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Home  » News » Opinion: Why US wants India-China conflict to simmer

Opinion: Why US wants India-China conflict to simmer

By Ambassador M K BHADRAKUMAR
July 08, 2020 18:55 IST
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The US has all along interfered in India-China issues.
The objective is clear: Bring the Sino-Indian standoff to a flashpoint that would compel the Modi government to take shelter under an American umbrella, argues Ambassador M K Bhadrakumar.

IMAGE: Prime Minister Narendra Damodardas Modi with National Security Adviser Ajit Kumar Doval, who is also India's Special Representative on the border talks with China. Photograph: PTI Photo
 

The civilian-military relationship is a complex matrix.

In 'wartime', this is more so when civilian leaders who never held a killer's weapon in their palms are called upon to take decisions on the passage of arms.

Of course, there are strong-willed leaders who force their will. Bismarck was one such leader -- Stalin another -- who lacked real military service.

Stalin had the additional advantage that every Red Army unit also had a commissar, an official of the Communist party, attached to it who would be a prescriptive figure of authority to ensure that the political leadership got an independent feedback uncluttered by the military's corporate interests.

Insubordination was unheard of in the Prussian and Soviet armies.

The most famous civilian-military confrontation in modern history occurred, perhaps, when then US President Harry S Truman relieved General Douglas MacArthur of command of the US forces in Korea in April 1951.

A flamboyant and egotistical personality, General MacArthur had devised some brilliant strategies and military maneuvers that stopped the invading forces of North Korea in the early days of the war (which began in June 1950).

Resting on the laurels, MacArthur argued for a policy of pushing into North Korea to completely defeat the Communist forces.

Truman went along with this plan, despite his gut feeling as a politician that the Communist government in Peking might take such invasion against a fraternal neighbour as a hostile act.

But MacArthur assured Truman that the chances of a Chinese intervention were slim.

However, in the winter of 1950, hundreds of thousands of Chinese troops did cross into North Korea in waves after waves and flung themselves against the American lines, driving the US troops back into South Korea.

MacArthur then asked Truman for permission to bomb China and to use Nationalist Chinese forces from Taiwan against the People's Republic of China.

This time around, Truman flatly refused and a very public showdown ensued resulting in MacArthur's dismissal.

Truman, in an address to the nation justifying his action, said it 'would be wrong --tragically wrong -- for us to take the initiative in extending the war... Our aim is to avoid the spread of the conflict.'

The American president explained, 'To make sure that the precious lives of our fighting men are not wasted; to see that the security of our country... is not needlessly jeopardised; and to prevent a third world war,' he had fired MacArthur, 'so that there would be no doubt or confusion as to the real purpose and aim of our policy.'

American public opinion was strongly against the sacking of the charismatic general (who was also skilled in political skulduggery among Washington elites.)

But Truman stuck to his decision without regret or apology.

Eventually, MacArthur would 'just fade away', and the American people began to understand that the general's policies and recommendations might have led to a massively expanded war in Asia.

The prerogative to start a war and to end it must always lie with the civilian leadership.

That is why New Delhi's decision which was announced on June 19 that the Indian Army has been given the freedom to take necessary steps along the border -- and not to limit the ability of commanders of frontline troops to take whatever action they deem necessary on the Line of Actual Control on the Chinese border -- becomes debatable.

Detractors of the government flippantly interpreted this decision as an evasive action by PM Modi to 'pass the buck' to the military if something untoward happened.

But the point is, the military must be held firmly responsible and accountable for its actions.

A high degree of ambivalence has already appeared in the air and the Indian media is awash with unsubstantiated reports (largely attributed to military 'sources') and rumour mongering.

GCTN, an organ of Chinese State media, said in a commentary on July 5, 'Despite the 1962 truce, the Indian side has never ceased its efforts in pushing the LAC forward. This is the root cause for the border disputes between the two neighbors. The Galwan Valley conflict is a direct result of New Delhi's provocations.'

IMAGE: Prime Minister Narendra Damodardas Modi addresses Indian soldiers during his visit to Nimu in Ladakh, July 3, 2020. Photograph: ANI Photo

Suffice to say, it was only appropriate that PM Modi visited Leh on June 3 to personally assess the situation, where he also met the GOC XIV Corps Lieutenant General Harinder Singh, before deciding to elevate the diplomatic contacts with Beijing to the political level and to bring in the Cabinet minister in charge of national security (defence and security establishment) and India's Special Representative on the border dispute, Ajit Kumar Doval, who reports to him directly, as India's point person to discuss the issues with the Chinese leadership.

To be sure, sniping has already begun.

The formidable US lobby in Delhi has begun to decry, discredit and degrade Doval's mission.

The objective is clear: Bring the Sino-Indian standoff to a flashpoint that would compel the Modi government to take shelter under an American umbrella.

The US has all along interfered in India-China issues.

More than ever before, a Sino-Indian confrontation fits in perfectly with the US' regional strategies today in Asia.

Day-to-day monitoring and interference in our news cycles is taking place.

Most important, on a day-to-day basis, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute is providing vital inputs purportedly based on satellite imageries from the Ladakh border.

Now, ASPI is known to be an anti-China lobbying group funded by the Australian defence department (reportedly, an Australian $4 million annual grant) and generously supported by the US, British, and some other governments and major weapons makers.

Doval's talks with Wang Yi on Sunday are already being nicely dissected and shown as a mere pantomime played by the Chinese side.

The US lobbyists merrily over-interpret the readouts from Beijing and New Delhi (here (external link) and here (external link)) to debunk the common understanding that emerged after Sunday's talks.

How can delicate negotiations pertaining to war and peace be possibly conducted under such circumstances? Doval is an ace negotiator and is immensely experienced in handling India's national security challenges, especially involving China and Pakistan.

His source of strength is also that he enjoys Modi's confidence.

Above all, Doval belongs to a vanishing breed of top officials who sees national security challenges entirely through the prism of Indian interests, and has no patrons abroad.

Quite obviously, this poses a particularly nightmarish situation to the Americans who are control freaks.

But no country will allow bazaar gossip by its own citizens over its national security concerns.

Surely, something can be done to put an end to such subversion? The MacArthur syndrome haunts India.

Rogue elements within our establishment are planting media leaks with ulterior intent.


Ambassador M K Bhadrakumar served the Indian Foreign Service for more than 29 years. He has served as India's ambassador to Turkey and Uzbekistan and has been a contributor to Rediff.com for well over a decade.

Feature Production: Aslam Hunani/Rediff.com

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