CHINA DECLARES OPEN SEASON ON INDIA?
By Bhaskar Roy
The inevitable has happened. On September
2, 2010, the Chinese official news agency,
Xinhua, which is an authoritative source,
reported Chinese Foreign Ministry
spokeswoman Jiang Yu’s statement on the
presence of Chinese troops in Pakistan
Occupied Kashmir (POK) as follows:
"China on Wednesday rejected reports of the
presence of over 11,000 Chinese troops in
North Pakistan, saying such "groundless
reports" were made with "ulterior motives".
"We believe the attempts of some people To
fabricate stories to provoke China-Pakistan
or China-India relations are doomed to fail"
said Foreign Ministry spokesperson Jiang Yu
in a statement".
The Xinhua news item went on to record "Gilgit-Baltistan
as a region of Pakistan.
Ms. Jiang Yu further underscored "About
our visa policy towards inhabitants in the
Indian-controlled Kashmir region, the policy
(stapled visa) remains unchanged.
This was a masterly crafted official
statement, used when the Chinese do not
resort to unsavory rhetorics and unprovoked
insults.
By saying that certain people fabricated
the report of 11,000 Chinese soldiers in
Gilgit-Baltistan area of Pakistan to
China-India relations, it obviously tried to
mislead the gullible among Indians. More
importantly, it gave a handle to the hard
line pro-China political elements to argue
that the Americans were trying to foment
India-China antagonism. The presence of 7000
to 11,000 Chinese troops working on roads in
Gilgit-Baltistan was first published in the
New York Times.
The Chinese authorities are banking on
the same Indian political section
who declined to condemn the 1962 Chinese
attack on India, and opposed the India-US
civilian nuclear agreement in Parliament, to
maintain silence if not back China.
It is abundantly clear that China is
fronting Pakistan in a much larger strategy
in the region, extending to the Gulf and the
Middle East on one side, and the Central
Asian States on the other. In between,
however, there is India to deal with – the
Kashmir issue, India’s acceptance among the
Afghan people in a historical relationship,
similar Indian relations with Central Asian
States and their people, as well as
no-friction exchanges and trade and economic
relations with the Gulf and the Middle East.
This is a huge diplomatic, political and
economic ensemble.
India is not a member of the Organization
of Islamic Conference (OIC). Yet, India
maintains cordial relationship with most IOC
members individually and bilaterally, save
Pakistan. The OIC conference releases are
based on consensus and, therefore,
Pakistan’s position on Kashmir is taken into
account. Otherwise, no OIC member is
interested in the Kashmir issue. This has
frustrated the Pakistani Army and connected
establishment including the foreign service
establishment.
A short time before the Gilgit-Baltistan
issue camp up, a Pakistani newspaper alleged
to be closed to the Pak intelligence agency,
the ISI, hinted that the Kashmir issue was a
tripartite one involving Pakistan, India and
China. The game was given away.
In terms of regional peace and stability,
China’s official statement of September 02,
may have turned the whole Kashmir question
and territorial issues involving India on
its head. And this is going to change
equations for times to come.
The withdrawal of the Chinese Foreign
Ministry on "Northern Kashmir" from their
website subsequently is viewed by some in
India including in the government, as
correcting a faux Pas or China
signaling that their position was not a
significant issue. The
Chinese recorded their new position on POK,
tested Indian reaction, closed the issue for
the time being. The Chinese Foreign
Ministry’s and the Xinhua’s position stays,
to be brought up at an appropriate time.
China has changed the India-Pakistan map,
which poses a serious threat to India’s
security and integrity.
The historically and UN recognized Jammu
and Kashmir region has been desecrated.
According to the Chinese Foreign Ministry
formulation there is no Kashmir question.
The POK or the Pakistani "Azad Kashmir" has
been washed away.
Yet, Jammu and Kashmir, which is part of
India’s sovereign territory has been
deviously projected as the disputed region
between India and Pakistan.
The projection made by China has very
serious implications on territorial issues
for India. Bilaterally (China-Pak)
converting POK into a part of Northern
Pakistan, addresses the 1963 China-Pak
agreement according to which Pakistan ceded
approximately 5,400 sq. kms. of POK to
China, through which the China-Pakistan
Karakoram highway runs.
One clause of the 1963 agreement was that
China will re-negotiate on this piece of
territory with the party which won
sovereignty over it once the Kashmir issue
was resolved. But the new position makes
this clause redundant as it becomes
Pakistani territory as per the two sides.
Apart from the 1947-48 UN resolutions on the
Kashmir issue which was never implemented
because of Pakistan’s refusal to go with the
parameters of the resolutions, the Kashmir
issue remained a lame duck, and has died
with time and demographic changes.
Now, this whole issue is about to change.
Chinese territory makes a sharp bridge head
into Northern Pakistan, going by the Siachen
Glacier. Siachen is also covered by Pakistan
and its military deployment on one side.
This would put tremendous pressure on
India’s position in Siachen, a critical
enemy gateway to J&K.
It has now been revealed that the Chinese
workers in Gilgit-Baltistan are no ordinary
labourers. They are from the PLA Logistics
Department, engineers and soldiers involved
in construction. Technically, they belong to
the PLA and the PLA is on active duty on
foreign soil. Deployment for UN Peace
Keeping forces is something totally
different. The PLA activity in
Gilgit-Baltistan lays bare the much touted
deceptive proclamation that not a single
Chinese soldier will be placed on foreign
soil.
There is clearly a need to recognize the
fact that when the Chinese make an official
statement, its impact, prospects and
consequences are very carefully weighed,
looking to future strategy for which the
blue print is already in place. They never
make mistakes or slip-ups. When changing,
they quote change in circumstances critical
to their security.
In this context, it merits to revisit
what is generally believed in India that
China recognized Sikkim as an integral part
of India in 2005. Visiting Chinese Premier
Wen Jiabao only showed a map to concerned
Indian officials showing Sikkim as a part of
India. China’s foreign ministry website
showing Sikkim’s status in unreliable and
can be changed at any time.
China can be nailed down to its words
only if there is an official statement. More
than that, there has to be written and
signed agreements. The Sikkim issue is very
much alive. After Wen Jiabao’s visit to
India, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman
in Beijing made it abundantly clear that the
Sikkim issue will be resolved along with the
border issue. This is the moot point.
As regards the boundary question, the
Chinese never wanted to resolve it at this
phase. They wanted stable and secure
neighbourhood to secure economic and
military development. Having achieved their
objectives, the Beijing leaders appear to
have embarked on the next stage of strategic
domination in Asia.
The "Watch and Wait" approach by India,
Japan and some of the South East Asian
countries are fraught with serious danger.
China’s territory hungry surge supported by
military means, is becoming louder.
A point to note is the expanding
designation of "core interest" territories.
From Taiwan and Tibet it has expanded to the
South China Sea and its island and the
so-called first chain of islands, to
Japanese territory emphatically, in the past
months.
India may wake up sooner than later with
China’s claims on Indian territories
designated as "core interest" territories.
This would mean that either submit to
China’s claims or prepare for a war to
protect them.
What exactly that territory would be is
not known. Beijing has not agreed to
exchange maps of the Western and Eastern
Sectors, the most strategic sections, with
the Indian interlocutors. Evidence exists
with the Indian side that China is
encroaching upon more Indian land
surreptitiously, especially in the Western
Sector.
India does not have the leeway to sweep
more Chinese dirt under the carpet. The
carpet is now too small to hide it all. It
is now time not only to use quiet diplomatic
channels with China, but show that India can
also hurt China.
India may have signed in 2003 that Tibet
Autonomous Region (TAR) is Chinese
territory. The operative part of this
agreement in the "autonomy" of TAR. If
autonomy of TAR as defined by several
international treaties is addressed by
Beijing, then the agreement stays. If not,
the Agreement is dead, and India can revert
to its original position on the entire Tibet
issue, the true history of Tibet be brought
out to demolish the history of Tibet
concocted by China, and refuse to give visas
to those Chinese officials including
military officials who have served in TAR
and Xinjiang Autonomous Region where Beijing
has launched a scorched earth policy against
pro-independent Uighurs.
Tibetans coming to India, whether on
official duty or private visits, be given
"paper", not "stapled" visas and their
Chinese passports not recognized.
There are issues regarding Taiwan, the
Dalai Lama, and Uighur leaders in exile like
Rebiya Kadeer is still palpable around the
world.
China need not think that it has drunk
the elixir from the Cup of Life, and that it
is invincible. The responsibility lies
entirely on the Mandarins of Beijing. There
is more to international behavior then a bag
full of money, nuclear weapons and
distortion of history.
(The author is an eminent China analyst with
many years of experience. He can be
reached at
grouchohart@yahoo.com)