Karan Datta – Thinker | Speaker | Sprinter | Investor
January 28: 1962 was a blunder of “Himalayan” proportions. PM Nehru stood down the IAF and the Indian Navy at the peak of the 1962 conflict. Many people would be surprised to know that the IAF had clear numerical and technical superiority over the PLA (over Tibet airspace). Our Canberra’s and Vampires would fly with impunity and take aerial recon without being challenged. Moreover, the Indian Navy had a clear advantage in terms of blocking the passage of Oil and other shipping lines thru Malacca Straits (and that too was denied by Nehru and VK Krishna Menon (Defense Minister at that time).
The Indian Army was sent in to fight in the most ill-prepared manner. The frontline forces were put on forward posts without basic winter gear itself, and nor were they provided with the required arms and ammunition essential for high altitude warfare. On top of it, there was tremendous upheaval in the senior ranks with abrupt changes made with the Army Chief. In short, it was a political debacle and not a failure of the forces.
However, just five years later, India defeated China in 1967, a battle that not too many people are aware of, nor do we speak about it much. The last battle fought between India and China was in 1967, which India won was the Battle of Cho La and Nathu La. That was a massive blow to China, and they shied away from actively allying with Pakistan and the US during the 71 war. Post that, we have had many skirmishes but never a battle again.
All of this has been repeated in the Ladakh and Arunachal Pradesh areas over the past two years. Having said this, let’s be very clear – 2022 is not 1962. It is no longer an India that will sit by and see itself being walked or trampled upon. The changes are not military alone but the confidence of a billion people to take this great nation ahead. I can go on giving an example after example of serious change. But to highlight just a few-
- Creation of India’s first Mountain Corps (operational)
- Forward deployment of BRAHMOS (operational)
- Post Galwan events when Col Santosh Babu and his Twenty soldiers died, it is now well established that between 83 to 102 Chinese soldiers were killed
- 65 Strategic roads have been built and completed on border areas (including tunnels). It never happened in the last 70 years
- Military Pacts – LEMOA, COMCASA, BECA all with the US.
– MLSA with France
– ACSA with Japan
– Access to Sabang Port in Indonesia. The naval base at “Assomption Island”, Access to Duqm Port In Oman
- Intelligence sharing with Israel and the US
- 6 new Nuclear powered and nuclear-capable submarines
- Launch of India’s indigenous aircraft carrier
- Induction of Raffales and Tejas
- Cross border action in Myanmaar, Uri, Balakot, Galwan, Doklam
The list can go on and on. The fact of the matter is that India has pushed back on all fronts this time around. Be it Pakistan, China or an internal insurgency. We have been preparing for two and a half fronts for decades; it’s not new. But its operational effectiveness is new.
Last I would like to leave you all with the thought – What if all the conflict is actually not for Land, but Water. China needs freshwater sources for its semiconductor industry. It needs clear and uninterrupted access to the Shaksgam Valley (which is overlooked by Indian troops posted at Siachen Glacier). The Chinese are irked by India’s furious border development. The formation of the QUAD compounds the issue.
The real conflict is about New Delhi forming alliances to defend Taiwan (the largest source of semiconductors in the world). The world order is shifting, and India will end up playing a pivotal role in the Indian Ocean Region.
China has overplayed its cards with the Wuhan virus, Galwan episode, Taiwan airspace violation, Australian Trade Wars, Cyber attacks and constant IP thefts. The world is coming together, and alternatives will be found to China’s manufacturing prowess. India will become a major beneficiary in the decades to come.
The following two decades could look very different from the last 20 years. After all, 2022 is not 1962.
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