To many Indians, their country’s strategic position looks
alarming. Its two biggest neighbors are China and Pakistan. It has fought wars
with both, and border issues still fester. Both are nuclear-armed, and are
allies with one another to boot. China, a rising superpower with five times
India’s GDP, is quietly encroaching on India’s traditional sphere of influence,
tying a “string of pearls” of alliances around the subcontinent. Relatively
weak but safe behind its nuclear shield, Pakistan harbors Islamist guerrillas
who have repeatedly struck Indian targets; regional security wonks have long
feared that another such incident might spark a conflagration, reports the
Economist.
So when four heavily armed infiltrators attacked an Indian
army base on September 18, killing 18 soldiers before being shot dead
themselves, jitters inevitably spread. The base nestles in mountains close to
the “Line of Control”, as the border between the Indian and
Pakistani-administered parts of the disputed territory of Kashmir is known.
Indian officials reflexively blamed Pakistan; politicians and pundits vied in
demanding a punchy response. “Every Pakistan post through which infiltration
takes place should be reduced to rubble by artillery fire,” blustered a retired
brigadier who now mans a think-tank in New Delhi, India’s capital.
Yet despite electoral promises to be tough on Pakistan, the
Hindu-nationalist government of Narendra Modi has trodden as softly as its
predecessors. On September 21 it summoned Pakistan’s envoy for a wrist-slap,
citing evidence that the attackers had indeed slipped across the border, and
noting that India has stopped 17 such incursions since the beginning of the
year. Much to the chagrin of India’s armchair warriors, such polite reprimands are
likely to be the limit of India’s response.
There are good reasons for this. India gains diplomatic
stature by behaving more responsibly than Pakistan. It is keenly aware of the
danger of nuclear escalation, and of the risks of brinkmanship to its economy.
Indian intelligence agencies also understand that they face an unusual
adversary in Pakistan: such is its political frailty that any Indian
belligerence tends to strengthen exactly the elements in Pakistan’s power
structure that are most inimical to India’s own interests.
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