Syllabus: GS3/Defense & Security
Context
- Recently, China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) conducted a large-scale military exercise around Taiwan named ‘Justice Mission-2025’.
About the ‘Justice Mission-2025’
- It was a large-scale military exercise conducted by China’s PLA around Taiwan.
- It was the second major drill of the year, launched to demonstrate China’s resolve to defend its sovereignty and national unity while sending a warning to Taiwanese separatist forces and foreign interference, particularly the USA.
- Objectives:
- Safeguard China’s sovereignty and national unity;
- Deter Taiwan’s independence moves;
- Counter foreign interference (especially from the U.S. and Japan)
- It is linked to the Trump administration’s $11 billion arms deal with Taiwan, involving self-propelled howitzers, advanced rocket launchers, and missile systems, pending US Congress approval.
Key Features
- Multi-Domain Focus: The exercise emphasized ‘three-dimensional deterrence’ — coordinated operations across land, sea, and air.
- It aimed to improve the PLA’s blockade capability, combat readiness, and comprehensive superiority.
- Air Operations: Over 130 aircraft sorties were carried out on the first day.
- 90 of these crossed the Taiwan Strait centreline, a rare and provocative move that broke previous tacit boundaries.
- Rocket and Missile Exercises: On the second day, China conducted long-range rocket firing.
- 10 rockets landed in Taiwan’s contiguous zone, the closest proximity ever recorded in such drills.
Impact on India’s Strategic Interests
- Strategic Implications for India’s Security Architecture: India views the PLA’s operations near Taiwan as part of a broader pattern of Chinese military expansionism. It is evident from:
- Aggressive PLA behavior along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in Ladakh and Arunachal Pradesh, and
- Assertive posturing in the South China Sea and East China Sea.
- Implications for India’s Indo-Pacific Strategy: The Taiwan drill reinforces India’s belief in the necessity of collective deterrence mechanisms through the QUAD Alliance (India, Japan, the US, and Australia).
- It underscores the need for greater coordination in maritime domain awareness.
- It may accelerate joint naval exercises like Malabar, focused on countering blockades and maintaining freedom of navigation.
- Deepening Cooperation with Japan: Japan’s declaration that a Chinese attack on Taiwan would threaten Japan’s survival.
- India and Japan are likely to intensify bilateral defence and intelligence cooperation, especially under frameworks like India–Japan Special Strategic and Global Partnership, and Asia-Africa Growth Corridor (AAGC) as an economic alternative to China’s BRI.
- Maritime and Trade Concerns: Any escalation in the Taiwan Strait directly endangers critical Indo-Pacific maritime trade routes, through which over 55% of India’s trade and nearly all energy imports from East Asia transit. It could:
- Disrupt shipping lanes between India, Japan, and South Korea;
- Increase insurance and freight costs; and
- Strain energy supply chains dependent on the South China Sea routes
- India’s Role Expansion: The Indian Navy’s strategic doctrine may evolve to ensure continuous presence and surveillance in the Malacca Strait and South China Sea approaches.
- India’s cooperation with Singapore, Vietnam, and the Philippines could expand under logistics support agreements and joint patrols.
- Diplomatic Balancing Between China and Taiwan: India officially adheres to the ‘One-China Policy’, but its informal relations with Taiwan have grown stronger, especially in semiconductor technology, trade and investment, and education and skill partnerships.
- India’s likely course is to maintain strategic ambiguity, publicly reaffirming the One-China stance, while quietly strengthening ties with Taiwan.
- Influence on India’s Defence Modernization: The demonstration of PLA’s joint-force capabilities serves as a wake-up call for India’s own modernization drive:
- It highlights the need for network-centric warfare systems and integrated tri-service commands.
- India’s upcoming Theatre Command System could benefit from lessons in PLA’s joint training integration.
- The PLA’s long-range missile demonstrations near Taiwan may push India to accelerate indigenous missile programs, such as Agni-V MIRV and hypersonic systems.
Conclusion and way forward
- China’s military drills around Taiwan pose strategic, economic, and security challenges for India, highlighting the need to balance ties with the U.S. and Quad partners while managing relations with China.
- Risks include disruptions to semiconductor supply chains, threats to regional stability, and the necessity to strengthen India’s naval presence in the Indo-Pacific.
- India is expected to adopt a cautious but firm approach, supporting a rules-based order, deepening Quad partnerships, and bolstering its maritime and technological resilience.
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