Press Statement
Outcome of the Sino-Indian Summit at Beijing
1988
The lack of any tangible progress in resolving the Border
question at the Beijing Summit must come as a severe shock
to Indian public opinion which had pinned high hopes on a
breakthrough as a result of publicity in the official
media. It is now clear that Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and
his advisers have gravely miscalculated and India has
suffered loss of prestige and setback in its negotiating
position. The Chinese have once again shown their prudent
determination to pursue their hegemonic aims while Rajiv
Gandhi’s appraisal of our Himalayan security prospects is
full of ambiguities and unanswered questions. The
unfortunate tenor and contents of Rajiv Gandhi’s remarks on
Tibet amount to an official endorsement of the Chinese
actions for making Tibet a formidable military base against
South Asia. By his ominous silence it would appear that he
has given his approval to the Chinese deployment of nuclear
weapons in Tibet, and his threatened curbs on the political
activity in favour of Tibetan rights can only be perceived
as his abetment of the repressive and dictatorial system
that Beijing has imposed on the Tibetans. Instead of
evolving a general consensus on India’s China Policy, Mr.
Rajiv Gandhi has made a number of gratuitous and flippant
remarks which are anathema to the Indian Public. Clearly
China has retained its options for a situation like that
developed in 1962 and their military strategists are ready
for a variety of contingencies. They have also used the
charm offensive of Hindi-Chini Bhai-Bhai and the Pancha
Sheel declaration to induce a more “relaxed” atmosphere
which in fact will induce a pattern of military restraints
on India without undertaking any serious and meaningful
confidence–building measures. In view of the formidable
Chinese military build-up in Tibet, about which I have given
details in the booklet “an Analytical Study of the Fatal
consequences of Rajiv Gandhi’s Beijing Odyssey and Policy
Alternatives in Sino-Indian Relations”, Rajiv Gandhi’s claim
of reciprocal restraint is plainly inaccurate. Instead of
adopting a balanced and prudent policy on deployment of
forces on the border, Mr. Gandhi’s efforts to work towards
what he called “a mutually accepted solution which is fair
and reasonable” will in fact lead him eventually to accept
enhanced Chinese offensive capacity on the frontiers of
India and reduce deployments essential for India’s own
defence preparations. His claim that he has been able to
establish a personal relationship with the Chinese leaders
will not carry much weight with the Indian public who will
remember that the cordial and relaxed relationship between
Jawaharlal Nehru and Mao and Chou-en-lai did not prevent the
Chinese from intensifying their military interest in the
Himalayas. The present strategic developments of the
Chinese in Tibet are very dangerous from the point of view
of Indian security interests. If one analyses the fine
print of the views expressed by Chairman Deng Xiaoping,
President Yang Shangkun, Prime Minister Li Peng and
Vice-Premier Wu Xueqian, one simply does not find any
“breakthrough” in the Sino-Indian issue which was expected.
Diplomatic observers of other countries will only come to
the conclusion that Mr. Rajiv Gandhi’s visit was a poorly
prepared undertaking and did not take into account the new
strategic and political realities on the international and
regional scene. For example:
1.
The Boundary Question:
the Indian public will be sceptical about Rajiv Gandhi’s
innocent protestation of both India and China having agreed
that pending solution to the boundary question, peace and
tranquillity should be maintained in the border areas. Even
if there is a phase of relaxation, it could be short-lived.
If for international reasons the Chinese have a political
–military impetus for provoking a conflict in the Himalayan
area, they could at little cost to themselves come down from
Tibet in strength and encroach on Indian soil in order to
counteract what they regarded as negative developments
elsewhere. Until the border issue is settled finally, it is
easy for China to demonstrate its military muscle and
willingness to take risks. It is a masterful political
stroke by the Chinese and a major setback for India that
they have pressured India into downgrading the central issue
of India’s strategic frontier.
2.
Tibet as China’s internal affair:
The Chinese are desperately looking a way out of the impasse
in which they find themselves as a result of their trampling
on the political, and human rights of the Tibetans. The
seething unrest in Tibet is no longer a secret. Tibetan
students have demonstrated even in Beijing. Rajiv Gandhi
knows that China has violated international law and has
committed genocidal actions in Tibet. For a country which
is proud of being a democracy and has taken up the fight for
Palestinians, Angolans and South African blacks, it is
positively humiliating for its Prime Minister to say that
political forces in India will not be allowed to engage in
activities “harmful to China’s internal affairs”. The
Indian Parliament has addressed itself time and again to the
grievances of the Tibetans, and Indians would not be worth
their salt or worthy of the heritage of Gandhiji if they did
not speak up and demonstrate openly when the rights of the
Tibetans, who are their closest cultural neighbours in the
whole world, are badly trampled by the Chinese. Mr. Rajiv
Gandhi’s remarks will only ignite mass Indian indignation
and an appropriate response to tangibly help the liberation
movement in Tibet.
3.
Back to the Five Principles:
Diplomatic observers are intrigued by Mr. Rajiv Gandhi’s
rhetoric about the Five principles and nostalgia about the
Hindi-Chini bhai days. He is bringing back memories of
Chinese duplicity and perfidy and psychologically speaking
this is not a step closer to peace between India and China
in the future. The political associations of Panch Sheel to
Indian public opinion are of complete mistrust leading to
open conflict. There are other models of resolution of
regional conflicts which Indians might accept, but the
response to Panch Sheel and Hindi-Chini bhai bhai can hardly
be heart warming to a public which remembers the fateful
events of 1962 and has seen through the smoke screen of
Chou-en-lai’s rhetoric. If something tangible is to be
achieved in improving Sino-Indian relations Rajiv must stop
trying to resurrect the discredited and useless symbol of
the Five Principles.
4.
Foundation for a peaceful, stable and cooperative
relationship: Mr. Gandhi’s claim that his visit is the foundation for a new peaceful
stable and cooperative relationship between India and China
is untenable. The first step towards real and stable peace
would have to be the withdrawal of the Chinese from Indian
territory which they have forcibly occupied and the removal
of the threat of a massive invasion of India with the
conventional and nuclear forces they have built up in
Tibet. Have the Chinese leaders offered to remove this
threat? A thinning out of Chinese forces or a pull back is
simply an eye-wash for they could be sent back into forward
areas in no time. A stable peace could be built on the
concept of mutual and balanced security but this would
involve the demilitarisation and denuclearisation of the
Tibetan region. A cooperative relationship cannot be built
by merely signing a few technical agreements. It requires
constructive bargaining stances on outstanding issues. The
Beijing summit does not provide any hint of that growing
trust which is essential for mutual cooperation. There is a
conspicuous omission in the parleys to the Dalai Lama’s 5
point plan which could alter the course of history and give
India, China and Tibet a real chance of peace.
5.
New world order and learning from each other’s experience:
What do the two sides mean by a common commitment to a new
world order? Merely paying lip service to proposals to
revamp the global economic order does not blaze a new
trail. India has a well defined attitude to international
economic restructuring, and it is hard for any
decision-maker in New Delhi to take seriously proposals
emanating from Beijing at a time when it is still engaged in
an uphill struggle to free itself from the economic
shibboleths of the Maoist era. The results of China’s
free-market experimentation are still uncertain. India
cannot even begin to learn from China as the Prime Minister
ardently wishes until the Chinese make somewhat clearer
statements of their honest intentions and inform the world
accurately about the results of their version of
perestroika. The effort to dress up the Summit’s results in
terms of enhanced prospects for bilateral cooperation only
diverts attention from the real issue: How to break the
logjam on the Himalayan military-strategic problem?
From the above perspective it is clear that the prospects
for Indian security have not been enhanced by the Beijing
summit. Rajiv Gandhi’s appraisal of the prospects of the
Summit appears to have been totally unjustified. It is not
enough to be a globe trotting statesman, and particularly in
Rajiv’s case his reasoning does a grave injustice to those
who laid down their lives for the defence of the Himalayas
in 1962. |