Associated Press (ap.org), Naqvi; Editors, Wisdom Quarterly
.
China demands India leave Himalayan plateau in dispute
BEIJING - China has
insisted India withdraw its troops from a disputed Himalayan plateau
before talks can take place to settle the most protracted standoff in
recent years between the nuclear-armed neighbors, who fought a bloody
frontier war 55 years ago.
Devas love the Himalayas. |
( India must pull back its troops "as soon as
possible" as a precondition to demonstrate sincerity, Foreign Ministry Spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters at a daily news briefing.
His
comments came after weeks of saber-rattling in New Delhi and Beijing, as
officials from both sides talk up a potential clash even bloodier than
their 1962 war that left thousands dead.
The standoff could spill over into the G-20 Summit
in Germany later this week where Chinese Pres. Xi Jinping and his
Indian counterpart PM Narendra Modi are expected to meet at a gathering of
leaders from five emerging economies on the sidelines of the main event.
The month-long standoff and unconfirmed reports of
troop buildups on both sides of the border have also underscored the
swiftly deteriorating relations between the two Asian rivals headed by
assertive leaders with a nationalist bent.
China dislikes Dalai Lama |
China
complained bitterly when Tibet's spiritual leader, the [14th] Dalai Lama, who
lives in exile in India, visited the contested Arunachal Pradesh region
in April, which India said amounted to interference in its internal
affairs.
China also appeared frustrated that India has
refused to join its continent-wide "One Belt, One Road" infrastructure
initiative, which includes a key component in Pakistan -- India's
archival but one of China's staunchest allies.
Meanwhile, India has
fumed about China using its position at the United Nations to
effectively stymie India's efforts to gain permanent membership in the
Security Council or label the Pakistani militant Masood Azhar a
terrorist.
Despite a litany of grievances on both sides,
frequent clashes on the 2,174-mile (3,500-kilometer) shared border have
been the most prominent irritant in efforts to build stable bilateral
ties, said Zhang Li, an expert on China-India relations at Sichuan
University.
"The border clashes show how fragile and volatile
the relationship can be," Zhang said, noting that the latest flare-up
took place in an area relatively free of past trouble and not previously
contested.
The dispute flared in June after Chinese teams
began building a road on territory also claimed by Bhutan.
Although
China and Bhutan have been negotiating the precise border for decades
without serious incident, the tiny Himalayan kingdom [now a republic after king renounced his throne to modernize his country with the highest Gross Domestic Happiness rating of all the world's countries] sought help this
time from its longtime ally, India, which sent troops onto the plateau
to stop the Chinese workers.
Since then, videos have emerged of Indian and
Chinese soldiers blocking each other with their arms and physically
jostling without coming to blows.
Incensed with India's involvement,
China retaliated by closing a nearby mountain pass that Indian pilgrims
use to reach Mount Kailash, a sacred Hindu and Tibetan (Vajrayana) Buddhist site in Tibet.
China's foreign ministry also presented to reporters historical
documents that it says prove China's claims to the plateau.
That hasn't stopped the two-way sniping. After
Chinese officials said India should learn "historic lessons" from its
humiliating defeat in the 1962 war, Indian Defense Minister Arun Jaitley
responded that "India in 2017 is different from India in 1962," in a
reference to its improved military strength.
While Indian media have issued shrill warnings
about Chinese expansionism, Chinese state media have also ramped up
their bellicose rhetoric, with the nationalist tabloid Global Times
warning Wednesday that Beijing would make no concessions.
Zhang, the Sichuan University professor,
acknowledged the unusually tough talk from both sides but said the
conduct of the two militaries and foreign ministries has been relatively
restrained and "within normal bounds."
Abhijnan Rej, a fellow at the Observer Research
Foundation, a New Delhi-based think tank, said India needed to "show
resolve" as China tries to pry away its traditional allies like Bhutan
and assert itself as the region's leader.
China has "exhibited a larger pattern in the last
two years" and sees itself as an Asian hegemon, Rej said. "You don't
become that by playing by the rules." Even though the Doklam Plateau is
not part of Indian territory, New Delhi has been particularly sensitive
to Chinese building activity in a region with strategic significance.
What's there to fight about up here? |
If linked by Chinese roads, Doklam could become a
launching point for a Chinese attack on the vital Siliguri corridor -- also known as the "Chicken Neck" -- that connects India's northeast with
the rest of the country, Indian analysts say. Last month, India's
Ministry of Externals Affairs said Chinese actions in the area had
"serious security implications."
Aside from Doklam, the two countries have vast
competing territorial claims. China claims about 35,000 square miles (90,000 square
kilometers) in the Indian province of Arunachal
Pradesh, referred to informally by some Chinese as "Southern Tibet."
India, meanwhile, says 15,000 square miles (38,000 square kilometers) of
the Aksai Chin plateau belongs to it.
More than a dozen rounds of talks have failed to
make substantial progress in the dispute, although there have been
relatively few confrontations in recent years.
India has also formally
joined the Russian and Chinese-dominated Shanghai Cooperation
Organization this year alongside Pakistan.
Former Indian Ambassador to Beijing C.V.
Ranganathan said he was "baffled" by why the typical diplomatic channels
that have smoothed over other flare-ups have not worked.
"The fact that
this has lasted so long is not a good sign," he said. "India and
China's relationship has been on a downward trend recently and this in
fact is yet another example." More
- Naqvi reported from New Delhi.
No comments:
Post a Comment