Just how the Doklam crisis plays out is still a matter of speculation. Nearly two months into the stand-off, the Chinese verbal bombardment
has not abated. The Bhutanese and Indian responses have remained low
key after their respective press releases of June 29 and 30.
One important consequence of the stand-off is already evident – the
parallel processes of negotiating China’s border with India and Bhutan
seems to have reached a logical dead-end. The three countries now
urgently need to come up with a new format if they wish to continue
their conversation. Such talks are not merely technical discussions on
the border, but since they are handled at a senior level, they are also a
means of managing the relationship in depth and over a wide range of
areas.
Since the Border Peace and Tranquillity Agreement of 1993,
India’s relations with China had been stable and even predictable. The
two countries managed their border issues well and have created layers
of confidence building measures that aided the process.
Yet, in fact, they did not manage to actually settle their border dispute.
There have been two distinct cycles here, the first between 1993 and
2002 when the official level joint working groups sought to stabilise
and work out a mutually agreed Line of Actual Control (LAC) – as per the
agreement of 1993 – as a prelude to resolving the dispute itself. This
process came to a grinding halt when the Chinese refused to exchange
maps of the western sector. They came to believe that finalising a
mutually agreed LAC could solidify it as a border and, as we have seen
since the mid-1980s, they have been insistently making major claims in
the eastern sector, which they now call southern Tibet. Special representatives to deal with border issues
The two sides thus decided in 2003 that a political dimension needed
to be added to the border settlement process and nominated a special
representative each to deal with the issue.
The process was at a ministerial level, the current Chinese special
representative, Yang Jichei, is a state councillor and senior even to
the foreign minister Wang Yi. The special representatives have had 19
rounds of talks till April 2016 and, in 2005, they had signed what was
hoped to be a far reaching agreement on the political parameters and
guiding principles of a border settlement.
This agreement baldly stated that “the two sides are seeking a
political settlement of the boundary question ….” In 2014, the Indian
special representative, Shivshankar Menon, acknowledged that all the
technical work relating to the border settlement had been done, now all
that was needed was a political go-ahead from the leaders of the two
countries.
But more than a decade later, they are no nearer towards clinching a
deal. In 2012, Dai Bingguo, the Chinese special representative, and his
Indian counterpart Menon, drew up a 18-point consensus document on the
eve of the former’s retirement, summing up the work they had done. The
disclosure of some portions of this document and some earlier
understanding, in the current war of words over Doklam, could well be
the clearest signal that the special representative process has run out
of steam. This is not surprising, the moment the Chinese stepped back
from the political parameters agreement, sometime around 2007, this had
probably happened.
China, Bhutan peace agreement
Parallel to this, China and Bhutan have had 24 rounds of border
talks. According to reports, the two sides came close to a settlement in
1996-2001, based on China agreeing to concede two parcels of land in
northern Bhutan for three lots, including Doklam in the western part of
the country. But thereafter Bhutan revised its claims and the process
has not moved much. Yet, like the process of the special
representatives, the Chinese and the Bhutanese continue to hold talks.
However, in the case of the Bhutanese, the peace and tranquillity
agreement they signed with the Chinese in 1998 barely worked. This
agreement committing both sides to maintain status quo as of 1959 has
most obviously been violated in the Doklam area. The reason for this is
that while India has steadily enhanced its border management capacities
along the LAC, the Bhutanese simply lack the population or resources to
police their 470 km border with the Chinese. The present crisis has
shown that as of now, any resolution of Bhutan’s boundary issue is
likely to be embedded in a Sino-Indian border settlement, unless Bhutan
takes the drastic decision of making a deal without taking India into
confidence.
Source: Google Maps
With the Sino-Indian and the China-Bhutan processes at a dead end,
the time has come for the countries to explore new institutional
mechanisms of resolving their border dispute and maintaining “peace and
tranquillity” on their border.
Rising frictions between the two Asian giants
There is also a larger view of the friction between a rising China and a rising India.
From the 1970s, India has seen the manner in which Beijing has sought
to limit India to South Asia by using Pakistan. Now, a much richer and
militarily more powerful China is pushing into not only South Asia but
also the Indian Ocean Region in an unprecedented fashion. It is not that
Bhutan will become a new platform for Chinese forays into South Asia
like Pakistan, but that it will neutralise an important South Asian
friend of India and add to Beijing self-worth as a regional power
without compare. As it is, in Nepal and Sri Lanka, India must now
compete directly with China for influence.
In response, New Delhi is intensifying cooperation with the US and
Japan. India’s actions are still constrained by its self image as an
independent player in the international system. It, therefore, does not
have a military alliance with the US and will therefore not be
privileged to receive US assistance in the event of a conflict with
China. In a recent article, historian John Garver suggested that Beijing may be seeing India as “the weakest link in the chain of ‘anti-China containment’ being built” in Asia.
India’s military modernisation is delayed by a decade and a half, and
there is nothing to suggest that it is doing anything about it.
That China has become more assertive since 2008-2009 is well known,
but Modi’s India also sets a value by adopting an assertive stance in
the South Asian and Indian Ocean region. And, unlike the smaller
countries of the region, India does have the capacity to deal with China
on its own terms. And almost everyone is agreed that in the
coming decade, this capacity will only increase. As the more powerful
party, China is the one that needs to figure out how it must deal with
India because whether India becomes more powerful, or, for that matter
flounders, it can still cause a lot of trouble for Beijing.
Conflict between the two Asian giants will act as a drag on their
rise. It was famously said that there is enough room for both of them to
grow at the same time. As of now, unfortunately, their simultaneous
growth is causing dangerous friction and their unsettled border can
always provide the spark for conflict.
With their dispute resolution processes not working, the two giant
neighbours urgently need to devise a newer mechanism. And this must be
done in a larger framework of engagement to promote what Xi Jinping says
is a “win win” relationship. It does not take much imagination to
predict what will happen otherwise. The Wire August 7, 2017
The 15-page document issued by China on August 2 on the Doklam standoff (“The
Facts and China’s Position Concerning the Indian Border Troops’
Crossing of the China-India Boundary in the Sikkim Sector into the
Chinese Territory”) marks another interesting turn to the ongoing crisis. Just what it means, however, is open to analysis and interpretation. Whether
it is a prelude to some new move, or merely a cover for restoring
status quo ante, too, is difficult to predict. In its own way, it is as
enigmatic as the Chinese move on June 16 to begin making a road from
the “turning point” below Doka La towards the Royal Bhutan Army post on
the Zompelri or Jampheri ridge.
As the document itself recounts,
on June 18, some 270 Indian troops driving two bulldozers crossed the
boundary, advanced 100 metres and blocked the Chinese activity which is
in territory disputed between Bhutan and China.
What the Chinese August 2 document calls is "Sketch Map of the Site of the Indian Troops’ Trespass"The
answer to the August 2 document and the Chinese move of June 16 is
probably linked to Bhutan, and the India-Bhutan relations.
In
the past decade, China has concluded that its border negotiations with
Bhutan are not going anywhere. They have violated their solemn
commitment of 1998 to maintain status quo on the border, freely
encroached on Bhutanese territory and, in the Doklam area, built a road
as far back as 2005. It has not mattered to China that Bhutan
voluntarily excluded a big chunk of the disputed area in 2007 when it
published a revised map of the kingdom. This included the 7,538m Kula
Kangri peak. But, the Chinese are only interested in the western claims
which include Doklam for strategic reasons.
The question at hand
is not so much Bhutan itself, but a growing belief that along with
economic dominance, the time has come for China to establish its
regional primacy in Asia. So, on one side, it is seeking to consolidate
itself along a belt extending from Korea to Malaysia, and on the other,
it is reaching out in Central, South Asia and the Indian Ocean region.
India, of course, is a “problem” but so is Bhutan with its “special
relationship” with India. Bhutan, of course, has its own value in
Chinese calculations in the context of its sensitivities relating to
Tibet.
The Chinese are aware that there have always been voices in
Bhutan calling for a quick settlement of the border issue to prevent
further encroachment by Tibetan herders and People’s Liberation Army
personnel. The Bhutanese know they lack the capacity to police their
borders, especially against a country which has made border nibbling a
fine art. The Chinese have made it clear that a border settlement must
precede the establishment of full diplomatic relations between Bhutan
and China. In addition, many Bhutanese, including those in the
government want stable and predictable relations with their giant
neighbor who is looming larger and larger by the day. As for India, its withdrawal of subsidies in 2013 signaled that India’s relations with Bhutan are not as trouble-free as is often assumed.
What the Chinese August 2 document calls "On-the-Scene Photo I Showing the Indian Troops’ Trespass"
Forcing the play
The
June 16 move could have been a means of forcing the play. The Chinese
would have enough knowledge of the Indian defence thinking to know that
New Delhi cannot accept a Chinese presence on the Jampheri ridge, and
sure enough Indian forces did intervene and the Indian statement of June
30 acknowledged that security was a factor in the decision.
Significantly, the Bhutan press note of June 29 did not say
that it had requested Indian intervention. The Bhutanese are sensitive
on the nature of their relationship with India which is today guided by a
treaty of 2007, which does not in any way imply any alliance or automaticity on matters of security.
Nevertheless,
military planners have their own logic and the Indians have not been
blind to the possibility that in the event of conflict, the Chinese
could walk through Bhutan and bypass the strong defences India has in
Sikkim and the Siliguri Corridor. The clash of Sino-Indian strategic
interests have, therefore, posed a painful dilemma for Bhutan.
The
August 2 document again recounts its case that the Indian side had
accepted the Anglo-Chinese Convention of 1890 and cites letters from
Nehru to Zhou in March 1959, September 1959 and an Indian note to
Chinese in February 1960. In addition, it adds some new information by
way of revealing that in the Special Representatives meeting in May
2006, an Indian non-paper (diplomatese for notes which are not binding)
to say that “Both sides agree on the boundary alignment in the Sikkim
sector”.
his last item is in response to a revelation in India’s press release of June 30 that in 2012
“the
two Governments had…reached agreement that the tri-junction boundary
points between India, China and third countries will be finalized in
consultation with the concerned countries.”
Further, as the Indian press release had added:
“Where
the boundary in the Sikkim sector is concerned, India and China had
reached an understanding also in 2012 reconfirming their mutual
agreement on the “basis of the alignment”. “
In other
words, in the Sikkim area, the actual alignment was yet to be
determined. In the language of border marking, the boundary had not even
been delimited on mutually agreed maps, leave alone demarcated on the
ground through boundary pillars. Both these decisions appear to have
been taken place in the meeting of the two Special Representatives,
though it is not specifically stated so.
The Chinese obliquely
appear to acknowledge this when in their August 2 note they constantly
refer to the fact that the boundary in the Sikkim sector had been
“delimited”. Further, the notes says,
“China and India ought to sign a new boundary convention in their own names to replace the 1890 Convention.”
Dumping the Anglo-Chinese convention, as the Indians appear to have done, could be a useful move. The
Chinese have landed up in a position where they support the 1890
Convention and oppose the Anglo-Tibetan Convention of 1914 which
created the McMahon Line, and second, they are left upholding the
watershed principle, something that India has been arguing for in the
border talks with China.
New Delhi has figured that
though the move appears to reopen the issue of the Sikkim boundary, it
also provides leverage in its wider negotiation with China on the
border.
What the Chinese August 2 document calls "On-the-Scene Photo II Showing the Indian Troops’ Trespass"The
August 2 statement expresses great concern over how India’s action is
also an affront to Bhutanese sovereignty. But it doesn’t say much about
the fact that Bhutan was not party to the 1890 Convention and that the
Chinese actions on the Bhutanese border, including the recent road
construction, are a gross violation of a solemn commitment that the
Chinese gave the Bhutanese in 1998 not to alter the status quo as of
1959.
Shifting goalposts
Having
dealt with China on the question of deciding the border since the
1950s, the Indian side is now quite well acquainted with their tactics.
Foremost among these is the shifting of goalposts at will. They have
seen many white papers and documents on the border issue. What they know
is that the only way to deal with China on the question of border is
through facts on the ground.
The Chinese can be quite relentless
here. For example the August 2 document has suddenly told us that the
Mount Gipmochi, the starting point of the 1890 border line, is
“currently known as Mount Ji Mu Ma Zhen”. This is perhaps a Chinese
rendering of Gyemochen, or it is simply the standard Chinese tactic of
assigning their own place names and then claiming historic association
with them.
There were no maps attached to the 1890 Treaty.
Subsequently, Gyemochen, Gipmochi figure in maps as the start point of
the Sikkim border, but many do not mark the Tibet-Bhutan boundary or a
trijunction.
Survey of India, 1923. Image: Manoj JoshiSurvey of India, 1933. Image: Manoj Joshi.Some, like a US Army map of 1955 show it at the same point as where India and Bhutan mark it, near Batang La.
US Army map of 1955. Image: Manoj JoshiAn
authoritative US data base maintained by the US Geospatial Intelligence
Agency is even more intriguing. Till two weeks ago, they were showing
Gyemochen/Gipmochi some 5 kms east of where past maps had shown it. Now,
they have marked both points, 5 km apart as Gipmochi/Gyemochen.
Screenshot of satellite image of the disputed area. Image: Manoj JoshiScroll.in August 3, 2017
By all rights, Kargil Vijay Divas, the
formal end of the Kargil war of 1999, ought to be a solemn event
commemorating the sacrifices of the 474 officers and men who died
pushing back Pakistani intruders from the strategic heights above
Kargil. By and large it is indeed observed as such, except, curiously,
by people close to the ruling party who use the occasion to bait liberal
academics in Indian universities.
Political move
In JNU, the vice-chancellor led a tiranga rally
on the eve of Kargil Vijay Divas in which he not only demanded that a
tank be placed on campus to promote “love for the army”, but a retired
general, well known for his hawkish performance in TV channels, likened
the occasion to a “capturing” the liberal fortress of JNU and called on
similar “victories” in Jadavpur University and University of Hyderabad.
So, it was not surprising when, a week later, the students’ wing of
the BJP forcibly set up a Kargil “memorial” on the University of
Hyderabad campus, which was subsequently demolished by varsity
authorities. That it was a political move, and not really motivated by
any solemn goal of commemorating the Kargil sacrifices, is evident from
the fact that it was set up near a memorial for Rohit Vemula, a Dalit
student who committed suicide in January 2016.
It is ironical that elements close to the BJP are using Kargil in
their culture wars against liberalism. This is because the whole Kargil
Divas was actually a means of concealing the guilt of the BJP-led NDA
government in allowing Pakistani forces to make massive incursion in a
strategically critical part of the country.
The
sheer bravery of the troops, who set aside the canons of modern warfare
and frontally took on the enemy, saved the government’s neck.
That is why we have no similar public “celebrations” for the day
Indian forces flew in to rescue Kashmir on October 27, 1947, or when
they turned defeat into victory in Asal Uttar in September 1965, or for
that matter, captured Dhaka in December 1917. The failure of the BJP-led
government was at three levels.
First, it failed in its strategic assessment of Pakistan. Even as the
Pakistan Army was readying to cross the LoC in February 1999, Prime
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee was making India’s most dramatic gesture
of peace by visiting the Minar-e-Pakistan in Lahore. Claims of
“Pakistani perfidy” would have had greater credibility had they been
accompanied an acknowledgement of your own naivety and culpability.
Shortcomings
At the second level was the inability to understand what was
happening even after the first news of Pakistani infiltration came in on
May 5, 1999. The first formal meeting of the cabinet committee on
security (CCS), the one in which it finally authorised the use of IAF,
took place only on May 25. This was a failure of not just the brigade in
question, but up the ladder to the division, Corps, Army HQ, the
R&AW, PMO and the CCS. Yet, as is famously known, no one paid the
price for this except a lowly brigadier.
At the third level, was the nature of the Indian response that led to
heavy casualties. The government insisted that the conflict be confined
to the area in which the Pakistanis had intruded. So instead of
fighting on a ground of our choosing our soldiers were made to undertake
frontal attacks on a ground well prepared by the Pakistani forces.
Several excuses were trotted out for this, principally that a wider
conflict would have been escalatory and could have led to nuclear war.
But surely, there were alternatives and why was the onus of preventing
escalation on us, and not the Pakistanis?
Review panel
The Kargil Review Commission was set up with the careful mandate to
“review the events leading up to the Pakistani aggression” and to
recommend measure to prevent a recurrence. It self-consciously avoided
apportioning blame, and though it broadly absolved the military brass
and criticised R&AW, it did refer to the “euphoria in some political
quarters” over the Lahore process.
The sheer bravery of the troops, who set aside the canons of modern
warfare and frontally took on the enemy, saved the government’s neck.
Their sacrifice does indeed demand solemn observance, but always with
the knowledge that had the government handled the situation more
competently, they may have been with us today.
Instead, what we are forced to confront is the shoddy and sad use of the occasion to promote a political platform. Mail Today July 31, 2017
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s supporters say that despite the
somewhat uncomfortable figures on economic growth and jobs, his
government’s great achievement has been systemic reform in a slew of
areas from bankruptcy code to GST and delivery of public services. But
in recent times worries have grown, even amongst them, that all this
will come to nought if the country’s political and social fabric is
ripped apart by the growth of public disorder and vigilante violence,
condoned, if not encouraged, by some of the party faithful. In the best of times India has hardly been a paragon of peace and
virtue. In the 1970s and 1980s there were a succession of communal riots
in UP, Bihar, Gujarat, Maharashtra, with Muslims being killed in
disproportionately large numbers; there were the Sikh massacres of 1984.
The rise of the Mandal parties saw a sharp deterioration of law and
order across UP and Bihar.
But the nature of the violence now gripping the land is different. It
is more seemingly random and anarchic. Rupa Subramanya has plotted a
line chart of total incidents of mob violence beginning January 2011.
Her data show a clear rise of incidents per month till June 2017. When
she further deconstructed the data she found a distinct upward trend
ever since BJP came to power in 2014.
In some ways the current spate of violence linked to cows is merely a
subset of the lawlessness that exists in parts of the country,
especially the north. Throwing the head of a cow or a pig in a religious
place of Hindus and Muslims has been a time-tested recipe for
triggering communal violence. India Spend, which has analysed data since
2010, found a spurt in bovine related violence since Modi’s government
came to power. In 2017, 20 cow related attacks have already been
reported, more than 75% of the figure for all of 2016.
There are many reasons for this. Urbanisation is occurring at great
speed and more people are living cheek by jowl in poorly policed and
ramshackle urban and semi-urban sprawls. There has been a massive
proliferation of weapons, including desi firearms, among the populace.
But for the current uptick in violence it is difficult to avoid the
conclusion that it is being used as a systematic strategy to coerce the
minority community and Dalits.
As the man in charge of running the country, PM Modi needs to worry
about the unravelling of the fabric that knits the nation together.
India was rent apart in 1947. This time around the danger is not from
one big event like Partition, but an overall attrition. Since 1947
certain values have shaped what was a collection of provinces and
princely states into this Republic. Foremost among these is the
importance of the safety and security of every citizen and their
equality before the law. There is a distinct impression these days that
some sections close to the ruling party feel that, perhaps, not all
citizens are equal in this country.
Modi has called on states, who are constitutionally responsible for
law and order, to act against vigilantes of all kinds. But his
admonitions, few and far between as they have been, lack his customary
authority. It is difficult to get over the suspicion that the coercion
of India’s largest minority is intrinsically linked to an electoral
project. If so, there is danger ahead. Reducing a significant proportion
of citizens to second class status is neither feasible, nor compatible
with the India Modi says he wants to build.
Sustainable economic growth must be accompanied by a deepening of the
republican and democratic promises of the Constitution. You cannot have
a society where law and order is coming apart, and the economy is
growing. Reversing the growing anarchy, especially in the northern part
of the country, is a precondition for the economic transformation of the
region and the country. Modi’s slogan – sab ka saath, sab ka vikas –
needs to include “sab ki suraksha” as well. Times of India July 22, 2017
To start at the very beginning: the Sikkim-Tibet border was defined
in 1890 through the Anglo-Chinese Convention that was signed in Kolkata
on March 17, 1890. Article I of the convention said that the boundary of Sikkim and
Tibet would be “the crest of the mountain range separating the waters
flowing into the Sikkim Teesta…from the waters flowing into the Tibetan
Mochu.” The beginning point of the boundary line would be “Mount
Gipmochi on the Bhutan frontier….”
As is evident, Bhutan played no role in this, nor did Sikkim or
Tibet; the agreement was between two empires – the British and the Qing.
The Tibetans refused to implement the convention and for this they were
punished when the British stormed Lhasa and later signed a convention
with the Chinese in 1906 and 1910 recognising the authority (suzerainty,
they said) of China over Tibet in exchange for a number of rights.
In the recent exchanges between India and China, it would appear that
while Beijing stands by the 1890 convention, India’s position is
somewhat ambiguous.
In its sole formal statement of June 30, 2017, the
Indian spokesman said that there was an agreement between China and
India in 2012 that “tri-junction boundary points between India, China
and third countries will be finalised in consultation with the concerned
countries.”
More important, he added that the 2012 understanding was merely a
reconfirmation of their “mutual agreement on the ‘basis of alignment’.”
Further discussions would have to take place to actually finalise the
boundary. Parsing this, it suggests that while the two sides had agreed
that the watershed, indeed, is the boundary, there is need for more work
to actually finalise it as such.
An exasperated Chinese spokesman underscored this on July 3, when he complained:
“As to the statement issued by India’s Ministry of External Affairs
last Friday (i.e. June 30), we have noted that this statement completely
left out the Convention Between Great Britain and China Relating to
Sikkim and Tibet (1890), none other than which clearly defined the
China-India boundary alignment in areas where the incident happened.”
Is India, then, interpreting the 1890 Convention unilaterally? If so,
then it is a dangerous game. Something similar happened when the MEA in
1959 “interpreted” the McMahon Line which, as per treaty, terminated on
the Bhutan border at 27°44′30″ N. But when Indian patrols went there,
they found that this was not the highest ridge of the watershed – that
was at Thag La ridge, some 4 kms north of where McMahon had drawn the
line on the map. The Indian side decided on its own that Thag La ridge
was the boundary, and the Indian Army was asked to throw the Chinese off
that ridge in an ill-considered operation that triggered the disastrous
war of 1962.
In Part I of the Henderson Brooks report on page 54, section 33 noted
“DHOLA post was established NORTH of the McMAHON Line as shown in maps
prior to October/November 1962 edition. It is believed the old edition
was given to the Chinese by our External Affairs Ministry to indicate
the McMAHON Line. It is learnt we tried to clarify the error in our
maps, but the Chinese did not accept our contention.”
With regard to the issue on hand – the China-India-Bhutan
tri-junction – there certainly are differences. Both India and Bhutan
put the tri-junction near Batang La (N 27°19′48″ & E 88°55′04″). A
record of the 68th session of the Bhutanese National Assembly in 1989
noted that the border would go from Batangla to Merugla to Sinchela
along the ridge and then down to Amo Chhu river.
The Chinese, however, insist, that the tri-junction is at Mount
Gipmochi. As the Chinese spokesman noted on July 5, “the 1890 convention
stipulates that the Sikkim section of the China-India boundary
commences at Mount Gipmochi.”
The problem is locating Gipmochi. An 1861 British map shows Gipmochi near the tri-junction but within Bhutan. (Map 1) Many old maps show the beginning of the border from a place called Gyemochen.
Indeed, the Bhutanese, themselves noted as the records of the
82nd session of their National Assembly reveals, that “the Chinese had
been going from Gyemochen and Chela to Amo Chhu.”
Gyemochen is mentioned in a 1937 Survey of India map (Map 2) and a US military map (Map 4). A British map of 1923 mentions the same feature of 14, 518 ft as “Gipmochi” (Map 3). And a 1910 map also mentions a place called Giaomochi of 14518 ft. (Map 5). But it does show the tri-junction roughly at Batangla.
So, the conclusion could well be that Gipmochi and Gyemochen are the
same place. But that’s where we run into trouble. A modern data base,
the one created and maintained by the US shows Gipmochi/Gyemochen to be
at least 5 kms east of where the earlier Gipmochi/Gymochen are
designated:
So clearly, what emerges is the difficulty of relying on an 1890
convention, based on possibly flawed surveys, that may have taken place
in the early part of the 20th century in a mountainous and inhospitable
region, for modern day boundaries. India and China have clearly
indicated their intention of following the watershed principle for
following their border. But to do it by relying on maps alone would be
an imperfect process. It has to be done on the ground.
Then, of course, there is the matter of Bhutan. It was not party to
the original convention and therefore cannot be held to its definition
of what and where the border should be.
The first map of Bhutan was prepared with the help of India in 1961
and subsequently a Bhutanese agency mapped the country in the early
1980s, prior to engaging China and India on border talks. In the
68th session of the National Assembly, the king outlined the border
which he said should go from Batangla to Merugla and Sinchela and then
down to the Amo Chhu river. But according to the record, it was during
the 14th round of border talks with China in 2000 that “the Bhutanese
delegation had further extended the claim line in three areas in Doklam,
Sinchulumba and Dramana” as per the decision of the council of
ministers.
As for the Chinese, they are always cagey about putting their claims
to paper. They follow the practical method of taking them over. So far
all they have done is to provide a sketch map (Map 6).
More extensive Chinese claims are visible through some maps in the
internet, though their official provenance cannot be established. (Map 7)
Of course, Chinese official maps of Yadong – the Tibet Autonomous
Region administrative unit that juts in between Sikkim and Bhutan – show
the entire Doklam region as part of the country. (Map 8)
As the 82nd session of the Bhutan National Assembly
records in June 2004 note: “During the 16th round of China-Bhutan
boundary talks, it was decided to exchange 1:500,000 scale maps with the
respective claim lines…. The Chinese delegation to the 17th Round of
Border talks in Thimphu did not bring the map with claim lines.”
As for India, it is not claiming anything, so all the officials have done is to have come out with some sketch maps.(Maps 9 and 10)
On the ground, however, the Indians have moved in from Doka La to
block the Chinese building a road to the Zomperi or Jampheri ridge which
is clearly visible in Map 3 above (the US military
map) below the wording “Gyemo Chen”. This ledge-like
structure overlooking the low-lying hills of Bhutan, gives a clear
overview to the Siliguri Corridor.
On June 29, Bhutan had put out its press release which was quite terse, noting that on June 16th, “the
Chinese Army started constructing a motorable road from Dokola in the
Doklam area towards the Bhutan Army camp at Zompelri. Boundary talks are
ongoing between Bhutan and China and we have written agreements of 1988
and 1998 stating that the two sides agree to maintain… status quo on
the boundary as before March 1959.”
Beyond the issue of maps and their interpretations, there is also the
clear violation by the Chinese of their 1998 agreement with Bhutan not
to disturb the status quo as of 1959. The Chinese have, in any case,
violated this agreement to build a motorable track to a point below Doka
La which is some 2 kms north of Gymochen.
While the Indians have been assertive in protecting interests
that they consider vital to their security posture in the region, they
remain cagey when it comes to the cartographic game. According to the
Survey of India website, the map of Sikkim is still under preparation.
There is a bottom line here, though not a very comfortable one. Which
is that international agreements are merely worth the paper they are
written on, unless there is some interest amongst the parties concerned
to uphold them. The Chinese are upset at India’s attitude towards the
1890 Convention. But they should introspect about their own attitude to
the UNCLOS arbitration award on the South China Sea in 2016 which they
have spurned, just because it did not suit their interests.
It speaks for the narcissism enveloping the country when a news item in a national TV website declares “To boost defence ties with India, US House clears over $600 billion
(Rs 38.5 lakh crore) Bill”. The reference is to the passage of the
humongous US defence budget by the lower House of Representatives.
It needs to be passed by the upper house, the Senate, before going to the president to be signed into law.
Mere amendment
One would imagine from the headline that the entire purpose of the
legislation is to promote India-US relations. But the actual fact is
that the India part is just in the form of an amendment moved by
Indian-American Congressman Ami Bera, tacked on to the Bill, with no
financial implications at all.
All it calls for is that the US State and Defence departments develop
a strategy for advancing defence cooperation between India and the US
within 180 days of the Bill becoming law.
Two other amendments by Dana Rohrabacher and Tom Poe call for the US
secretary of defense to certify, prior to making reimbursements to
Pakistan, which could be of the order of $400 million (Rs 2,57,000 lakh)
per annum, that Islamabad is taking demonstrable steps to take on the
Haqqani network and ensure security of supply convoys going to
Afghanistan.
These amendments gather one-day headlines and are thereafter ignored.
What the final shape of the US defence budget Bill will be can only be
determined after the Senate passes its version and the two are
reconciled. These amendments may simply fall off the map. Even if they
get through, which it is likely they will, they mean little.
For India, a legislative roadmap, minus any financial or legal
commitment means little. For Pakistan, there is a good case to argue
that the amendments actually enable US aid, not block it. No legislative
directive can alter the realpolitik with which a US administration has
to deal with Pakistan. And neither, despite its fulminations about
Pakistani “betrayal” can it alter Islamabad’s strategic calculus.
The new Trump administration has yet to reveal its hand on South Asia.
Past instances We have been there before. In 1985, in a similar move to stop
Pakistan from developing nuclear weapons, the Pressler Amendment was
passed. It demanded an annual certification from the US president that
Pakistan “does not have nuclear weapons.” Despite evidence to the
contrary, the US president routinely gave the certification because US
was locked into a proxy war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan.
Only after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1990 did the US
president refuse his certification. By that time it was way too late.
Looked at carefully, the Pressler Amendment was actually an amendment to
enable the US to give Pakistan aid, not to block it. If the US Congress
really feels strongly about Pakistani betrayal and so on, they can
simply pass an amendment to block aid to Pakistan. All this business
about certification is eyewash.
Actually, to go by the law, Pakistan remains a Major Non-NATO Ally, a
legal category involving some 17 countries which gives them a range of
benefits. They can establish cooperative projects with the US Defense
Department for R&D, get priority delivery of US surplus equipment,
get finance, loans of equipment and materials to lease certain equipment
and so on.
Future hope
Israel is an MNNA, but it is specially privileged through a US-Israel
Partnership Act that allows the United States to share and exchange
research technology, intelligence, information, equipment and personnel.
Israel’s status is unique and it is designated as a “major strategic
partner.”
Since 2016, India has been designated as a “major defence partner” of
the US. So while in statements, the US has said that it will treat
India “at a level at par with that of the United States’ closest allies
and partners,” the only legislative commitment we have is through Ami
Bera’s amendment in this year’s Defense Department bill which calls on
the Pentagon and State Department to develop an India strategy.
No doubt, we will get there some day, but not right now. The “major
defence partner” designation was mentioned in the 2016 budget and
formally conferred by the Obama administration a month before it left
office. The new Trump administration has yet to reveal its hand on South
Asia.
For the past several months the US national security adviser, HR
McMaster, is reviewing the US South Asia policy which includes issues
relating to India, Pakistan and Afghanistan. The review has been
delayed, but you can be sure, its focus will not be India, but
Afghanistan and Pakistan.
As for India, relations are on an even track and it is unlikely that
there will be any dramatic change in any new US policy towards the
region. Mail Today August 17, 2017
Professional journalist interested in national security affairs, currently Distinguished Fellow with the Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi looking after their national security programme