Forward policy (Sino-Indian conflict)

Forward policy was a term coined by the Indian Army to refer to the Indian government directive of establishing "forward" posts (advance posts)[1] to reclaim disputed territory occupied by China. The Dhola Post in particular became a trigger leading up to the 1962 Sino-Indian War. The term has also been used to describe China's and Britain's Tibet policies in the early 1900s.

Colonial era forward policies

Wendy Palace, a member of the Tibet Society at the University of Cambridge, described the 1903 British expedition to Tibet, which was spearheaded by the government of India under the British Raj, as one of the most extreme examples of forward policy on India's frontiers.[2] While London viewed Tibet under the wider context of its relations with China and Russia and was thus reluctant to provoke the two powers unnecessarily, Lord Curzon of the British Indian government was more eager to protect its commercial interests, such as trade routes crossing the Himalayas.[3] China reacted with its own forward policy to reinforce control but was often held back by internal and external turmoils.[4][5] Kapileshwar Labh believes that due to China's then push into British India and the Himalayan states of Nepal, Sikkim, and Bhutan, India's reactionary and defensive forward policy during the later half of the century was conceptualized.[6]

Sino-Indian War

Jammu and Kashmir (National Geographic, 1946)
Jammu and Kashmir (Survey of India, 1954)
The Jammu and Kashmir border of the Republic of China, 1947
The 'forward policy': Indian posts in blue, Chinese posts in red

Forward policy with respect to India refers to political and military decisions taken in the early 1950s onwards, but it usually specifically refers to the policy adopted in late 1961 in the context of Jawaharlal Nehru, the Sino India border relations and the 1962 war. The forward policy adopted on 2 November 1961 and [7][8] has been used to explain and justify the Sino-Indian War, which was launched by China in October 1962.[9][10] While the Henderson Brooks–Bhagat Report opined that the 1962 war was triggered by India's forward policy,[11] other views occur such as that of Bertil Lintner, who blames events in 1959, specifically the escape of the Dalai Lama from Lhasa, Tibet, to India.[12] Until 1971, Intelligence Bureau Director Mullik positively had advocated the forward policy decision made by Nehru.[13] The Intelligence Bureau had a forward policy in place in 1959.[14] The term "forward policy" was also used in government documents but was a misnomer or seen in the incorrect context of Indian expansionism. The policy did not imply expansionism but was a defensive policy based on perceived external aggression by pushing back an external aggressor from one's own territory.[10]

Nehru's forward policy was an attempt to break the deadlock that Chinese-Indian relations had reached in 1961. A deadlocked created by events in Tibet causes border clashes, which resulted in fatalities, India's perceived helplessness against Chinese border developments was exacerbated by international and mounting domestic pressure.[15][7] On 5 December 1961 orders went to the Eastern and Western commands:[16][17]

[...] We are to patrol as far forward as possible from our present positions towards the International Border as recognized by us. This will be done with a view to establishing additional posts located to prevent the Chinese from advancing further and also to dominate any Chinese posts already established in our territory. [...]

The forward policy had Nehru identify a set of strategies designed with the ultimate goal of effectively forcing the Chinese from territory that the Indian government claimed. The doctrine was based on a theory that China would not likely launch an all-out war if India began to occupy territory that China considered to be its own. India's thinking was partly based on the fact that China had many external problems in early 1962, especially with one of the Taiwan Strait Crises. Also, Chinese leaders had insisted they did not wish a war.[18]

Nehru began acting out a policy of establishing new outposts further to the north of the line of control. In June 1962, local Indian commanders had established Dhola Post, in Tawang. The issue was that Dhola Post was one mile north of the McMahon line and was clearly regarded as being in Chinese territory, even by Indian standards.[18]

General Niranjan Prasad, the commander of the Fourth Division, later wrote, "We at the front knew that since Nehru had said he was going to attack, the Chinese were certainly not going to wait to be attacked".[19]

Nehru's forward policy did not achieve what he had wanted. Contrary to his predictions, China attacked Indian outposts north of the McMahon Line. Thus began the Sino-Indian War, which lasted 30 days as China eventually pushed Indian forces back miles south of the McMahon line. China unilaterally declared a ceasefire with a message that India has entered Chinese territory.[citation needed]

With respect to China, Indian diplomat T. N. Kaul later wrote that the only valid, logical and reasonable surmise seems to be that:[20]

China's radical leaders... wanted China to become the leader of the communist world and the "Big Brother" in Asia, with a string of client states around it.... India seemed to be the main obstacle in extending China's hegemony over Asia and then assume the leadership of the Third World.... This was China's "forward policy" against India. She wanted to show the Third World that India was military weak, socially decadent and economically dependent on Western aid.

C. Raja Mohan used the phrase "forward policy" in 2003 with respect to India in Afghanistan.[21] The term has also been used in relation to the 2020 China–India skirmishes.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ U.S. Army Command and General Staff College (1922), The defensive, p. 38
  2. ^ Palace 1995, p. 2.
  3. ^ Palace 1995, pp. 19–22.
  4. ^ Labh 1974, p. 237… Bhutan's emergence as a British Protectorate in January 1910 was hastened by China's attempt to establish its suzerainty over Bhutan in 1908. Soon after the withdrawal of British troops from the Chumbi Valley, China asserted its suzerainty over Bhutan in pursuance of its forward policy towards the Himalayan states, a policy which it had followed ever since the return of the Younghusband Missson from Lhasa.
  5. ^ Palace 1995, pp. 236–243.
  6. ^ Labh 1974, p. 238… China, which had been pursuing a forward policy towards the Himalayan states since the departure of the Younghusband Mission from Lhasa, staged a full-fledged invasion of Tibet in February 1910. It would have penetrated into Bhutan as well if the latter had not enjoyed the protection of the British.
  7. ^ a b Jensen 2012, p. 62.
  8. ^ Sandhu, Shankar & Dwivedi 2015, p. 39.
  9. ^ Noorani 1970, p. 136.
  10. ^ a b Jensen 2012, p. 56.
  11. ^ Jha, Prem Shankar (5 June 2020). "Why It Is Imperative That Indians Come to Know What Happened in 1962". The Wire. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  12. ^ Banerjee, Ajay (6 December 2017). "Nehru's forward policy not to blame for '62 war: Book". Tribuneindia News Service. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  13. ^ Jensen 2012, p. 64.
  14. ^ Jensen 2012, pp. 64–65.
  15. ^ Noorani 1970, pp. 136–137.
  16. ^ Maxwell & Noorani 1971, p. 157.
  17. ^ Noorani 1970, p. 138.
  18. ^ a b "The China-India Border War". www.globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  19. ^ Rautela, Parakram (2 April 2014). "It wasn't China, but Nehru who declared 1962 war: Australian journalist Neville Maxwell". The Times of India. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  20. ^ Shaw, Yu-ming (5 April 2019). "The 1962 Sino-Indian Border Conflict and After". Mainland China: Politics, Economics, and Reform. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-429-70953-1.
  21. ^ Mohan, C. Raja (22 February 2003). "India's forward policy". The Hindu. Retrieved 28 January 2021 – via mea.gov.in.
Bibliography

Sources