On July 17, 2013, the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) finally
approved the army’s proposal for raising a Strike Corps for the
mountains. Though the approval came after considerable delay, it is a
pragmatic move that will send an appropriate message across the
Himalayas. It will help India to upgrade its military strategy against
China from dissuasion to genuine deterrence as the Strike Corps, in
conjunction with the Indian Air Force (IAF), will provide the capability
to launch offensive operations across the Himalayas so as to take the
next war into Chinese territory.
The new Strike Corps will comprise two infantry divisions and will be
supported by three independent armoured brigades, three artillery
brigades to provide potent firepower, an engineer and air defence
brigade each, an aviation brigade and units providing logistics
services. The Corps will cost Rs 64,000 crore to raise and equip over a
period of five to seven years. Approximately 90,000 new personnel will
be added to the army’s manpower strength, including those in ancillary
support and logistics units. The army has already raised 56 and 71
Mountain Divisions and deployed them in Arunachal Pradesh to fill
existing gaps in the defences. Some elements of these divisions will act
as readily available reserves for the new Strike Corps to add weight
along the axis of attack and exploit success. These divisions will also
be employed to secure launch pads for offensive operations across the
Himalayas. Hence, these must be seen as playing a significant supporting
role for the Strike Corps.
Territorial Dispute
Of all the areas of concern that have dampened relations between
India and China, it is the long-standing territorial and boundary
dispute that is the most disconcerting. Since well before the 1962
border war, China is in occupation of large areas of Indian territory.
In Aksai Chin in Ladakh, China is in physical possession of
approximately 38,000 square kilometres (sq km) of Indian territory since
the mid-1950s. China surreptitiously built its alternative route from
Tibet to Xinjiang through this part of Aksai Chin. In addition, in March
1963, Pakistan illegally ceded 5,180 sq km of Indian territory in the
Shaksgam Valley of the Northern Areas of Pakistan Occupied Kashmir
(north of the Siachen Glacier and west of the Karakoram Pass) to China
under a bilateral boundary agreement that India does not recognise.
Through this area China built the Karakoram highway that now provides a
strategic land link between Xinjiang, Tibet and Pakistan.
In India’s north-eastern region, China continues to stake its claim
to about 96,000 sq km of Indian territory that includes the entire
Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, even though physically the territory
has always been under Indian control. In terms of area, Arunachal
Pradesh is over three times the size of Taiwan. Sun Yuxi, the then
Chinese Ambassador in New Delhi, had publicly reiterated this claim just
before President Hu Jintao’s visit in November 2006. The ambassador
single-handedly ensured that his President received a cold shoulder in
Delhi and the visit turned out to be inconsequential. Since then,
Chinese interlocutors have claimed several times that the Tawang Tract
is part of Tibet because one of the Dalai Lamas was born there. Chinese
scholars visiting New Delhi always hint that the merger of the Tawang
Tract with Tibet is non-negotiable. China’s often stated official
position on such issues is that the reunification of Chinese territories
is a sacred duty.
An inherently destabilising situation stems from the fact that the
Line of Actual Control (LAC) between India and China, implying de facto
control after the 1962 war, is yet to be physically demarcated on the
ground and delineated on military maps. The LAC is quite different from
the disputed 4,056 km long boundary between India and Tibet. The
un-delineated LAC is a major destabilising factor as patrol face-offs
are common and could result in an armed clash between patrols. Also,
incidents such as the Nathu La border clash of 1967 and the Wang Dung
standoff of 1986 can recur. Such incidents have the potential to
escalate into another border conflict similar to the war of 1962. Also,
over the last decade, China has spent considerable time, effort and
resources to upgrade the military infrastructure in Tibet. The PLA has
stepped up the number of military training exercises that it has been
conducting in Tibet every year. An airborne division, which is a
dedicated rapid reaction force, has also practised induction and
deployment in Tibet.
Joint Operations during War in the Mountains
Hence, despite the ongoing border talks between India and China to
resolve the territorial and boundary dispute, often punctuated by ugly
incidents like the PLA incursion in the Daulat Beg Oldie sector in
April-May 2013 and repeated incursions into Chumar since then, a limited
India-China border conflict cannot be completely ruled. As the
territorial dispute with Pakistan over Jammu and Kashmir is also in the
mountains, there is a very high probability that the next conventional
conflict involving India will again break out in the mountains. Since
the war will be fought under a nuclear overhang, particularly with
Pakistan, there is a fair possibility that it will remain confined to
the mountains so that it does not escalate out of control to nuclear
exchanges. Hence, it was time for India to pivot to the mountains in its
quest for building military capacities and it is creditable that the
government has given the go ahead to raise a new Strike Corps.
In any future war that the armed forces are called upon to fight in
the mountains, gaining, occupying and holding territory and evicting the
enemy from Indian territory occupied by him will continue to remain
important military aims. While these will be infantry predominant
operations, no war plan will succeed without achieving massive
asymmetries in the application of firepower to destroy the enemy’s
combat potential and infrastructure. Therefore, army-IAF operational
plans must be fully integrated. These must be jointly evolved,
meticulously coordinated and flexible enough to be fine-tuned to exploit
fleeting opportunities and to take advantage of the enemy’s reactions
during execution. This is especially so in the mountains where the
military aims and objectives are limited in scope because of the
terrain. Both the Services must work together to create the capabilities
that are necessary to take the battle into enemy territory during the
next war in the mountains.
As artillery batteries and regiments cannot be moved and re-deployed
easily, operations in the mountains place a premium on battlefield air
support. Operational mastery over air-to-ground strikes can influence
the outcome of tactical battles in the mountains extremely favourably.
Firepower ratios can be enhanced to levels necessary for achieving
overwhelming superiority only through a major upgradation in the
availability of artillery guns, rocket launchers and missiles and
offensive air support. A contract for the acquisition of 144 howitzers
of 155 mm caliber has been hanging fire for long and needs to be
expedited. The new artillery units that will be raised must be equipped
with short-range ballistic missiles (SRBMs) that can engage targets deep
inside Tibet from deployment areas in the plains. Precision-guided
munitions (PGMs) need to be acquired in large numbers both by the
artillery and the IAF to accurately destroy important targets such as
communications centres. The government must also hasten the acquisition
of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance equipment.
Ancillary Support
The peculiarities of terrain and the lack of sufficient road
communications, particularly lateral roads that connect the road axes
leading to the border, will place heavier demands on helicopter lift for
the movement of reserves within divisional and brigade sectors. At the
operational level, only an “air assault” formation can turn the tide
through vertical envelopment and enable deep offensive operations to be
carried out when employed in conjunction with Special Forces. An air
assault brigade group inducted across the LoC or LAC by helicopters
after the IAF has achieved a favourable air situation can seize an
objective in depth. Ideally, each of the infantry divisions of the
strike Corps must have one air assault brigade with the requisite air
lift. Air-transported operations can also play a major role in
influencing the course of the war. During Operation Parakram in 2001-02,
almost a complete brigade group was airlifted to Kashmir Valley to
enhance the reserves available in 15 Corps for offensive operations. In
addition to attack helicopters, which will provide sustained firepower
support, a large number of utility helicopters will be required to
support offensive operations across the Himalayas, including medium- and
heavy-lift helicopters.
The successful launching of Strike Corps operations will depend on
the availability of good infrastructure, including double-lane roads
with all-weather capability and suitably placed logistics nodes. India’s
plans to upgrade the infrastructure in the states bordering China have
not been progressing at an adequate pace. In fact, there have been
inordinate delays due to the lack of environmental clearances and other
reasons. While the new Strike Corps is being raised, equipped and
trained, the government must make vigorous efforts to speed up the
completion of infrastructure projects. Otherwise, the army will have a
new Strike Corps and not be able to launch it effectively.
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