China: “India is a Paper Tiger and Will be
Trounced if it Uses Force Against China”, Experts Warn
By D. S. Rajan
(To be read with SAAG paper No.3247
dated11 June 2009,
www.southasiaanalysis.org)
Beijing’s official response to the
Indian Prime Minister’s statement on Arunachal (9 June 2009)
and India’s reported moves to dispatch additional troops to
the Sino-Indian border, remains so far muted with no provocation to New Delhi. In contrast, the comments on
the subject appearing in the country’s state-controlled
media have been sarcastic with a rather threatening tone,
towards India.
The PRC Foreign Ministry spokesperson,
Qin Gang (11 June 2009), while reiterating that the
Sino-Indian border has never been formally demarcated, has
stated that China wants a ‘just and rational’ solution to
the border issue through talks with India. He has hoped that
both sides would follow the consensus and principles agreed
upon and protect together the stability and security of the
border region.
The authoritative Global Times,
affiliated to the Party organ People’s Daily, has on the
other hand, been choosing a hard-hitting line towards India.
Following its article, “India’s Unwise Military Moves”
(People’s Daily Online, English, 11 June 2009), it has
published a highly provocative comment (Global Times,
Chinese, 12 June 2009) entitled “India is a paper tiger, its
use of force will be trounced, say experts”, which needs a
close examination. The comment alleged that Indian
politicians have always been seen adopting a contradictory
stand on China – advocating cooperation on one side and
creating incidents on the other as well as declaring support
to ‘one-China policy’ on one side and supporting the Dalai
Lama “clique” for more than half a century on the other. It
singled out the actions of Indian Prime Minister Dr.Manmohan
Singh in this connection by referring to his visit to the
disputed territory in the Eastern sector of the Sino-Indian
border soon after his visit to China and his statement on 9
June 2009, that India would not compromise on the border
question.
Declaring that China is not ‘afraid’ of
the dispatch of 60,000 additional troops to the border, the
Global Times write-up has listed India’s real motives for provoking China – raise the bogey of ‘security threat’
to the border for diverting the attention of Indians from
the daily sharpening internal clashes in the country,
maintain India’s big brother status in the region and tell
the US and other powers that it can play an important role
in their attempts to ‘contain’ China. Reiterating China’s
stand that it does not recognise the McMahon line, and that
it wants to solve the border problem through peaceful and
friendly talks, the article has said that India’s actions in
the border like sending additional troops, improving
firepower and building airfields only hint at New Delhi’s
efforts to ‘legalise its territorial occupation’. It has
concluded by saying that it is laughable for Mr. Manmohan
Singh to talk about preparedness to deal with the ‘security
threat’ from China, while simultaneously calling for
strengthening of relations with China in the international
arena.
The ‘paper tiger’ language takes one to
the past, when Mao termed the ‘imperialists’ as a paper
tiger, to which Khrushchev responded by saying that ‘paper
tiger has nuclear teeth’. This exchange had then
ideological and policy connotations. Is it the same
situation now? Has Beijing started to reassess India’s role
in policy terms? It is anybody’s guess, but to say the
least, the epithets in the Global Times look very unfriendly
to India, not to mention their criticisms against Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh by name.
How to interpret the apparent mixed
signals emanating from China? Beijing’s official caution
would only mean that it wants no escalation of tensions with
India on the border issue. Qin Gang’s press comments above,
illustrate this point. On the other hand, China has
strategic concerns and hence its use of the state-controlled
media to convey the same to India. Such a methodology is not
unknown to other nations including India. Of immediate
concern to India, would be any signal, which may point to
the Chinese military moves in the border in retaliation to
steps being taken by it. The fact, however, is that China
has already strengthened its military and logistic system in
the borders and India’s latest steps are only in response to
that.
Caught in a circle, both India and China should now
jointly work towards diffusing any border tension, in the
overall interest of bilateral relations. The good
atmosphere, marked by trade jump and the ‘shared vision for
the 21st century’, should not be allowed to get eroded
through any radical step by each side.
(The writer,
D.S.Rajan, is the Director of the Chennai Centre for China
Studies, Chennai, India. Email:
dsrajan@gmail.com)