One of the reasons why I object to all this mushy-wushy talk of "Ohh Sri Lanka was on our sideSri Lanka has banned the Chinese navy from Hambantota port for now, but faces decades of debt repayments to Beijing. “Any country that extends economic assistance, whether it’s China, India or the US, has a strategic interest in doing so,” says Dushni Weerakoon, the executive director at the Institute of Policy Studies in Colombo.






We have made the same reassurances to Pak and China but they do not follow our ideas. Hence there is the question of use of military/coercive power with both China and Pakistan in case diplomacy does not work. In general we do not use that sort of threat with small states, hypocritical as that attitude might be. Our men sitting up in the mountains and our navy are implicit evidence of our readiness to use force.
China and Pak have used force against us. Pak I will not discuss further. But we are also ready to use force with China. if you are scared of that then we should pull back our troops and navy and let them do what they like. But our forces are there as an in your face signal that force will get China only so far. If they build up their forces and get threatening - then we too will build up and it's not going to help them have their way.
One of the complaints I hear is that we are "reactive". I find this a fairly idiotic thing to say. Do the critics want us to NOT react? The same critics who howl that we are "reactive" are hyperventilating, jumping up and down like they have a full bladder demanding that we react to things in Sri Lanka, Maldives blah blah blah? Heck should we react or not react? We are reactive but not reacting. wtf is that? The fact that from a position of abject weakness in 1962 to a stalemate with Pakistan in 1965 we have reached a position where we are talking about a 2 front war. Is is "overreaction"? Should we have stayed weak - or even better attacked China and Pakistan from a position of weakness? I find some of the absurd criticisms beyond absurd.