Himalayan Impasse | India-China Standoff
Battle Ready:
Army chief Gen. Naravane (second from left) in Rechin La on a visit to
the frontlines
India's challenges in 2020 included not just the pandemic but also a national
security threat on the borders in eastern Ladakh. A series of incursions by
the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) has been the biggest attempt to
forcibly alter the 1,597 km Line of Actual Control (LAC) since the 1962 border
war. PLA troops stepped forward to claim territory on the Depsang Plains and
at three other spots, including the shores of the picturesque boomerang-shaped
Pangong lake. The incursions led to a violent skirmish in the Galwan Valley on
June 15 in which 20 Indian soldiers, including the commanding officer Col.
Santosh Babu, were killed. An unknown number of PLA soldiers were also killed
in the melee, the largest clash between the two sides since the 1967 Nathu La
and Cho La skirmishes in Sikkim. A countermove in late August saw Indian Army
special forces, including ethnic Tibetan fighters, occupying strategic heights
south of the lake, overlooking Chinese positions. Nearly eight months later,
the two armies are locked in a standoff, with close to 100,000 soldiers from
both sides deployed at extreme altitudes of over 12,000 feet. At some
locations, such as Rechin La which army chief General M.M. Naravane visited
during a recent tour of the frontlines, troops and tanks on either side are
just a few hundred metres apart.
What has beguiled New Delhi is that despite India sitting out of President Xi
Jinping's Belt and Road initiative and protesting the China Pakistan Economic
Corridor (CPEC), relations between the two countries were better than they had
been in years, seemingly helped by personal summits between President Xi and
Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The second summit, at Mamallapuram, was in fact
held just seven months before the May incursions. One key government official
believes Beijing's belligerence was as much about safeguarding Chinese
interests in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir as it was about showing New Delhi that
China is Asia's preeminent power. India has indicated it will accept nothing
less than a restoration of the ground situation as it existed on April 2020.
It has hit back with a series of economic measures aimed at restricting
Beijing's access to Indian markets-from smartphone apps to Chinese
telecommunication equipment. Foreign minister S. Jaishankar has called
relations between India and China "significantly damaged" and said the only
way they can improve is if China pulls back its troops. Even as both sides
hunker down through a brutal winter, the next year will see who blinks first.
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