 1972. For the first time, the US acknowledged Taiwan not as a separate, sovereign, entity but, more ambiguously, as part of the “One China, two systems” concept.

      The US intent was to use Maodezong’s China to balance the Soviet Union. To firm up the value of this geostrategic card, Washington transferred military high technology to gild China’s military muscle[6] and opened up the American market to Chinese exports – an opportunity the far-sighted Chairman Dengxiaoping quickly capitalized on to get the country’s economy rolling on the exports-driven path. The rapprochement, however, ended up leaving Taiwan in the lurch, its security concerns the US sought to address with the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act promising protection in case Beijing tried forceful means of “unification”.  Joining the international mainstream has resulted in sustained skyrocketing growth for China averaging some 9% annually over the last 30 years, and an economy set to overtake the US’ as early as 2015, but no later than 2020. Taiwan, ironically, played a leading role in China’s economic regeneration. It is responsible for over 80% of Foreign Direct Investment in China, with Taiwanese industrialists and entrepreneurs exploiting the low wages and state subsidies to establish that country as a base for exporting low cost manufactures to a global market, and establishing China as the “workshop of the world”. Beijing, on its part, has all along hoped that such linkages would, over time, ease Taiwan’s peaceful absorption into the larger Chinese fold. But the most significant development is not that Taiwan and China are mutually dependent but that, notwithstanding the enormous economic gains accruing to Taiwan, the sentiment for resolutely maintaining its status, independent of and separate from, China’s continues to be strong, and animates much of Taiwanese politics.[7]

      Indeed, the leader of the opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Tsia Ing-wen’s call, during her September 2011 visit to Washington, for a new basis for US-Taiwan relations and the possibility, moreover, of her winning the general elections in January 2012 has sent unease coursing through Washington and Beijing because of their shared fear that Sino-US relations and the region, generally, may be heading, once again, for a rough ride. [8] When DPP last ruled in Taipei, President Chen Shui-bian, it may be recalled, had mooted a nation-wide referendum on independence, and precipitated a China-US confrontation in the mid-1990s in the Taiwan Straits. In more recent times, the US Government’s faint-hearted approach to helping Taiwan strengthen its armed forces may have placated Beijing but it has, apparently, discouraged not just the Taiwan nationalists such as Tsia but also the ruling Koumintang Party, which would prefer that Taiwan stay engaged with China but also remain a distinct entity, to achieve which goal periodic injections of advanced weapons systems into the island state to counter the arms build-up on the Mainland are necessary.

      Three requests by Taipei since 2006 to replace 66 of its aging F-16 A/Bs from a fleet of 150 such planes with the newer F-16 C/Ds, were hanging fire for over five years before the Obama Administration finally turned them down. Instead, only a mere upgrading of the existing Taiwanese F-16 A/Bs in a pared down deal worth $4.2 billion was approved, which will do nothing to correct a major skewing of the air warfare capabilities in China’s favour. The PLA Air Force units fronting on Taiwan are outfitted with Su-27s, Su-30s, J-10s, and even the fifth generation J-20 combat aircraft. A US Congressional assessment surveying the scene  has observed that “the US paralysis over sales of these aircraft since 2006 has given China time to develop more advanced capabilities…and evaluate capabilities to defeat even more advanced US tactical aircraft such as the F-22”.[9] A relieved Beijing said little unlike its response to President Barack Obama’s 2010 announcement of a $6.4 billion arms package that included missiles, Black Hawk helicopters, and mine-sweepers, when it went ballistic.[10]  

      Washington’s  room for maneuver and, in fact, its ability to take a strong stand on Taiwan’s autonomy is limited by the current economic depression and high unemployment the US is experiencing combined with the resource-draining wars in Iraq and Afghanistan it is embroiled in.[11] While President Obama is beginning to wind down these wars, it is unlikely there will be significant cost savings considering US Special Forces presence will continue in the more active theatre, Afghanistan, for a long time and periodic injections of huge amounts of money into Pakistan will be required as incentive to keep Islamabad from bolting the “global war on terrorism”. The US condition will not be helped by Beijing continuing to buy US Treasury bonds just so its exports to the American market remain at a high level. It is the recognition of limited options America has that led US Vice President Joseph Biden on his return from a state visit to China   categorically to state that Washington does not entertain “visions of a cold war-style rivalry or great power confrontation with China.” In the context of “China’s growing military abilities and intentions”, he volunteered, the US is “engaging with the Chinese military to understand and shape their thinking.”[12] The trouble is it may be China that is actually “shaping” US thinking on Asia and not the other way around, especially because American strategic experts, having conceded a “power shift”,[13] seem to have already thrown in the towel.

      Security-wise, Japan finds itself in much the same unenviable position as Taiwan, caught between the economic pull of China and the security pull of the US. The new Democratic Party government was elected on the promise that it would reconsider that country’s US-centred foreign and military policy. Once in office, however, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda has tried to find the middle ground between two policy streams – one tending to China, the other to the United States. The European Union-inspired concept of an East Asian Community proposed by a former premier from his Party, Yukio Hatoyama in 2009, as a means of solidifying the burgeoning economic linkages with China, was in the backdrop of his failure to convince the US Government to reduce the major US military presence in, and move the American base to a less populated part of, Okinawa. The other stream was the hard line adopted by his immediate predecessor, Naoto Kan, in the long simmering territorial dispute over the Senkaku/Diaoyu island chain.[14] It resulted in 2010 in an incident at sea leading to the Japanese navy arresting and releasing a captain of a Chinese vessel that occasioned a volley of harsh words by Beijing.

    Japan’s Self-Defence Forces, boasting of significant anti-submarine warfare and air superiority capabilities, an air assault brigade, and a navy bigger than most big power navies, are more than competent to handle China by themselves in the conventional military realm. As backstop is the US 7th Fleet in Yokohama, the forward-based American air strike and combat elements, and the land force contingent on Okinawa, which are bound, willy nilly, to get involved in any Japan-China military clash. But over and above that  is the status of Japan as a “para-nuclear state” that can in no time at all convert vast holdings of reprocessed spent fuel plutonium from its many power plants into quite literally “thousands of nuclear warheads”  to deter Chinese threats, as Ichiro Ozawa, the Liberal Party president  warned in 2002. He went on to boast that “If we get serious, we will never be beaten in terms of military power.”[15] This kind of uncharacteristically incautious utterance by a Japanese leader may mirror the rethink going on in Japanese security circles about self-reliance owing to doubts about US as a reliable military ally. It’s a feeling that’s been further fueled by Washington deciding not to sell 40 F-22 Raptors that Tokyo had asked for even before the decision was taken to scrap that aircraft programme. Even the deal for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter for Japan in lieu of the F-22, is minus some of the cutting edge stealth capabilities. It is the sort of attitude that does not inspire confidence.[16] Similar doubts motivated the South Korean nuclear weapons programme started in the 1974 by President Park Chung Hee that Washington pressured Seoul into abandoning, but which went covertly ahead anyway; it however progressively lost steam.[17]

      Unlike Japan, Taiwan has a small and effective “Hsin Chu” nuclear weapons programme at the Chungsan Institute of Science & Technology, initiated in the wake of the Chinese atomic test in October 1964.[18] In the 1970s, CIA was of the view that this programme could produce a nuclear bomb inside of five years. Some forty years  later, it is reasonable to assume they have ready nuclear warheads for the two strategic nuclear-capable missiles developed as part of the so-called “Tiching Project”. The missiles are a 1000 km range, two stage, solid fuel variant, and another with range of 300 kms, both designed to carry the same sized nuclear warhead.[19] In essence then, Taiwan too has a nuclear deterrent in embryo to fall back on. Nevertheless, by way of abundant caution and to keep any conflict this side of the nuclear Rubicon, the clause invoking US military protection in the Taiwan Relations Act is likely to be invoked by Taipei at the first hint of serious trouble with China, despite Taiwan’s quite considerable conventional military preparedness. As the latest US Department of Defence report on the Chinese military capabilities clearly states, other than the small sparsely populated offshore islands, “An attempt to invade Taiwan would strain China’s untested armed forces”, “pose a significant political and military risk” for Beijing  and, in light of “Taiwan’s investments to harden infrastructure and strengthen defensive capabilities” make it difficult for China “to achieve its objectives.”[20]

      It is now evident that Tokyo and Taipei, looking beyond the US strategic umbrella, are seeking to add more arrows to their defensive quiver. India is a country both states hope will join them in their separate endeavours, so far exclusively underwritten by the US military deployment, to fence in China.  The Indian Navy has been exercising frequently  with the Japanese Navy in the waters off Senkaku, and with the navies of South Korea, Vietnam, Singapore, and other ASEAN members. While Delhi put off the “trialogue” with Japan and the United States in 2011 lest China see this as a formal ganging up by rival powers,[21] it has been forthcoming in the military field – conducting the annual ‘Malabar’ naval exercise, most recently in summer 2011, with a destroyer flotilla off Okinawa alongside the US naval forces, an exercise the Japanese Navy had to withdraw from owing to its preoccupation with the Fukushima nuclear disaster relief work.[22]One reason India and Japan are increasingly on the same page as far as China is concerned is, perhaps, because Beijing is employing the same strategy with both countries of testing their defences with provocative acts. Incursions across the disputed Sino-Indian border (Line of Actual Control) by the Chinese PLA and the paramilitary People’s Armed Police units and the air space by Chinese helicopters are, apparently, as common now as the 96 incidents (a tripling of such violations over the past year) of intruding Chinese aircraft intercepted by Japanese air defence fighter planes over the outer Japanese islands.[23]  

      Even so, Delhi appears diffident, which problem was sought to be addressed in 2010 by the visiting former Japanese Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, who likened Japan’s situation to that of India in its relations with China and advised Delhi not to feel “shy” in joining the United States and Japan to keep the Asian sea lanes open and safe, because such military cooperation will soon draw other Asian states, such as Vietnam and South Korea into a collective security enterprise. He counseled that India and Japan ought to work together to ensure that, in this time of US weakness, there is “no strategic void” and, by implication, that this void is not filled by China. Abe also indicated the direction in which the mutually compatible countries are headed, saying “India’s success is in Japan’s best interests and Japan’s success is in the best interest of India.”[24] Japan has also overcome its earlier reservations about conducting nuclear trade with India, making the distinction between a nuclear weapon state and a nuclear proliferator.[25] This trend of greater Japanese strategic engagement with India is reflected in strengthening economic bonds, such as Japan emerging as the sixth largest source of Foreign Direct Investment.

      India’s links with Taiwan are still a work in progress, but proceeding along the lines the two countries have generally agreed upon. Taiwanese Member of Parliament Chen Chiech-Ju, visiting Delhi in October 2011 as head of a DPP delegation, proposed greater cooperation between littoral states, including India, to contain Chinese expansionism and maritime ambitions.[26] The Indian government, while happy with such sentiments, is more focused on getting a big part of the Taiwanese Foreign Direct Investment, presently channeled into the Mainland, diverted to India. But Taipei’s efforts in pushing such diversion of capital have floundered because the Taiwanese businessmen and industrialists find the difficulties of language and the poor quality of infrastructure in India obstacles too big easily to overcome. This reluctance is despite some singular successes racked up by Taiwanese Companies in India, such as Acer Computers and the telecommunications firm, D-Link. Early in the last decade, India broached the subject of sharing intelligence on China with Taiwan, given Taipei’s effective intelligence penetration of the Chinese system. The Taiwanese were however skeptical about what it would get of value in return. But, as Antonio Chiang, former Deputy Secretary General, National Security Council, Taiwan, who visited Delhi a number of times in the last decade, said in 2006: “Both sides have felt good about each other but are still unsure about what to do.”[27] Some of those early doubts may have been settled and cooperation, mostly in the intelligence field, is underway. More substantive cooperation, starting with joint exercises, in the security field may follow.

 South-East Asia: China’s Soft under-belly

 For geographically obvious reasons, South East Asia at once confronts China with danger and opportunities. The littoral states, while wishing to benefit from the surging Chinese economic growth, are nevertheless wary of Chinese intentions and Beijing’s moves are invariably looked upon with suspicion. The strategic problem for China[28] is that one of its two most volatile regions, Tibet (the other being Xinjiang) is proximal to this region, and harsh Chinese Communist rule and oppression of Tibetan people and Tibetan culture are seen as warning signals of the overarching danger posed to South East Asian states by China. The fear inspired by proximity to China has prompted increased defence expenditures and military acquisitions. Malaysia’s military acquisitions budget, for example, has gone up by some 700% in the 2005-2010 period, Singapore’s by 140%, and Indonesia’s by 84%.  Even so, the ASEAN states are not comfortable and seek further bolstering of their security by looking to India, with size, location, and politico-military weight to act as shield and counter. Unfortunately, the Indian government has lacked the strategic vision and the drive sufficiently to cash in on the anxiety triggered in this region by a China fast emerging as a great power.

      To the extent India’s ‘Look East’ policy has succeeded other than in fostering trade and commercial ties with the countries of that region, it’s been in the slow and substantive buildup of security partnerships across South East Asia, led by naval diplomacy. The leading countries with which India is developing special security relationships are Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, and particularly Vietnam.[29] The annual ‘Milan’ naval exercise involving the ASEAN (Association of South East Asian Nations) members and Bangladesh, Maldives, et al,  with portions of the on-shore interaction designed to cultivate social bonding between the sailor communities and, at higher levels, allowing officers to exchange views on the evolving military situations they face and to chalk out cooperative and collaborative counter measures. Such confidence building programmes have prompted greater mutual reliance. Thus, Singapore sent its submarine crews to train on Indian ex-German HDW 209 Submarines, also in service with the Singapore Navy, and its Air Force regularly uses Indian air space for training purposes. The Malaysian Air Force pilots flying ex-Russian Mi-29 aircraft and the maintenance crews servicing these planes, are trained by the Indian Air Force. Along with other ASEAN countries, Vietnam sends scores of its senior officers for higher command training to the India’s National Defence College, and depends on the Indian Armed Services for technical support. Delhi finally accepted the logic, that has been articulated for many years now, of arming Vietnam with consequential weaponry,[30] and the strong pitch by Vietnam and Indonesia for the Indian Brahmos supersonic cruise missile. As a result, this missile may soon be found on Vietnamese and Indonesian warships and outfitting their coastal batteries,[31] no doubt to the considerable unease of the Chinese South Seas Fleet operating out of Sanya base on Hainan Island. South China Sea may no longer be exclusively China’s sea as Beijing perceives it with its rather arbitrary drawing of the expansive U-shaped dotted line on maps to claim most of it, a sea territory rich in oil and gas and hence even more vigorously contested by neighbouring countries, including Malaysia, Vietnam, Brunei, and the Philippines.   

      India is seen by these states as a counter-balancing military presence to China in the extended area, especially with the US naval forces in the strategic mix securing the eastern end of the arc of the Chinese periphery in Asia-Pacific in league with the Japanese and Australian defence forces.[32] The Indian government’s continued hesitation in overtly making common cause against China hasn’t prevented the Indian Navy from participating in joint maneuvers with its US, Australian and Japanese counterparts. Much of the firming up of the collective effort to ring in China is despite most of the countries, including India, having strong trade and economic relations with it. China displaced the United States two years ago as India’s largest trading partner with trade growth exceeding targets. The other states bordering China similarly are plugged into the Chinese manufacturing loop, such as Vietnam and Thailand, or are prime exporters of natural resources (wood, minerals, oil, off shore gas) to meet Chinese industrial demand, such as Myanmar. But all of them share the same high level of distrust where China is concerned owing to historical memory of imperial Chinese aggression and, in many instances, unresolved border disputes, and because of their apprehension of once again being reduced to vassal or tributary status. Some of these countries, in particular Myanmar, expressly blame India for “pushing” it “into Chinese arms” by over-stressing the Human Rights angle,[33] but have quickly grasped the Indian offer of development aid and military assistance to balance the Chinese presence. This even though Myanmar has allowed a rapid north-south road and rail build-up, enabling China to have an opening on the Bay of Bengal through a deep water port it is constructing on the offshore Ramree Island.

      China’s claims on the South China Sea encompassing the disputed Spratly and Paracel Island chains and coveted by many of the other nearby states not little because of rich oil and gas deposits found in those areas, have been arbitrary, transgressing existing maritime laws and conventions. Notwithstanding its being party to the 2002 ASEAN Declaration on Conduct (DOC) of countries with claims on South China Sea, Beijing warned all countries to terminate oil exploration and drilling activities not specifically permitted by it. Oil majors, such as Exxon and British Petroleum were intimidated enough to cease operations. China’s   expansive offshore territorial claims have been vigorously challenged in legal terms by Vietnam. Hanoi has complained about China’s non-conformance with numerous 1982 UNCLOS (UN Law of the Sea) provisions. Elsewhere, Philippines upped the ante when Chinese aircraft and naval vessels tried to run its people off the Reed Bank in the Paracels, by totally rejecting Chinese claims and invoking the 1951 Mutual Defence Treaty with the United States in order to deter China from taking precipitate action. A defensive Beijing fell back on justifying its claims on the basis of these being “formed by history”.[34] It led to the US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at the ASEAN summit in Hanoi committing America to, in effect, enforcing the international maritime law.[35]

      Vietnam, in furtherance of its proactive stance, also cleverly triggered both an acknowledgement by Delhi of a naval encounter off its coastline with China in order presumably to gauge India’s resolve to back Vietnam, and to test its willingness to protect its energy stake. Having earlier accorded the Indian Navy the right to use the port of Nha Trang on the South China Sea as provisional base whenever its ships are in the vicinity, Vietnam leaked the details of a mid-July 2011 encounter the Indian navy amphibious assault ship, INS Airavat, sailing north to Haiphong, had with a suspected Chinese ship, in which Airavat was ordered out of those waters. The Indian ship did nothing of the kind and the incident made it to the international Press almost a month later. Critical commentaries in Indian newspapers[36] resulted in the Indian Ministry of External Affairs departing from its usual policy line of offering China minimum offence and asserting India’s right, in a joint venture with Vietnam, to drill for oil in an area clearly within Vietnamese claim lines.[37] Hanoi, it may be deduced, hoped to test the seriousness of Delhi’s profession of support for its South China Sea claims in particular, and its readiness to tangle with the Chinese naval forces and, presumably, was delighted with the outcome, what with India providing proof of being a reliable strategic partner. Vietnam and India categorically rejected the Chinese exclusive claim on the South China Sea with India making it clear that the state owned oil exploration firm – ONGC Videsh Ltd, would continue to explore and exploit its resource-rich seabed.[38]  In fact, the new found bounce in bilateral relations can be seen in the Oct 13, 2011 joint statement issued during the state visit to India of Vietnamese President, Truong Tan Sang, which repeatedly harped on their “strategic partnership”.[39] China is watchful and believes the move to involve India in the South China Sea disputes was actually instigated by Vietnam and the Philippines and that, under the circumstances, it may be best to be more confrontationist. Beijing is considering  replacing its policy of “shelv[ing] the dispute and joint[ly] develop[ing]” the oil and gas fields, with one that “must dare and …develop” and otherwise draw “an insurmountable red line” which, it hopes, an “ambitious” but “immature” India will not cross, especially in the context of “reluctant” United States and Japan.[40]

      The “string of pearls” to-date may be more potential than reality. But it does show China’s long term plan to avoid the possible Malacca choke point by developing other trade and access routes via construction of deep water ports on the Indian Ocean littoral, such as Ramree Island in Myanmar and Gwadar on the Baluch coast in Pakistan.[41]

 Conclusion:

 The strategic worries and insecurities sparked by aggressive Chinese policy and the uncertainties attending on the best way to handle a growingly uncontrollable China, manifestly the dominant Asian power, suggest the obvious hedging strategy for countries of Asia-Pacific desirous of constraining China. This strategy will have to rely on the US, Indian, and Japanese militaries, their combined capabilities augmented by  the military wherewithal and locational attributes of smaller countries in the region. The objectives would be to, firstly, strengthen the choke capabilities at the Malacca Straits with India’s integrated Andaman military command in the van; secondly, to reject the exclusionist Chinese notions of  “closed sea” whether in the South China Sea environs or in the Yellow Sea area and, finally, collectively to get into a position to  mobilize and deploy sufficient naval, air, land, and strategic nuclear forces in relatively quick time to dissuade and deter Beijing from embarking on provocative or punitive military actions against any single state or set of countries in the Asia-Pacific region.

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End-Notes:

[1] “A declining power” is how much of the world sees the United States per world-wide surveys conducted by Pew Global Attitudes Project. Refer Richard Wike, “From Hyperpower to Declining Power”, September 7, 2011 at www.pewglobal.org

[2] Stefan Shultz, “Europe and China Bound by Mutual Fears”, Spiegel Online, September 14, 2011 at www.spiegel.de

[3] The Economist, September 10, 2011, p. 78.

[4] Ashley  J. Tellis, Travis Tanner, and Jessica Keogh (eds.), Strategic Asia 2011-12 – Asia Responds to Its Rising Powers: China and India [Seattle: The National Bureau of Asian Research, 2011]

[5] Bharat Karnad, India’s Nuclear Policy [Westport, CO, & London: Praeger Security International, 2008], pp. 29-33.

[6] US agreed in the 1980s on joint projects such as “Peace Pearl” to upgrade the avionics suite in the Chinese F-8II fighter aircraft and to help in the production of high caliber ammunition. See David Shambaugh, Modernizing China’s Military: Progress, Problems, and Prospects [Berkeley & Los Angeles:  University of California Press, 2003], pp. 229-230

[7] The recent arrest in Taipei of Taiwan army Major General Lo Hsien-che for divulging details of the most secret command, control, and communications “Po sheng” (Broad Victory) network to China, reveals the extensive espionage and counter-espionage Taiwan and China engage in against each other, to secure every additional bit of military advantage. Andrew Higgins, “In Taiwan military, Chinese spy stirs unease”, Washington Post, September 27, 2011.  

[8] Kathryn Hille, Anna Fifield & Robin Twong, “China and US on edge over vote in Taiwan”, Financial Times, September 16, 2011.

[9] Bill Geertz, “Obama agrees to sell arms to Taiwan”, Washington Times, September 9, 2011.

[10] Keith B. Richburg, “China gives muted response to US-Taiwan arms deal”, Washington Post, September 19, 2011.

[11] To date, the US expenditure in wars in Iraq and Afghanistan over the past decade and more  have exceeded $2.5 trillion.

[12] See his “China’s Rise Isn’t Our Demise”, New York Times, September 7, 2011.

[13] Robert D Kaplan, “A power shift in Asia”, Washington Post, September 23, 2011.

[14] “Analysis: Japan’s PM Noda: Warm to Washington, Wary of China”, Reuters, Washington Post, September 15, 2011.

[15] “Japan: Weapons of Mass Destruction” at www.globalsecurity.org

[16] “Dogfight over the archipelago”, Economist, Oct 1st , 2011

[17] Peter Hayes & Chung-in Moon, “Park Chung Hee, the CIA & the Bomb”, Global Asia, Volume 6, Number 3, Fall 2011.

[18] “Taiwan: nuclear weapons” at www.fas.org

[19] :Taiwan nuclear missiles:, June 26, 2006 at www.strategypage.com

[20]   Annual Report to Congress: Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China, 2011, Office of the Secretary of Defense, Dept of Defense, p. 52

[21] “India develops cold feet on talks with Japan, United States”, Times of India, Aug 25, 2011

[22] “India upset over Russia calling off naval exercise”, Times of India, May 31, 2011. The Indian flotilla after ‘Malabar’ was scheduled to steam north for exercises with Russian Far Eastern Fleet off Vladivostok.

[23]  See footnote #16.

[24] “Ex-Japanese PM seeks security tie-up with India”, Times of India, September 21, 2011.

[25] Tsuneo Watanabe, Director, Research, The Tokyo Foundation, in a discussion with this analyst Oct 3, 2011.

[26] “Interaction with a Taiwanese delegation”, Vivekananda International Foundation at www.vifindia.org

[27] Tung I-Tsai, “For Taiwan, India’s in the slightly less hard basket”, Asia Times, February 15, 2006.

[28] T.N. Ninan, “Guns in the east”, Business Standard, Oct 8, 2011.

[29] A series of research articles by David Brewster analyze the evolution of many of these security partnerships. See his “The Strategic Relationship between India and Vietnam: Search for a Diamond on the South China Sea” Asian Survey, January 2009; “India’s Security Partnership with Singapore” Pacific Review, December 2009; and, “The Relationship between India and Indonesia: An Evolving Security Partnership?” Asian Survey, March/April 2011.

[30] I have argued that because China practices realpolitik, the effect of India’s arming Vietnam with nuclear missiles as a tit-for-tat gesture for China’s nuclear missile arming Pakistan, will have a salutary effect on China’s generally aggressive approach to India and the extended region. Bharat Karnad, Nuclear Weapons & Indian Security: The Realist Foundations of Strategy, 2nd edition [New Delhi: Macmillan India, 2005, 2002], pp. 540-542, and  Karnad, India’s Nuclear Policy, pp. 16-37, and Bharat Karnad, “Indian armed forces have China Syndrome“, Asian Age, Oct 13, 2011.

[31] “India to sell Brahmos missile to Vietnam”, Asian Age, Sept 20, 2011.

[32] Provisions of the new US-Australian defence and security treaty will likely be instrumental in facilitating operational military cooperation in China-related contingencies. Refer Anna Fifield, Peter Smith and Kathryn Hille, “US and Australia tighten military ties”, Financial Times, Sept 14, 2011.

[33] Myanmar Foreign Minister in an informal interaction at the Indian Council of World Affairs.

[34] “Don’t explore oil at (sic) South China Sea, warns Beijing”, Economic Times, Sept 16, 2011.

[35] Mark J. Valencia, “Diplomatic Drama: The South China Sea Imbroglio”, Global Asia, Vol 6, Number 3, Fall 2011.

[36] Bharat Karnad, “No buckling down to China”,  New Indian Express, Sept 24, 2011.

[37] Anupama Airy & Jayanth Joseph, “China objects to oil hunt, India says back off”, Hindustan Times, Sept 15, 2011.

[38] “Vietnam takes on China, says India can explore its oil”, Press Trust of India news agency, Tribune, Oct 9, 2011.

[39] See the text of the Joint Statement at www.saigon-gpdaily.com.vn. It states, for example, that both sides seek not merely to “deepen” the “strategic partnership” but to “broaden it to new areas of cooperation” in “the fields of defense and security” with a view, among other aims, to ensure “the safety, security and freedom of navigation in the high seas”, and that both countries abhor the “the threat or use of force” to resolve “disputes in the East Sea.”

[40] “Breaking up the coalition on the South China Sea”, a commentary published in Huanqiu and reprinted in Xinhua, Oct 7, 2011.

[41] Vivian Yang, “Is China’s String of Pearls Real?”, FPIP (Foreign Policy Institute Forum), July 18, 2011 at www.fpip.org

 

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