Once the
Indian leadership realised that the Chinese were indeed ‘teaching them a
lesson’, Jawaharlal approached the Formosa (now Taiwan) leadership with an
offer which he felt they could not refuse. A Indian recognition of Formasa as
the ‘real China’ followed by an International campaign to back this recognition
to the hilt. Formosa expressed thanks and regretted the ‘inconvenience’ which
Indians had been put at by the Red Army. It added, however, that if Indian
support was in expectation of Formosa’s support in the border fracas, it was
bound to be disappointed. The Nationalist Government, which saw itself as the
legitimate ruler of China, considered the core middle kingdom and adjoining
provinces of Mongolia, Manchuria, Sinkiang, Formosa and Tibet as Chinese lands
and hence there was no question of supporting any alien Nation which
undermined, in their views, territorial integrity of the Chinese Nation.
Such is
National consensus on territorial integrity among the Han that Taiwan has till
date not relinquished Chinese claims over Mongolia. While the People’s Republic
of China has recognised Mongolia as an independent Nation, it was under severe
duress, when China was but a shadow of its powers. Nothing stops China from
renewing its claim and annexing Mongolia once Taiwan reintegrates with the
mainland. If single-minded obsession with territorial integrity were the
benchmark for National pride, then the Han Chinese are definitely the most
proud of all nationalities inhabiting the Earth. Just take the example of
Tibet. A vast land of a pacifist couple of million trampled and contained by a
bellicose bully which is 1200 million strong. Little chance that Tibetans can
regain their autonomy or at least the way they would have wanted. Yet, China
ensures that most Nations do not play host or their leaders do not grant any
audience to the Dalai Lama. Any transgression of this code is met with
demarches and diplomatic sanctions. One may wonder – what harm will the powerful middle kingdom suffer if some leader does meet the Dalai Lama? After all, there
is neither any organised resistance movement against the Chinese rule nor does
the Lama seek independence. And even if there were such a movement, what chance
would it have to succeed against a mighty, determined Nation? Still, rather
than taking any chance and ignore any activity which might fan separatist
fires, China prefers to err on the side of caution and punishes the
transgressors of its territorial integrity in the harshest possible ways.
What is
the lesson for India?
For one –
India is not China. It never was, and it never will be. For all those
self-deluded individuals/organisations which hyphenate India with China or talk
of inanities such as Chindia, if nothing else, the recent visit of the Chinese
President should be enough to serve as a wake-up call. A salivating gentry was
waiting with breathless expectations on what ‘gifts’ would China come bearing –
a USD 100 Billion FDI, technology for high-speed trains, support for a
permanent seat on UN security council, a border settlement! Is it a
relationship of equals or even near-equals when one of them is so clearly the
seeker?
Two –
Indians do not value territorial integrity inspite of having suffered invasion
after invasion in the last two millennium. We have had but one Chanakya who
understood the need for securing our frontiers. After that, it was only the
invaders – the Khiljis, the Mughals and later the British, who realised that a
Nation vulnerable at its edges cannot ever be in peace. The British in
particular, whatever their end objectives be, ensured that India was at its
widest and most secure from foreign invasions in a long long time. But, after
independence, the naïve Indian leadership, in constant affirmation of their
‘statesman’ image, goaded by the ‘peace-at-any-cost’ brigade, has somehow
confused ceding of land with diplomacy. In each of its encounters with its
neighbours, from Sri Lanka to Maldives, from Myanmar to Bangladesh, from China
to Bhutan and of course Pakistan, we have ceded land, either voluntarily or
under force. Today, we are a witness to China shrinking our frontiers through
the very Chinese method of ‘creeping acquisition’ – slowly claim land pasture
by pasture, prevent Indian activity in what was hitherto undisputed Indian
land, deepen ingress into Indian territories so that more and more of the
frontiers become ‘disputed’ and consequently, a non-go area for the India army.
In the
last few decades, each time a Chinese dignitary visits, we have had border
transgressions, each more serious than the other. But, so thick is the skin of
Indian establishment that an ex-diplomat, who runs an influential blog on
foreign policy, blamed the Indians for ‘provoking’ the Chinese. More seriously,
a sort of consensus is developing that any border settlement with China should
be maintenance of status quo, i.e., India retaining Arunachal Pradesh and
ceding Askai Chin and the trans-Karakoram area to China. Such thoughts are
fraught with immense dangers for our Nation on account of multiple reasons. One
- unlike India, China takes a long term view of its territories and any piece
of land, which was ever under the Chinese, is seen as being part of their
Nation forever. Hence, an abdication of Chinese claims over Arunachal does in
no way prevent future Chinese from staking claim. This becomes even more likely
when one considers the stance of Taiwan over Mongolia. Two, Indian claim over
Askai Chin is historically more valid and legally more tenable than compared to
its claim on Arunachal, or at least large parts of it. The lands of Arunachal
were ceded by Tibet to British under the Shimla agreement. This settlement was
never accepted by the Chinese for they refused to recognise Tibet’s right to
negotiate as a sovereign Nation. On the same lines, India has always recognised
China’s sovereignty over Tibet with Atal Bihari Vajpayee, in his
characteristic search of validation, gratuitously recognised Tibet Autonomous
Region as an integral part of China. Now, if Tibet was never a sovereign
Nation, how can its act of ceding lands to India be considered valid ? On the
other hand, the lands of Askai Chin were overrun by Dogra armies and
administered by kings of Jammu & Kashmir and hence are more validly ours.
Third, what will India gain other than tenuous peace at the cost of sacrifice
of land? Is this lasting sacrifice for at best, a temporary reprieve,
worth it?
The
callousness of us Indians can be gauged from the mere fact that an official
memorandum between Government of Gujarat and China contained a map which showed
Askai Chin and Arunachal as disputed. Nothing highlights our selfishness better
than the constant refrain of industrialists that increasing trade will force
China to mellow down. The reality is that this trade is skewed heavily in
favour of China and its imbalance has only magnified in the last few years. If
anyone has to feel the pinch of an interruption in trade, it is the Chinese as
they will lose a vast market for this finished goods. Yet, all the economic
logic has not prevented China from strengthening its claim to what it feels are
its core National interests. Indians on the contrary, ever so happy to save
money, are aghast at the mere prospect of a stoppage of cheap Chinese goods
from flooding our markets.
Given
our vacuousness, the stance taken by Narendra Modi, while not substantial,
is a welcome improvement from the vapid conduct of the previous NDA and
UPA governments. Even as our home minister parroted the shameful UPA line that
Chinese transgressions are but a result of different perceptions of border
(wonder why India does not transgress, if this be the case), the Government
allowed Tibetan refugees to demonstrate against the visiting dignitary and made
pointed references to the border dispute. Yet, the same Government succumbed to
Chinese pressure and withdrew from Chumar. In a case of callous oversight,
India yet again recognised Chinese sovereignty over Tibet in the MoU signed on
the new route to Kailash Manasarovar.
While the
very nature of our people ensures that India can never be China, we need to be
wary of this forceful Nation which has defeated us in both the armed encounters
we have had with them (eighth and twentieth centuries). At the same time,
Indians need to appreciate those qualities which have ensured that except for
small intervals, China has stood like a colossus in the community of Nations.
Developing a sense of territorial integrity and National pride would be a good beginning.