The Indian Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) on the morning of April 12 2026 did a ritual that is quite as predictable as it is empty that has become the habit of the Indian Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) after China announced a new list of “standardized” names in Arunachal Pradesh. The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) in a strongly worded statement, called the move “mischievous” and “baseless. ” It was more or less a piece that was copy-pasted from the statements of 2017, 2021, and 2024.
However, as the list of renamed mountains and rivers approaches to almost hundred, the talk coming out from New Delhi sounds less like the voice of a sovereign and more like a scripted acknowledgment of impotence. Despite all the “muscular” foreign policy projection of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the actual situation on the rugged peaks of the Eastern Himalayas points to a widening gap between nationalist optics and strategic reality. While the government maintains that “not an inch of land” has been lost, the cartographic and administrative reality suggests that India is losing the battle of attrition.
The Rhetoric of “Red Eyes”
When the BJP rose to power, it did so on the promise of a “Lal Aankh” (Red Eyes) policy, a commitment that India would no longer be the soft state of the 1962 era. Yet, a decade into this tenure, the Chinese “salami-slicing” strategy has only accelerated. China’s “three warfares” doctrine, legal, media, and psychological, is working precisely because India’s response remains trapped in a cycle of reactive press releases.
The government’s biggest failure is not necessarily military, but a refusal to be honest with the public. Since the Galwan clash in 2020, the Prime Minister’s infamous statement,“Na koi wahan hamari seema mein ghus aaya hai” (No one has entered our territory), has become a millstone around the neck of Indian diplomacy. By denying that intrusions have taken place, the government has inadvertently handed Beijing a psychological victory. If no one has entered, then what is there to protest? If the status quo is maintained, why are Indian shepherds suddenly losing access to traditional grazing grounds that have now become “buffer zones”?
Administrative Annexation vs. Defensive Denial
China’s strategy of renaming villages and mountains isn’t just a “mischievous” whim; it is the construction of a legal file for the future. By creating the new administrative counties of Cenling, Hean, and Hekang, Beijing is building a domestic legal framework that treats Indian-held land as its own.
In contrast, India’s response has been largely defensive and infrastructure-heavy. While the Sela Tunnel and the “Vibrant Villages” program are necessary, they are decades overdue. For years, the BJP pointed fingers at previous administrations for neglecting border infrastructure, yet under their watch, China has managed to build entire “Xiaokang” (well-off) villages, dual-use civilian and military settlements, on land that was once considered a neutral zone.
The BJP’s detractors claim that the ruling party is worried more about the image of security than security itself. When Chinese soldiers obstruct Indian patrolling in Depsang plains or Demchok sector, such incidents are often either hidden or minimized by the media, which is reluctant to defy the narrative of a “strongman” leadership. This “strategic silence” may work for domestic electoral gains but it sends a wrong message to Beijing, indicating that India is more concerned about its image than its territorial integrity.
The Economic Paradox
Perhaps the most biting critique of the current administration is the economic contradiction. Even as the government bans Chinese apps and promotes “Atmanirbhar Bharat” (Self-reliant India), trade with China has surged to record highs, with the trade deficit widening in Beijing’s favor.
India finds itself in a position where it is funding its adversary’s military expansion. The “muscularity” of the BJP’s rhetoric fails to translate into economic leverage. China knows that India is deeply dependent on Chinese raw materials and components for its manufacturing sector. This economic tethering makes India’s diplomatic protests over Arunachal Pradesh look like a performance for a domestic audience rather than a credible threat to a global superpower.
The Passport Warfare and the Failure of Deterrence
The detention of Indian citizens like Pema Wangjom Thongdok at Chinese airports and the consistent issuance of “stapled visas” to Arunachal athletes are direct insults to Indian sovereignty. Yet, India’s response remains asymmetrical and soft. Beyond boycotting an opening ceremony or issuing a protest note, there has been no significant cost imposed on Beijing for these provocations.
If an Indian citizen’s passport is declared “invalid” because of their birthplace, it is a fundamental challenge to the Indian state’s authority. By failing to reciprocate with similar diplomatic costs or by failing to escalate the issue in international forums beyond symbolic gestures, the government allows China to set the rules of the engagement.
The Cost of Complacency
The people of Arunachal Pradesh, the Monpas, the Adis, the Nishis, are the ones living in the shadow of this “creeping annexation.” They see the towers being built across the line; they see the high-resolution maps that erase their history. They are fiercely Indian, but they are also pragmatic. They see a New Delhi that is quick to use them for a photo-op but slow to acknowledge the “salami-slicing” occurring under its nose.
The “Mountain No One Can Agree On” is slowly being redefined by the side that is most persistent. China is playing a hundred-year game of paperwork and concrete. India, under its current leadership, appears to be playing a five-year game of headlines and election cycles.
Until the BJP government moves past its policy of denial and begins to project actual power, both economic and strategic—rather than just rhetorical bravado, the renaming lists from Beijing will continue to grow. Sovereignty is not maintained by press releases; it is maintained by the unwavering ability to protect every inch of one’s soil. Currently, the gap between the map and the reality is a space where India’s territorial integrity is slowly being eroded, one renamed mountain at a time.