Wednesday, April 25, 2012

India’s Strategic Landscape for the 21st Century


                                  
This piece will seek to analyze and examine India’s strategic position vis-à-vis its neighbours and its broader engagement with the world over different issues.

The simultaneous rise of India and China over the last two decades has completely altered the strategic landscape of the region and brought the Indian Ocean Region(IOR) countries into sharp focus. Asia today has some of the most dangerous flashpoints of the world. It is the battleground for struggle against Jihadi forces and the centre of some of the bitterest ethnic conflicts. It has a number of nuclear powers living in close proximity with relations between them perennially on the edge. Add to it the intense conflict of interest over resources- oil, metals, minerals and now water- to meet the voraciously growing appetite of prospering populations and one finds oneself caught in a vortex difficult to escape.

India and China:
The rising prosperity of the world’s two most populous nations, India and China, has led to a manifold spurt in demand for raw materials to feed the growth engine. Both countries have sought to secure energy supplies for the long-term by investing in oil-fields and oil companies abroad- whether in Central Asia or Africa. The fight for coal has intensified after China turned a net importer of the commodity, both countries slugging it out in Indonesia, South Africa and Australia. Coal is desperately needed to feed the thermal power plants which are still the main vehicles for power generation owing to their cost-effectiveness. Chinese companies have been aggressively buying stakes in the biggest mines and mining companies themselves the world over. The state-backed behemoths with the full backing of government funds are more than a match for any private company the world over and have leveraged this advantage to the hilt by outbidding the latter everywhere. The biggest oil companies in the West find themselves unable to compete with Chinese companies, which sweeten the deal by offering cheap Chinese state-backed credit, soft loans and investment in the host country’s infrastructure development. The Western companies are further constrained by law to not engage in business with pariah states and autocratic rulers whereas the Chinese with their policy of “non-interference in a sovereign country’s affairs” hardly blink an eye in sealing deals with them. India on the other hand, has so far chosen to rely on soft power to gain influence, seeking to gather the goodwill of the general populace rather than the benevolence of rulers.

For all its might, China still sees India as a potential and the only threat in the region to its great power status. It has sought to checkmate India through its now well-known “String-of-Pearls” strategy under which it is building a string of ports and bases in the Indian Ocean region to surround India. Gwadar in Baluchistan(Pakistan), Hambantota in Sri Lanka, Chittagong in Bangladesh, bases around the Andamans and a newly-announced naval base in the Seychelles are a cause of great alarm for India. As Robert Kaplan points out in his book “Monsoon”, Gwadar on the Makran Coast of Pakistan will allow China to keep a check on security of oil supplies coming through the Strait of Hormuz, Hambantota will allow it to keep an eye as the oil moves through the Indian Ocean sea lanes towards the Strait of Malacca and the Seychelles naval base will allow it to pre-empt any naval blockades in the Malacca Strait, undoubtedly the most vulnerable chokepoint in the route. Chittagong port in Bangladesh and the Sittwe port in Myanmar will secure the supplies coming from Africa through the Bay of Bengal to Myanmar from where they will be transported via long pipelines to China. Gwadar is also rumored to have a listening post to keep track of Indian activities in the Arabian Sea. The growing might of the Chinese navy with the establishment of an underground nuclear submarine base in the Hainan province and the recently launched aircraft-carrier don’t do anything to inspire confidence, further deepening Indian suspicions of Chinese intentions. The Chinese navy has begun flexing its might in the region by engaging in tense stand-offs with Indian naval vessels, engaging in a high-level diplomatic spat with Japan over Senkaku (Diayou for the Chinese) islands(and thereby cutting off supplies of rare-earth metals for a long period) and claiming rights over vast swathes of the South China Sea by defining it as a “core-interest” all of a sudden.  The audacious attempt to warn India against signing an off-shore oil-and-gas exploration agreement with Vietnam by defining the territory as “disputed” underscores its seriousness in making these claims.

As noted defense expert Brahma Chellaney points out in his new book, water is another potential area of conflict in the coming decades. The rising demand for food and growing populations in India and China have brought freshwater supplies under tremendous pressure. With surface-water supplies dwindling owing to damming, pollution and receding of glaciers, groundwater resources are being tapped at a rate exponentially higher than replenishment rates. Water tables have gone down, making it increasingly difficult and energy-intensive to extract further. Also, at these depths, replenishment doesn’t take place so it’s a permanent loss. China is in a unique position whereby control over Tibet gives it control over origins of almost all the major rivers in the region that represent a big chunk of total freshwater supplies in the region. Its obsession with building large dams over these rivers(like Brahmaputra) has left lower-riparian states like India at a significant disadvantage owing to reduced flows, besides resulting in adverse environmental consequences for China itself. Its Three Gorges Dam, touted as the biggest engineering achievement since the Great Wall, is a case in point. The renewed Chinese claims over Arunachal Pradesh have been made with an eye on its bountiful freshwater reserves.

Militarily speaking, there is hardly any parity between India and China. The latter has the world’s largest standing army, a fleet of over 70 submarines- most of them nuclear-powered, a superior number of fighter aircraft, inter-continental ballistic missiles, a nuclear arsenal whose size can only be guesstimated and most importantly mind-boggling infrastructural and logistical capabilities that enable it to transfer almost 4.5 lakh troops(thus outstripping Indian forces 3:1) to the border in double quick time than India.  More significantly, its defense spending is assumed to be almost double of what it officially declares every year, the declared amount itself being twice the Indian expenditure.

The struggle for resources, aggressive Chinese moves in the region coupled with its unwillingness to come to the negotiating table to resolve contentious issues including  those related to borders, provocative moves such as stationing of troops in the PoK region and issuance of stapled visas to Kashmir residents make co-operation between the two countries difficult. In absence of a proper dispute resolution mechanism, friction is bound to increase. Heavens forbid, if this leads to military exchange in future, the consequences could be catastrophic given the nuclear armed status of the two nations. It is therefore in the interest of both countries to seek a common minimum ground, engage in diplomatic exchanges, refrain from whipping up nationalistic rhetoric and make co-operation rather than competition the lynchpin of their relationship in the foreseeable future.

India and Pakistan:
Any amount of writing space would be insufficient to do justice to the intricate relationship these arch-rivals share. However, I shall try my best to touch upon broad contours and the plausible way ahead.
Pakistan till date hasn’t brought 26/11 perpetrators to book and continues to shield, fund and encourage them. Extremism has become a Frankenstein’s Monster over which the military establishment exerts only partial control now. Some of the groups have turned against the government and the Army there in retaliation to the perceived co-operation they give to the US. Nevertheless, the terror infrastructure is still intact, terrorists continue to be pushed across the border and efforts are being made to set up indigenous terror groups in India by indoctrinating and misguiding youth through propaganda. The latter, Pakistan hopes, would give it room for deniability whenever a terror strike takes place. Even with its own economy in shambles and on a lifeline of US-supplied aid, the maverick Generals continue to harp on the India threat. Alarmed by Indian efforts in Afghanistan to improve infrastructure, it has repeatedly tried to sabotage such efforts for fear of losing influence in a region it relies on for “strategic depth” in its war doctrine. Even though nearly bankrupt, it continues to grow its nuclear arsenal at an astonishing rate. Amusingly, it seeks to blame India and the US for all its ills. It accuses India of funding, aiding  and abetting separatist movements in Balochistan while shamelessly seeking to fan insurgency in Assam and supplying money and arms to Naxalites. India is blamed for depriving Pakistan of its rightful share of water under the Indus Water Treaty which is in-fact, perhaps the most generous treaty ever formulated between an upper and a lower riparian state. All of this when its own former foreign minister admits that the problem is one of inefficient use and large-scale wastage than that of availability.

A country where the Army is the only properly functioning institution, democracy has never been given a real chance, feudal landlords control the economy and dominate the political space and where blasts are the norm rather than an exception, cannot be but a tinderbox case. The civilian government has no real authority to negotiate on vital contentious issues and its Army shies away from direct engagement to keep up the façade of democracy. Platitudes apart, making any real progress has thus proved impossible.

To hedge its bets against India, Pakistan has continued to draw closer to its “all-weather” friend China. The latter helped Pakistan achieve nuclear capability, transferred blueprints of ballistic missile systems and continues to supply a large chunk of its military hardware including fighter jets. It has even been audacious enough to disregard Nuclear Suppliers’ Group(NSG) rules in supplying additional nuclear reactors ostensibly for nuclear power generation. In order to checkmate Indian in the Arabian Sea, Pakistan has invited China to formally set up a naval base at Gwadar. Given the closeness of this relationship, one finds it quite curious that China provided only a pittance in the form of aid to Pakistan when it got ravaged by floods last year. On the other hand, western nations including the US pitched in generously almost instantaneously.
With US forces slated to withdraw completely from Afghanistan by end of 2014, competition for influence in Afghanistan is only set to intensify further. India and Pakistan apart, China and Iran too are jostling for space. China has already won lucrative mining contracts for the new found Afghan mineral wealth and rides piggyback on the security provided by international forces. To deter India, it’s only to be expected that Pakistan will indulge in more attacks in Afghanistan as well as inside India. Pakistan perceives that a strong Afghan National Army trained by India is not in its interest and it would like to do everything in its power to become the training provider itself.

All in all, predicting the trajectory of India-Pakistan relations for anytime beyond the visible horizon would be foolhardy. Since the tide of terrorism is not expected to abate anytime soon, the major factors for deviation from the predictable are likely to be the domestic political situation in Pakistan, the relations between the Army and the government and the way the Afghan end-game plays out over the next couple of years. The challenge would be keep the relations from deteriorating beyond a point in order to avoid an all-out war. An attack on the lines of 26/11 would constrict political space for leaders on both sides who’ll not only find peace a difficult proposition to sell to their people, but may be obliged to give in to nationalistic demands to teach the adversary a lesson. Civilian led efforts to promote ties in the area of culture, arts and music may be the best bet ahead in order to keep emotions and tempers in check.

India and the Rest of the World:
The Indo-Russian partnership has stood the test of time even after momentous events such as the break-up of the Soviet Union. Occasional friction on account of poor quality of military hardware or the Russian propensity to go back on contracts to negotiate for better terms mid-way through a deal have not deterred leaders from both sides. Joint projects such as the design, development and production of the fifth generation fighter aircraft, the PAK T-50, and the joint development of cruise missile BrahMos are two examples of ongoing collaboration. Indian companies have also acquired significant stakes in the development of oil and gas fields in Siberia with an eye on energy security. Relations are likely to be cordial in the foreseeable future.

The evolution of the India-US partnership over the last decade, underpinned by the Nuclear Deal, has been a seminal event. The growing unease with Chinese intentions in the region has brought the two nations closer, both of whom have an interest in maintaining the freedom of navigation in international waters. Countries in the Asia-Pacific region such as Vietnam, Indonesia and Philippines, intimidated by China, have sought to come closer to India and US. India and US continue to iron out differences, even as India seeks to avoid being counted as an outright ally of the latter, for fear of inviting China’s displeasure.

 A seat at the High Table:
Although India has repeatedly sought to stake a claim over permanent membership of the Security Council at the UN, it would first have to demonstrate an ability to take unambiguous stands over critical issues rather than choosing to sit on the fence. Without it, few would be ready to consider India’s candidature seriously. India has adopted an incoherent approach to the Iran issue and maintained silence on the Arab Spring and the Libyan affair. It has also shown little spine in dealing with the Chinese, giving in to unreasonable demands to clamp down on the Tibetan protests and Dalai Lama’s activities. Chinese provocations in the form of issuance of stapled visas and its protests over the Indian PM’s Arunachal visit have not been responded to in a tit-for-tat manner despite ample existence of diplomatic vulnerabilities at the Chinese end such as its annexation of and atrocities in Tibet and Xinjiang. A nation unwilling to stand up for itself can earn little respect from others, let alone be entrusted with the responsibility of protecting the security interests of weaker countries. India has rejected the notion of a permanent membership without the veto power but it needs to ask itself whether it has demonstrated enough spine and leadership capabilities to earn this privilege.