Saturday, July 14, 2007

Finding theanswer

I’m kind of continuing from my last post.

For whatever reason the Indian military fail to finish off the rebels establishments along the Indo Burma borders, one possible way to explain it, is to assign it an inherent weakness in its setup. That said, the soft power of the Indian state is still tremendous. Can we think up of any modern State which military has to engage in a 3 hours gun battles with rebels? May be, Afghanistan, which is more or less a freakish state. In India’s case, its military has to fight a 3 hours long gun battles with its home grown rebels and still able to present a completely normal facet to the rest of the world. That’s a tremendous achievement.

Then, we can come to the question: Why don’t the Indian military advance right up to the rebel-held areas and finish off the rebels there? We have to remember here they enjoy huge numerical superiority and the much needed local supports in the forms of assistance provided by the cadres of KNA.

Going by the strategy deployed during the Kargil war, we know that Indian military is willing to suffer a disproportionate mortality to achieve a military target.

So, it appears that the field commanders of the Indian military deployed right now along the Indo Burma borders are being tied down by other considerations, which might not be essentially military in character.

For example, the recent Chinese diplomatic moves. For several years now, everybody knew that the border dispute between China and India was becoming a non-issue. Then, only some weeks back, the Chinese made a sudden volte-face and resumed its farcical claim that Arunachal Pradesh is their territory. They even refused to issue a visa for an IAS officer, who is a native of the said state.

The most consummate nature of the recent Chinese diplomatic offensive is their ability to position it as a countermove to an Indian diplomatic move.

A countermove to what Indian diplomatic move?

To my mind, it’s the Indian diplomatic move, cozying up with the Burmese military junta, even to the extent of supplying military hardware. International diplomatic community thinks that if Indians initiate a move in a Chinese backyard, it is legitimate for the Chinese to make a countermove.

So, right at the moment, the Indian State finds itself dragged down in an uncomfortable diplomatic mess.

This state of diplomatic mess demands that the Indian military should avoid at all cost a situation whereby it is forced to a military face off with the Burmese side. We have to remember here that if the Indian military initiates ‘operations’ against the rebels too near the border, it is very well possible that it might degenerate into a military face off with the Burmese side.

So, it’s fairly possible that the field commanders of the Indian military deployed along the Indo Burma border to fight the rebels are being prevented from executing their military duties by the twists and turns of international diplomacy. This might just be the reason why there is deafening silence along the Indo Burma border right at the moment.

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