Since the 1950s, China had made significant advancement in developing major connectivity projects in Tibet, which it considers as its territory. Tibet shares its border with Arunachal Pradesh, one of the least populated states of India. China also claims that entire Arunachal Pradesh, situated at an elevation of 4,010 metres above sea level, is South Tibet. “He who holds Tibet dominates Himalayan piedmont; he who dominates Himalayan piedmont threatens the Indian subcontinent, and he who threatens the Indian subcontinent may well have all of South Asia within his reach and, with it, all of Asia,” highlights George Ginsburg and Michael Mathos, authors of the 1964 book titled, Communist China and Tibet.
It is why when China occupied Tibet in 1949, connectivity projects like road construction, railways, and airports followed for strategic purposes. By the late 70s, China had spectacular connectivity in Tibet that helped its troops keep a hawk’s eye on its borders. One of the major projects in China is the Belt and Road initiative in 2013. In Chinese President Xi Jinping’s words, “To govern the country well we must first govern the frontiers well. Now it was India’s turn to make ways for better surveillance in the snow-capped borders of the North and Northeast part of mountainous Arunachal Pradesh.”
In December 2018, PM Narendra Modi inaugurated the Bogibeel Bridge, one of the longest in India upon Brahmaputra in Assam to enhance national security in its eastern sector and ensure smooth movement of troops to Arunachal Pradesh. The 2,000 km Mago-Thingbu–Vijaynagar Border Road, also called Arunachal Frontier Highway, is another project to develop roads in border towns of Arunachal Pradesh. It will connect bordering areas from Vijaynagar in Changlang district in the east end to Mago-Thingbu in Tawang district, in the west. In Sikkim, which shares its boundary with Tibet, the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) has launched an indigenously developed 140’ double lane bridge in Doka La, a forward area near Line of Actual Control (LAC)—location of a major standoff with Chinese troops in 2017.
Another reason for speeding up connectivity projects in the Northeastern region is India’s need for cooperation with the East and South-east Asian countries to counter China’s growing influence in the region. The Look East Policy got a boost as the Act East Policy after Modi became PM in 2014. According to Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, the Centre has taken up various rail, road and air connectivity projects in the NE region worth Rs 1,34,200 crore. It includes 20 rail projects across 2,011km, road projects covering 4,000km and 15 projects for air connectivity.