What Should India do if China Attacks Taiwan? Indian Military Orders Study

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Debating, discussing, and deliberating on the formation of joint or theatre commands apart, the armed forces have also decided to undertake a study to assess India’s possible options and responses to a potential invasion of or attack on Taiwan by China.

Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) Gen Anil Chauhan late last month ordered the study during a conclave of top military commanders convened in Lucknow. The idea, according to sources, is to be ready with options in case a conflict over Taiwan breaks out.

This decision was taken in the wake of persistent reports and possibly inputs shared by US and Japanese intelligence agencies on Chinese plans over its Taiwan policy. It is seen as essential since India has recalibrated its relations with the United States and is a member of the Quad. This grouping consists of the US, Japan and Australia.

On Saturday, the South China Morning Post (SCMP), a Hong Kong-based daily, published a report headlined ‘Mainland China airs documentary signaling military preparation for Taiwan attack and willingness to sacrifice,’ essentially saying ‘Beijing is trying to send strong signals about its preparation for an attack on Taiwan, with People’s Liberation Army soldiers pledging to sacrifice themselves.’

The SCMP report adds: “The documentary series offers a view – albeit restricted – of the PLA’s operation scenarios, such as seizing air superiority, sea control and information tech suppression before launching an amphibious landing.”

Some senior military observers, such as former US Indo-Pacific Command Chief Philip Davidson, have said in the recent past that the PLA is likely to make a move by 2027, the deadline for the PLA’s centennial goal of becoming a world-class military. Davidson’s warning is in keeping with US assessment, but for the first time, India’s military planners are looking at drawing up plans to meet contingencies arising out of a possible conflict far from its shores.

The study will draw up calibrated plans considering various possible scenarios that may emerge during the conflict. The study team, drawn across the three services, has been told to look at options in case the United States seeks India’s help.

India’s own stand in case of a hot war in the Taiwan Straits will depend on various factors such as the duration of the conflict, the involvement of other nations led by the United States and resistance offered by Taiwan.

For instance, the US military may want to use India’s airfields and naval bases for refueling, replenishment and repair facilities in the initial stages of the conflict under the foundational agreement such as LEMOA or Logistics-Exchange Memorandum of Agreement that the two countries have signed in 2016.

Basically, LEMOA is a facilitating agreement that establishes basic terms, conditions, and procedures for the reciprocal provision of Logistic Support, Supplies, and Services between the armed forces of India and the United States.

Logistic Support, Supplies, and Services include food, water, billeting, transportation, petroleum, oils, lubricants, clothing, communication services, medical services, storage services, training services, spare parts and components, repair and maintenance services, calibration services, and port services. 

Another possible scenario in which a potential Taiwan conflict turns into a military stalemate may require India to get involved beyond just providing logistics support to the US military. Under such circumstances, if India decides to open a second front for China in its southwest along the Himalayan Frontier, what shape such a military operation can and should assume is a question the study will attempt to answer.

Whether or not to present China with a ‘two-front’ conundrum will be a political and diplomatic call of course, but the Indian military wants to be ready with options and not wait for the actual conflict to break out over Taiwan, sources said.

This study, to be completed within a specified timeframe, comes on the back of recent intense deliberations within the Indian military that the three forces must imbibe from the on-going Russia-Ukraine war. 

Nitin A Gokhale 


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Nitin A. Gokhale
Author, thought leader and one of South Asia's leading strategic analysts, Nitin A. Gokhale has forty years of rich and varied experience behind him as a conflict reporter, Editor, author and now a media entrepreneur who owns and curates two important digital platforms, BharatShakti.in and StratNewsGlobal.com focusing on national security, strategic affairs and foreign policy matters. At the beginning of his long and distinguished career, Gokhale has lived and reported from India’s North-east for 23 years, writing and analysing various insurgencies in the region, been on the ground at Kargil in the summer of 1999 during the India-Pakistan war, and also brought live reports from Sri Lanka’s Eelam War IV between 2006-2009. Author of over a dozen books on wars, insurgencies and conflicts, Gokhale relocated to Delhi in 2006, was Security and Strategic Affairs Editor at NDTV, a leading Indian broadcaster for nine years, before launching in 2015 his own digital properties. An alumni of the Asia-Pacific Centre for Security Studies in Hawaii, Gokhale now writes, lectures and analyses security and strategic matters in Indo-Pacific and travels regularly to US, Europe, South and South-East Asia to speak at various international seminars and conferences. Gokhale also teaches at India’s Defence Services Staff College (DSSC), the three war colleges, India's National Defence College, College of Defence Management and the intelligence schools of both the R&AW and Intelligence Bureau. He tweets at @nitingokhale

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