Chinese information warfare gimmicks India News Network 10 Jan 2022 Maj Gen Harsha Kakar

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https://www.indianewsnetwork.com/20220110/china-s-information-warfare-gimmicks

Chinese information warfare gimmicks India News Network 10 Jan 2022

          Chinese hybrid warfare strategy encompasses a mix of psychological, information and legal warfare all with a common goal of subduing the enemy without fighting. It exploits informational warfare to project a larger-than-life image of its armed forces, psychological warfare to put its adversaries on the defensive and legal warfare to add confusion. Information warfare is not projected by displaying the PLA’s true abilities but by copying scenes from western movies to portray as its own. Anshul Saxena, a national security observer and analyst, posted a collection of Chinese information warfare photographs and their origins on twitter.  

As per Anshul, the Chinese have utilized videos and photographs from western movies including top gun, transformers, the rock and hard locker to project Chinese military power. In a unique case there is a photograph of missile firing by the Tejas aircraft displayed as a JF version Chinese aircraft. The PLA Navy displayed photographs of Russian and US warships claiming them as Chinese. China assumes that with few aware of reality, it can push fake informational warfare propaganda.  

On new year’s day, China released a video of its troops hoisting a Chinese flag in what they termed as Galwan. It caused a flutter within India and even politicians commented on it. Subsequently it was discovered through Chinese social media that China had employed movie stars to produce this fake video, shot deep within its territory. When the Indian army released a similar video from the actual Galwan front, China had no answer.  

China latest psychological warfare is issuing a list of new names for 15 regions of Arunachal Pradesh, which it claims as part of Tibet. In 2017, it issued a similar list of names for 6 places in Arunachal. The Indian spokesperson stated, ‘Arunachal has always been, and will always be, an integral part of India. Assigning invented names to places in Arunachal Pradesh does not alter this fact.’ He termed the current action as a ‘ridiculous exercise’ to support ‘untenable claims.’ The Chief Minister of Arunachal tweeted that the state has a border with Tibet and not China. China has been allocating its own names for islands in the South China Sea for years to no avail.

          The political commissioner of the Chinese embassy in Delhi wrote to few Indian politicians who had attended a meeting to revive the All-Party Indian Parliamentary Forum for Tibet (APIPFT) in Dec. The letter read, ‘I have noticed that you have attended an activity held by the so-called APIPFT. I would like to express our concern on that.’ The Indian MEA responded, ‘The substance, tone and tenor of the letter are inappropriate. The Chinese side should note that India is a vibrant democracy and Hon’ble MPs, as representatives of the people, undertake activities as per their views and beliefs.’

The Tibetan government in exile, based in India, responded to the letter. It stated, ‘It is evident that China is intimidated by the growing support for the Tibet movement around the world.’ China can never respond to the Tibetan government in exile. Last year PM Modi had officially wished the Dalai Lama on his birthday, an act, though symbolic, conveyed India’s views on its one-China policy. There was silence on the part of China.

Letter writing by the Chinese embassy is not new. In Oct 2020, the Chinese embassy had written to Indian media on not terming Taiwan as a nation. It stated, ‘We hope Indian media can stick to Indian government’s position on the Taiwan question and not violate the One-China principle. In particular, Taiwan shall not be referred to as a ‘country (nation).’ The response was overwhelming support to Taiwan and display of numerous Taiwanese flags near the Chinese embassy, for which China had no answer. The Taiwanese government joined the global chorus condemning China.

          The Chinese new laws on land borders effective from 01 Jan this year is an example of exploiting legal warfare to enhance confusion. The new law states, ‘the sovereignty and territorial integrity of… China are sacred and inviolable.’ Is it different from any other nations’ laws. While negotiations for resolving the border may be stagnated currently, it has anyway not moved an inch in several decades. Gautam Bambawale, an ex-ambassador to Beijing mentions that the new law, ‘states the obvious’ as ‘every country is in the business of protecting its territorial integrity… The big question is what is your territory, and there we don’t agree with each other.’

China also exploits select trade unions and its activists to disrupt production in specific Indian industries and manufacturing units which have shifted from China. The closing of copper manufacturing Sterlite and the ongoing strike in both I phone manufacturing concerns are possible examples. India is now compelled to import copper. Chinese media houses purchase coverage in global dailies, including few in India, seeking to project China’s views and political beliefs.

In end November, in a rare show of solidarity, the Chinese and Russian ambassadors to the US, wrote a joint op-ed criticizing the democracy summit being conducted by President Biden. China exploited every media channel projecting itself as a democracy more vibrant than the US. Its mouthpiece the Global Times had numerous editorials criticizing western models of democracy. This was globally rebuked, including with comments that the term democracy does not exist in the Chinese dictionary.

Chinese social media networks are inaccessible to global users, thus making its launched propaganda warfare one-sided. China employs its state-owned media networks to target the global public on issues which impact China, while locking its population from a similar impact. China fears internal opinion and anger more than external as an authoritarian regime.   

Chinese hybrid warfare against India witnessed a quantum leap post the standoff of 2020. It has since then attempted to project the PLA as invincible especially after hiding details of its casualties in the Galwan clash.  The intention is to create doubts in Indian mindset on challenging China and accepting peace on their terms and conditions. Unless Chinese hybrid warfare is countered and reality exposed, the common Indian will continue being influenced.