Making A Difference

The Secret History Of India바카라s Tibetan Sword-Arm

Successive ­Indian PMs have doggedly stuck to the line of ­disavowing ­support to the Tibetan cause, but reality was a bit different

The Secret History Of India바카라s Tibetan Sword-Arm
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When Nirupama Menon Rao was posted as ­ambassador to Beijing in 2008, she was summoned late one night to the Chinese Foreign Office. Receiving a tongue-lashing at 2 am is not usually part of the call of duty for a career diplomat, but there were exigent reasons! The Chinese wished to register their anger against Tibetan refugees blocking the Olympic torch being carried through Indian cities, en route to its final destination across the MacMahon line: the Beijing Olympics were around the ­corner. It was also the 50th anniversary of the Dalai Lama바카라s flight from Tibet, and just as in 2006, ahead of President Hu Jintao바카라s India visit, there was a spurt of violence in Tibet and neighbouring provinces, besides protests and self-immolations by Tibetan refugees across India. Enough to get the mandarins touchy.

The implication, albeit unspoken, was that New Delhi was somehow complicit in all that. Ms Rao, who went on to ­become foreign secretary the next year, had to explain the basics: that in a democracy like India, protests such as these are par for the course; indeed, that there are even protests against the Indian government. But beyond the words uttered on both sides, there lurked a story. Beijing must have known fully well, then, as it does now, that while New Delhi has never openly played the Tibet card, it바카라s one that has been in play, in one form or the other, since 1962.

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On one side, disavowals of support to the Tibetan cause have a long, bipartisan history. Successive prime ministers have stuck doggedly to that line바카라all the way from Lal Bahadur Shastri to Atal Behari Vajpayee, Dr Manmohan Singh and even Narendra Modi. It was Vajpayee who ­formally recognised Tibet as a part of China in 2003, and Modi even failed to wish the Dalai Lama on his 85th birthday in 2020. This endemic reluctance to even take the name of Tibet was바카라and is바카라doubtless coloured by New Delhi바카라s wish not to upend the 바카라peace and tranquility바카라 on the border.

Episodically, that strategic silence has been proved to be myopic. But it바카라s a silence not shared by the intelligence and strategic community; and certainly not by the Tibetans who fled when Mao Zedong바카라s brutish PLA forcibly 바카라integrated바카라 Tibet into the very womb of Chung Kuo in 1951바카라marching into Lhasa, and over the years destroying and looting the Dalai Lama바카라s Norbulingka palace and a string of monasteries, hounding herdsmen, and imposing punishing taxes on landowners who were humiliated and tortured for 바카라crimes against the people바카라.

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The crackdown set off an exodus of angry Tibetans, thirsting for revenge바카라what most people don바카라t know is that they signed on in their hundreds to become members of a pan-Tibetan resistance force drawn from the Kham and Amdo regions of Tibet. The Dalai Lama바카라s own expeditious escape saw him shepherded to safety through the precarious mountain passes over 14 days, and brought into India by the then envoy to Lhasa, P.N. Menon, at Bomdila. P.N. Menon, incidentally, is the father of Shivshankar Menon, who would go on to become India바카라s National Security Advisor under Dr Manmohan Singh.

Now, as the four-month-long China-India standoff skates dangerously close to an all-out confrontation, the taking of Black Top in Chushul, Ladakh, on August 31 carried an extra buzz. Helming the operation was the Special Frontier Force, a hitherto secret Tibetan force that ­morphed from its first raw avatar, Establishment 2-2, into what it is today. Their triumphant 바카라coming out바카라 at Chushul Valley, the site of a famous 바카라last man, last round바카라 battle by the Indian Army in 1962, has overnight turned the unit into the stuff of legend.

So who are they? The Tibetans in the ranks of the SFF바카라s original avatar were drawn from resistance fighters who rose up against Communist China in the mid-fifties and found in US President Dwight Eisenhower and CIA director Alan Dulles two unlikely mentors who backed their ­rebellion. A backing they did not get from Nehru who, in a face-to-face meeting with the Dalai Lama, after he had granted the Tibetan leader asylum, had famously scoffed at his words: 바카라You say you want independence and in the same breath, you say you do not want bloodshed. Impossible!바카라  

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The PLA바카라s destruction of Tibetan religious symbols and the later imposition of Han culture would see hitherto peaceful monks take to arms바카라it would also spark the Khampa ­rebellion. The war-like Khampas바카라also called the 바카라Buddha warriors바카라바카라were said to be feared even by the Chinese for their guerrilla skills. Led by Gompo Tashi Andrugtsang, head of the famed Lithang monastery, one of those levelled by the PLA, memories of the rebellion ­continue to haunt Beijing even today.

Gompo Tashi바카라s Tibetan resistance movement would be taken over by the Dalai Lama바카라s brothers, Gyalo Thondup and Thubten Norbu, operating from Kalimpong. The brothers had opened lines to Washington. Gyalo first ­approached the CIA as early as 1952, offering the services of some 27 Khampas to the CIA. That small band of Tibetans, posing as Bengalis, were the first to be taken across the border to then East Pakistan, and flown out from a secret airfield near Dhaka to a US airbase in Saipan, the CIA station in the Mariana Islands. There, they learned how to handle radios, send messages on Morse code, how to operate a parachute바카라in short, everything needed to ­conduct clandestine operations inside Tibet. Through the years, groups of several hundred Khampas would be trained at other US bases and dropped into Tibet, melding into the community as nomads, supplying local resistance groups with arms, cash and communication equipment. All the while, without Indian involvement.

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A Tibetan sets himself on fire during a protest against Chinese occupation of Tibet, in Delhi in 2012.

But with the Soviet Union growing into their primary foe in the geopolitical sweepstakes and China less so, as the Vietnam war took its toll, the US pulled the plug on the Tibetan resistance in 바카라64, opening a backchannel to Beijing. But by 1962, after the drubbing at the hands of the PLA, the value of having eyes and ears behind Tibetan lines was not lost on the chief of India바카라s Intelligence Bureau, B.N. Mullik. Credited with the idea of having a Tibetan counter-intelligence arm, Mullik entrusted the task to Maj Gen Sujan Singh Uban, then a brigadier, and his protégé, new recruit M.K. Narayanan, both operating out of a tiny room that had space for just a table and two chairs. In a mere 14 months, Brigadier Uban and Narayanan바카라who would later head IB and also become India바카라s NSA under Dr Singh바카라would set up the innocuously named Aviation Research Centre, the air wing of a highly effective intelligence gathering and subversive network inside Tibet that worked closely with the IB and CIA, specialising in sabotage and snooping. The ARC, a guerrilla unit under the Indian Army drawn entirely from Tibetan exiles, would go on to operate in East Pakistan, during Operation Blue Star, in Sri Lanka, in the Kargil war and even in Afghanistan.

A new generation of Tibetan ­exiles who grew up in the ­settlements in and around Dharam­shala in the north and Bylakuppe in the south, fiercely loyal to India, have not sworn off from settling scores with China for its brutal occupation of their homeland, and the forced flight of their spiritual leader to exile in India in March 1959. It would be a matter of much chagrin for China바카라s strongman President Xi Jinping and the PLA바카라s Western Command that바카라despite its ­tactical and vastly superior ­technological edge, which has ­enabled it to hold a swathe of territory in Ladakh, from Depsang to Hot Springs to Pangong Tso바카라the grit of this new breed of Indian soldier, built for mountain warfare, forced a Chinese retreat, ­however temporary, after opening fire at Mukhpari peak on Monday night.

Prime Minister Modi, who some sources say rebuffed a phone call from Xi, may or may not have wanted to play the Tibet card openly바카라unlike one of his chief foreign policy ­advisors, Ram Madhav, who attended the funeral of SFF Tibetan soldier Nyima Tenzin, who died in the August 31 encounter. Either way, it has already upset the Chinese. But that offers enough room for PM Modi to examine whether he can review Vajpayee바카라s wholly unwarranted placation of China with his recognition of Tibet as a part of 바카라One China바카라. One natural route would be to raise China바카라s human rights violations in the Uighur province and in Tibet, just as Beijing has done repeatedly on Kashmir through its proxy, Pakistan. The meeting between foreign ministers S. Jaishankar and Wang Yi could be a possible precursor, ­insiders say, to a Modi-Xi summit. The Tibetans are surely hoping it바카라s payback time. A final reversal of Nehru바카라s ­abandonment of Tibet to the maws of the Cold War would be a fitting twist to a long, secret history.

(Views expressed are personal)

Neena Gopal worked as Foreign Editor for Gulf News, covering the first Gulf War in 1990,  war-torn Iraq and its neighbours through the second Gulf War, as well as India and its immediate neighbourhood. She has reported from various hotspots, including the LTTE-held areas in northern Sri Lanka and Afghanistan soon after the ouster of the Taliban. Until recently the Resident Editor of Deccan Chronicle, she is the author of 'The Assassination of Rajiv Gandhi', a retelling of the last interview that India's youngest prime minister gave her before his death.

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