India-Pakistan relations look to be interesting in the next
few years, especially if by “interesting” one means “potential for regional
conflagration with toasty global elements”.
If the PRC continues its rise at its current trajectory and
under its current management, chances are that by 2050 the United States will be
facing a China that is 1) militarily and economically predominant in Asia and
2) explicitly hostile to US global and regional leadership and 3) in a position
to do something about it.
Maybe the PRC will fall on its behind before that
happens. After all, the CCP’s empire is
rife with internal political, social, ethnic, and economic contradictions and
Xi Jinping seems to be trapped in the endless “frantically pumping up the
economy with colossal amounts of debt while he struggles to make a single-party
dictatorship pretend to be an efficient pluralistic polity” phase.
However, “standing idly by” is not the job description of
the people who run America’s half-trillion-dollar
military/security/intelligence effort, so I expect passively waiting for 2050
while praying that Gordon Chang is right for once is not the only item on the
agenda.
Maybe a helping push will be necessary. In other words, maybe the US will transition
from a “containment while hoping China collapses from its internal
contradictions” policy to a more forthright “China collapse” strategy.
In IR speak, this would involve a sea change from the US nominally
promoting a stable world system to acting as a de facto disrupter and destabilizer.
The US pays inordinate lip service to its role as custodian
of the liberal global order and up til now has done an OK job of tarring China
as an “aggressive, assertive” disrupter in Asia.
But when deterrence/containment breaks down, the US has
shown itself pretty willing to bend the rules of the “international liberal
order” to advance its interests.
Look at Syria as an example of what we do when our power
projection capabilities are limited but we want to degrade and distract a
regional adversary, Iran, by bleeding it in an interminable local conflict, cost,
collateral damage, and blowback be damned.
Nice harbinger for
China.
And if one considers Syria as a U.S. foreign policy Mission
Accomplished and not, as the IR crowd might, as a ECFOML—Egregious Clusterf*ck
on Multiple Levels—the anti-China battlespace looks a little different.
There are plenty of external anvils to toss the PRC to
exacerbate/provoke internal contradictions: Taiwan independence, Hong Kong
autonomy, agitation in Tibet, the South China Sea…
…South China Sea?
Hmmm.
Are we going to confront Chinese power directly with our
naval squadrons in the South China Sea, risking US assets and prestige in a
hugely expensive mano-a-mano cage match over some worthless islands, the
prospect of which quite frankly horrifies our prosperity-friendly and conflict-averse
regional allies?
Or, as an option, why not look down South Asia way, fortuitously
the home of a powerful and aggressive US ally, India, who is already eager to
slug it out with a vital PRC ally, Pakistan?
Maybe start something there the sooner the better, before
the Pakistan-PRC axis entrenches itself and China breaks out of the US-led
containment system toward its west via OBOR?
Something really nasty that in addition to balking a PRC
move toward South Asia, offers the promise of a nice murderous stew of
aggrieved Islamist militants unleashing havoc in Xinjiang?
Something that involves a regional asset bearing most of the
risks, and not the United States?
Hmmm.
The China Pakistan Economic Corridor or CPEC is in my
opinion the key tell as to whether the US-led global system is willing to
accommodate China’s rise or simply wants to f*ck with it.
Current indications are: Let’s F*ck With It.
The PRC has reached out to India to a certain extent to try
to reconcile India to the CPEC—and the fatal fact that it cuts through
Gilgit-Baltistan, which is tangled up in the Kashmir dispute.
But indications are that India ain’t buying the win-win OBOR
fable unless the PRC performs the impossible task of throwing Pakistan under
the bus: neutering the ISI and its barely deniable terror network, neutralizing
Pakistan’s army, zeroing out Pakistan’s independent regional influence, and thereby
giving India a free geopolitical run to its west through Afghanistan and out to
Iran.
The murderous Uri raid, in which Pakistan-backed militants
apparently killed 17 Indian soldiers in India-occupied-Kashmir, looks like a
disturbing indicator there is no way for China to square the circle between Indian
assertiveness and Pakistani aggression.
I write about the entanglement of US and PRC priorities in the murderous mix of the Uri outrage in my latest piece at Asia Times, South Asia on a Knife Edge After Uri Raid. Indian media and hawkish opinion have unsurprisingly adopted a simple narrative of "Savages murder innocent Indian soldiers because Pakistan's only export is terrorism", but it appears to me the raid is part of a nasty geopolitical snarl including Kashmir, Balochistan, CPEC, China, and United States threads.
I write about the entanglement of US and PRC priorities in the murderous mix of the Uri outrage in my latest piece at Asia Times, South Asia on a Knife Edge After Uri Raid. Indian media and hawkish opinion have unsurprisingly adopted a simple narrative of "Savages murder innocent Indian soldiers because Pakistan's only export is terrorism", but it appears to me the raid is part of a nasty geopolitical snarl including Kashmir, Balochistan, CPEC, China, and United States threads.
India’s hawks are openly calling for the liquidation of
Pakistan as Plan B, by supporting the independence of Balochistan, which would
pretty much put an end to Pakistan and, in a geopolitical twofer, kill the
CPEC, which runs through Balochistan for about a third of its length, and
effectively end the PRC presence in South Asia.
Plan C—letting a hostile Pakistan stabilize itself and
enhance its regional clout by serving as a useful economic and strategic ally
and asset of the PRC on India’s doorstep—doesn’t seem to top too many lists, at
least in government.
So Pakistan-collapse is emerging as the proactive option for
India, just as China-collapse is for US planners.
The US, in a signal to India whose significance should not
be understated, reaffirmed its opposition to Balochistan independence thereby
indicating it wasn’t quite ready to see India promote the dissolution of
Pakistan just yet.
But that’s an
undertaking that could be a) withdrawn b) honored “in the breach” i.e. the U.S.
could condone Indian subversion of Pakistan sovereignty over Balochistan sub rosa c) blithely ignored by India,
which is anything but a tractable U.S. client and understands the Pentagon will
swallow almost any defiance as long as India plays an active anti-China role.
The unsettling conclusion is that, if you want to pull the
pin on the China-collapse grenade, Pakistan is the place to do it—and India
might be happy to perform the honors.