The more power China has accumulated, the more it has attempted to achieve its foreign-policy objectives with bluff, bluster, and bullying. But, as its Himalayan border standoff with India’s military continues, the limits of this approach are becoming increasingly apparent.
The current standoff began in mid-June, when Bhutan, a close ally of India, discovered the People’s Liberation Army trying to extend a road through Doklam, a high-altitude plateau in the Himalayas that belongs to Bhutan, but is claimed by China. India, which guarantees tiny Bhutan’s security, quickly sent troops and equipment to halt the construction, asserting that the road – which would overlook the point where Tibet, Bhutan, and the Indian state of Sikkim meet – threatened its own security.
Since then, China’s leaders have been warning India almost daily to back down or face military reprisals. China’s defense ministry has threatened to teach India a “bitter lesson,” vowing that any conflict would inflict “greater losses” than the Sino-Indian War of 1962, when China invaded India during a Himalayan border dispute and inflicted major damage within a few weeks. Likewise, China’s Foreign Ministry has unleashed a torrent of vitriol intended to intimidate India into submission.
Despite all of this, India’s government, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has kept its cool, refusing to respond to any Chinese threat, much less withdraw its forces. As China’s warmongering has continued, its true colors have become increasingly vivid. It is now clear that China is attempting to use psychological warfare (“psywar”) to advance its strategic objectives – to “win without fighting,” as the ancient Chinese military theorist Sun Tzu recommended.
China has waged its psywar against India largely through disinformation campaigns and media manipulation, aimed at presenting India – a raucous democracy with poor public diplomacy – as the aggressor and China as the aggrieved party. Chinese state media have been engaged in eager India-bashing for weeks. China has also employed “lawfare,” selectively invoking a colonial-era accord, while ignoring its own violations – cited by Bhutan and India – of more recent bilateral agreements.
For the first few days of the standoff, China’s psywar blitz helped it dominate the narrative. But, as China’s claims and tactics have come under growing scrutiny, its approach has faced diminishing returns. In fact, from a domestic perspective, China’s attempts to portray itself as the victim – claiming that Indian troops had illegally entered Chinese territory, where they remain – has been distinctly damaging, provoking a nationalist backlash over the failure to evict the intruders.
As a result, President Xi Jinping’s image as a commanding leader, along with the presumption of China’s regional dominance, is coming under strain, just months before the critical 19th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). And it is difficult to see how Xi could turn the situation around.
Despite China’s overall military superiority, it is scarcely in a position to defeat India decisively in a Himalayan war, given India’s fortified defenses along the border. Even localized hostilities at the tri-border area would be beyond China’s capacity to dominate, because the Indian army controls higher terrain and has greater troop density. If such military clashes left China with so much as a bloodied nose, as happened in the same area in 1967, it could spell serious trouble for Xi at the upcoming National Congress.
But, even without actual conflict, China stands to lose. Its confrontational approach could drive India, Asia’s most important geopolitical “swing state,” firmly into the camp of the United States, China’s main global rival. It could also undermine its own commercial interests in the world’s fastest-growing major economy, which sits astride China’s energy-import lifeline.
Already, Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj has tacitly warned of economic sanctions if China, which is running an annual trade surplus of nearly $60 billion with India, continues to disturb border peace. More broadly, as China has declared unconditional Indian troop withdrawal to be a “prerequisite” for ending the standoff, India, facing recurrent Chinese incursions over the last decade, has insisted that border peace is a “prerequisite” for developing bilateral ties.
Against this background, the smartest move for Xi would be to attempt to secure India’s help in finding a face-saving compromise to end the crisis. The longer the standoff lasts, the more likely it is to sully Xi’s carefully cultivated image as a powerful leader, and that of China as Asia’s hegemon, which would undermine popular support for the regime at home and severely weaken China’s influence over its neighbors.
Already, the standoff is offering important lessons to other Asian countries seeking to cope with China’s bullying. For example, China recently threatened to launch military action against Vietnam’s outposts in the disputed Spratly Islands, forcing the Vietnamese government to stop drilling for gas at the edge of China’s exclusive economic zone in the South China Sea.
China does not yet appear ready to change its approach. Some experts even predict that it will soon move forward with a “small-scale military operation” to expel the Indian troops currently in its claimed territory. But such an attack is unlikely to do China any good, much less change the territorial status quo in the tri-border area. It certainly won’t make it possible for China to resume work on the road it wanted to build. That dream most likely died when India called the Chinese bully’s bluff.
Brahma Chellaney, Professor of Strategic Studies at the New Delhi-based Center for Policy Research and Fellow at the Robert Bosch Academy in Berlin, is the author of nine books, including Asian Juggernaut, Water: Asia’s New Battleground, and Water, Peace, and War: Confronting the Global Water Crisis.
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2017.
www.project-syndicate.org

Jo Snow try not to troll too much buddy. Indians will make a sandwich out of you.
Jo Snow Bhutan hates india with passion?
Can you be a bigger imbecile?
This is not the West buddy where you can bully or buy your way with money. To deal with a nation state like india you need wisdom.
Jo Snow keep dreaming.
PLA is an overblown war inexperienced army. Hahahaa
Neel Lakhani, NK will now on path to a stable country, because it has secured it’s existence, just like India and Pakistan did years ago.
Karthik Sunder please read what the Bhutanese got to say. They are the ones under India’s tender care. Read Wangcha Sangey’s blog will you.
am i right in thinking that its indian troops in chnese territory,and not chinas troops in india..so it looks like a stalemate..because china will not attack india..all it will do is ask india to withdraw its troops….nobody won..
Have a read with an open mind what a Bhutanese view is. I cant say he speaks for all of them but from what I have been reading this seems to be view of the majority Bhutanese. Mr Wangcha’s blog (a number of articles on this border problem) is worth your while to persue to see the third pespective on this border problem
http://wangchasangey.blogspot.com.au/2017/08/the-strategy-behind-india-doklam.html
This link below will help to clearup the misinformation that China is the aggressor in the 1962 SIno-India War and should help one keep an open mind on the current Dklam/Dkolang dispute. This from Greogory Clarke an Australian diplomat during the 1962 war and his findings. http://www.gregoryclark.net/redif.html
to the credit of rediff.com (an indian media organisation ) which published the above; case of better late than never.
And here’s link to Neville Maxwell’s book on China’s India War: https://chinaindiaborderdispute.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/neville-maxwell-chinas-india-war.pdf
Neville and Gregory are not China sympathisers/apologists but presenting facts as they “discovered” them. Have a read of the above with an open mind.
War is the worst outcome in any dispute. I hope India can take a bold step back and settle their border dispute with China like Russia did.
Yes.. India may no longer be officially a western colony, but it still is in heart and mind.
Another constipated author. He says China is in no position to defeat India along its border because New Delhi has fortified defenses… Why hasn’t China done also? Oh yes.. That would be perceived as a threat like the case now… And still no official words from Bhutan, so far it has been Indian narrative..have the happiest folks on earth taken a collective vow of silence? Is that why they are so happy? Speak no evil and no lies..
The present impass is a direct result of Modi’s muscular foreign policy. Maybe he bargained with Trump to act as a spoiler for the OBOR and in return Trumo agreed to sell him surveillance drones.
The longer this drags on the more clear the situation with the truth slowly coming to light.
India is in a fix. She can’t advance with further encroachment which would made her aggressor twice over. She can’t withdraw. Modi would have eggs on his face. She can only stay put, and wait for China to take action. Where, when and how would be decided by China. China needs only to keep this in a slow boil, and let the truth spread to see who is the aggressor, and meanwhile mobilized at her leisure, and planned where, when and how to strike back.
Tibet was part of the Ching empire. Even the British acknowledged that. And now India wants to contest that? Looks like WW3 isn’t far off.
What Bhutanese territory. This area has been under effective Chinese control for a long time, and only contested by Bhutan during the 20th round of border talk at the instigation of India. Arunachal Pradesh is also contested territory will India surrender that.
Keep smoking.
Joe, There are images of uncover DF16 line up transporting to the west, along with many other hardwares. New Delhi is in our cross hair.
Karthik Sunder India is practically steal Bhutan’s hydro power, and you dare to talk about Building Dam. Why not talk to Pakistan when you threaten them with uilding dam!
U must forgot the 1962 defeat ,china enter india too
China has clearly entered Bhutans territory same way China tries to take territory from Myanmar, Nepal and tries to wrest control of seas from Vietnam, Indonesia and Phillipines.
China illegally occupies Tibet and supports rogue nations like North Korea and terrorist state of Pakistan.
North Korea is going to blow up in Chinas face soon. China will queietly leave from it’s illegal squatting on Bhutan to deal with Korea crisis.
Jo Snow China squatting on Bhutans land and pressurizing Nepal, Vietnam and Taiwan. Deluded chinese noodles…
Haha Pakistan is pathetic. Indians conquered their mughal lands in 18th and 19th century and were having fun with Paki women since that time.