(Photo: courtesy
Ajai Shukla): Sunrise over Tawang, the important border town in
Arunachal Pradesh, on which China has cunningly focused the border
discussions
by Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 10th July 12
As this
newspaper reported last week (7th July 12, “British question mark
lingers over Arunachal”) a scholarly article in a
Beijing newspaper has focused China’s spotlight on a troubling British policy
retreat that undermines the Indian claim that the McMahon Line forms the
Sino-India border in Arunachal Pradesh. This took the form of an inexplicable
statement from former British Foreign Secretary David Miliband in 2008, that
back-tracked from Britain’s long-held position that Tibet was autonomous before
1950, with China having a “special position” but not sovereignty over that
country. Miliband abandoned that position as an “anachronism” based on “the
outdated concept of suzerainty.” Instead, he announced that, “Like every other
EU member state, and the United States, we regard Tibet as part of the People’s
Republic of China.”
Why is this
vital for New Delhi? The McMahon Line was formalized between India and Tibet at
the Simla Convention in 1914, and its legitimacy rests on Tibet’s independence.
Beijing argues that Lhasa was subordinate to Beijing and, therefore, not
empowered to negotiate its borders. Miliband’s statement could add weight to
Beijing’s argument. Chinese negotiators will say: the colonial power that
negotiated the Simla Convention has wisely repudiated
it.
What makes
Miliband’s retreat especially baffling is that London got absolutely nothing out
of it, except for a mouthful from Beijing for interfering in its internal
matters. Having already given away Hong Kong and forsaken Taiwan with a
one-China policy, Tibet was the lone card in the British hand that mattered
desperately to Beijing. But London gifted it away without any apparent strategic
intent.
London was not
alone in kowtowing to China in 2008, when the economic recession made the East
wind appear to indeed be prevailing over the West wind. Nicolas Sarkozy,
France’s blustering former president, responded to China’s brutal crackdown on
Tibetan protestors in Mar 08 by threatening to boycott the opening of the
Beijing Olympics that August. This led to a coordinated picketing of Carrefour
supermarkets across China and an internet campaign that charged the French chain
with funding the Dalai Lama. It was the first anti-European deployment of
people’s power, a weapon that had been perfected earlier against Japan. Beijing
intervened only after a few days of carefully calibrated silence, and Sarkozy
got the message. After meeting Chinese president Hu Jintao in July, Sarkozy
announced his attendance at the Olympics in the spirit of “peace, friendship and
brotherhood.”
Miliband’s
wobble and Beijing’s skilful hardball raise two big issues for India. Firstly,
is China’s economic muscle reformatting foreign policy hard drives in Western
Europe? This is especially relevant regarding the UK, where India’s border claim
has been impacted by the inconsistency of British policymaking in the face of a
resurgent China. Given the haste and secrecy that attended this policy shift, it
appears that London’s eagerness to please Beijing overrode the traditional
policy review process, including consultations with historical and legal
experts.
New Delhi must
immediately seek a public clarification from London, which would allow the
British government to clarify that the pre-1950 position on Tibet remains
unchanged. The big question is: “What is the UK’s current view of its pre-1950
relations with Tibet, and in particular of the Annexures to the Simla Convention
of 1914.” Meanwhile, New Delhi must urge London to recalibrate how it deals with
a rising China, basing policy decisions on long-term considerations and not just
immediate needs.
Secondly,
India must re-evaluate its own Tibet policy. Having provided asylum to the Dalai
Lama, the Central Tibetan Administration, a vibrant Tibetan clergy and a hundred
thousand Tibetans, India is probably the world’s only country with serious
leverage in Tibet. Sadly, New Delhi bends over backwards to convince Beijing
that India has no designs on Tibet. This submissiveness has yielded only
disadvantages: the Tibetan presence in India cannot but make China deeply
suspicious of India; while New Delhi’s periodic clamp-down on Tibetan refugee
activity --- portrayed as a neighbourly concern for Chinese sensitivities ---
leads Beijing to conclude that sustained pressure on India will make the Tibet
card unplayable.
India must
abandon this practice of dealing with China through concessions. Over thousands
of years of history, successive Chinese rulers have seen concessions as a sign
of weakness. The Chinese Communist Party wholeheartedly embraces this belief.
Another
Chinese diplomatic tradition involves centring the public debate on relatively
minor issues, while consigning the crucial central issues --- such as Tibet ---
to the shadows. Robert Barnett of Columbia University, a noted Tibet and China
expert says, “My hypothesis is that we can understand Chinese diplomatic
strategy better by regarding the things they make a big noise about as less
important because they want to protect from public debate the really important
things.”
China will
cheerfully discuss human rights, labour protection legislation, environmental
degradation and a raft of issues that could well be fobbed off as “internal
affairs”. But say the word “Tibet” and the shutters come down. China’s expansive
claim over Arunachal Pradesh is hardly backed by history. But it is designed to
keep the discussion off Tibet, an increasingly sensitive issue for Beijing as
its thuggish militias fail in stamping out a deep-rooted identity
struggle.
Rather than
continuing to play by Chinese rules, where Arunachal is discussed but not Tibet,
and while concessions like Miliband’s reshape the ballgame to India’s
disadvantage, New Delhi must begin raising the issue of Tibet in the Special
Representatives’ dialogue. As long as talks are about only the border, no
settlement is likely. But by strategically repositioning the Sino-Indian
dialogue, and shifting at least some of the spotlight onto Tibet, New Delhi can
create incentives for Beijing to loosen its untenable positions. India has
legitimate and non-provocative interests in Tibet: including the reopening of
India’s consulate in Lhasa that was shut down in the 1950s; border trade;
religious linkages and tourism and people-to-people contacts.
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