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Disengagement at LAC: Decoding China-India moves ahead
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S.B. Asthana | 15 Feb, 2021
China and India have announced the disengagement of troops along Line of
Actual Control (LAC), at the southern and northern bank of the Pangong
Tso Lake having commenced since February 10. It seems to be a positive
step to mark the beginning of a possible end of one of the longest
stand-offs, which had tremendous financial and human cost to bear, due
to 'LOCisation' of the LAC, in harsh winters. A compulsion to get into
some mutually acceptable solution, out of numerous negotiations at
various levels is understandable, as stretching the standoff beyond a
point was serving no useful purpose. The actual worth of announcements
will be seen in implementation stage, in view of trust deficit and past
track record of Chinese in junking agreements, when it suits them, as
the LAC as well as border remains undemarcated between both countries.
Decoding the Statements and Implications
Chinese
strategic design involves misinterpreting the statements to its
convenience. Chinese statement indicates that it is a Pangong Tso
specific Agreement, meaning synchronised and organised disengagement of
frontline troops at the southern and northern bank of the Pangong Tso
Lake, which can be well inferred by them as pullback of Indian troops
from Kailash Range, in exchange of PLA moving back their frontline
troops from Finger 4 and continuing to maintain their presence
elsewhere.
The Defence Ministry's statement in Rajya Sabha on
February 11, highlights that the Chinese side will keep its troop
presence in the North Bank area to east of Finger 8, thus moving back
from Finger 4 to 8. Reciprocally, the Indian troops will be based at
their permanent base at Dhan Singh Thapa Post near Finger 3. A similar
action would be taken in the South Bank area by both sides. Structures
built by both sides since April 2020, in North and South Bank area to be
removed and the landforms restored. The Chinese, however, have not put
out any such assurances in public domain, so far.
The Ministry
also highlighted some outstanding issues with regard to deployment and
patrolling at some other points along the LAC in Eastern Ladakh to be
discussed later, in next meeting of the Senior Commanders within 48
hours after the complete disengagement in the Pangong Lake area. It
indirectly implies that some Indian concerns including extra kilometrage
with China in Depsang plains, Galwan, Gogra and other areas,
restrictions on patrolling, vulnerability of DS-DBO road will remain to
be discussed later.
From Chinese perspective, it indirectly means
that newly occupied heights on Kailash Range, which were their major
concern, will be vacated in a phased, coordinated and verified manner by
both. The military activity including patrolling to the traditional
areas will cease temporarily in north and south of Pangong Tso. Chinese
discomfort includes Indian dispositions in India's Sub Sector North
including DBO, infrastructure development including DSDBO road, viewed
as a threat to crucial Tibet-Xinjiang-Pakistan connectivity, which will
remain. The Chinese aim of preventing Indian infrastructure development
hasn't been achieved, as both sides continue development of
infrastructure in areas they perceive to be theirs.
What India needs to be Careful of?
India
in Ladakh is in a position of strength, having created a vulnerability
for China south of Pangong Tso and occupation of some crucial heights
elsewhere. The professionalism of
Indian Military under extremely
harsh climatic conditions of Ladakh, and the national resolve of India,
to have reacted speedily and decisively during the pandemic, creating a
mirror image deployment to even out PLA's first movers advantage, has
forced China to revisit its options, leading to the present agreement.
This agreement will lead to India losing major advantage of some heights
on Kailash Range, a crucial bargaining chip, in exchange of Chinese
recoiling from North of Pangong Tso. This will have to be pursued with
vacation of Depsang and other areas, without which LAC will de facto get
altered not in Indian favour.
Given the track record of China,
it may go through this agreement temporarily and later follow it up by a
military action, post winters to reoccupy same areas after getting
Kailash Range vacated from Indians, due to its faster mobilisation
advantage due to its better infrastructure. This option, however, is
marred with a major risk of loss of face for Xi Jinping, as a military
defeat is last thing which he would like to face, that too in centenary
of formulation of CCP. Chinese strategic aim in Eastern Ladakh will
continue to be to provide depth to its National Highway G-219, Karakoram
Pass and China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), redraw LAC as per its
perception and negotiate border on their terms thereafter.
Indian
aim should be not to concede de facto shift of LAC as LAC-2020, be
prepared for �Two Front War' as a worst case scenario, and continue
capacity building in all domains, including maritime arena. As long as
the LAC is not demarcated, standoffs will continue, and a temporary
solution will only postpone the next standoff, leading to 'LOCisation'
of the LAC further. Chinese will like to keep border unsettled, till the
time the political cost of Not settling it, becomes higher than doing
so, for CCP, China.
(Major General S.B. Asthana is a strategic
and security analyst, a veteran Infantry General with 40 years
experience in national & international fields and the UN. A globally
acknowledged strategic & military writer/analyst authored over 350
publications. The views expressed are personal)
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