CHINA AND INDIA AGREE TO EASE TENSIONS IN BORDER DISPUTE
CHINA
AND INDIA AGREE TO EASE TENSIONS IN BORDER DISPUTE
India and China agreed on Monday to
back away from their confrontation over a tiny slice of territory high in the
Himalayas, easing tensions between the world’s two most populous countries.
For weeks, worries had been
growing of a major conflict between the two nuclear powers, in what had
developed into one of the worst
border disputes between the countries in 30 years — punctuated by a rock-throwing,
chest-bumping fracas between
the Chinese and Indian soldiers.
Both sides agreed to give
some ground in order to end the standoff. In a short statement, the Indian
government said it had reached an “understanding” with Beijing and had agreed
to an “expeditious disengagement” along the border, pulling back troops who had
been sent to the disputed area to block the Chinese from building a new road.
China seemed willing to
compromise as well, still claiming the disputed territory, but making no
mention in its statements on Monday that it was continuing to build the
contentious road.
Minutes after the
announcement, Indian stocks rallied and many in India claimed victory. “The
Himalayan ice has melted,” one Indian newspaper wrote. An Indian TV station
issued a breaking news bulletin that said: “Diplomatic win over China.”
But some analysts said that
India realized, after initially talking tough and sending the troops into the
area, that it was overmatched, economically and militarily.
“What we are seeing is
face-saving,” said C. Raja Mohan, the director of Carnegie India, a branch of
the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
The Chinese Ministry of
Foreign Affairs confirmed the agreement on Monday, though it vowed to continue
to patrol the disputed area. The state-controlled news media portrayed the
agreement as a victory for China and a sign that the nation was acting as a
“responsible big country” in handling global affairs.
Clearly, analysts said,
China had its own sound reasons to end the dispute. “It would be a strategic
disaster for China to make a mortal enemy out of India,” said Daniel C. Lynch,
a professor of Asian and international studies at the City University of Hong
Kong. “The last thing an aging, economically less vibrant China needs is to
fall into a generations-long cold war with India.”
While the agreement does
not amount to a permanent solution, the two sides appeared to have found a way
to avoid a serious confrontation. Hua Chunying, a spokeswoman for the Chinese
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, suggested that China might even reduce troop levels
in the area, which number in the hundreds.
“Given that the situation has
changed, the Chinese will make necessary adjustments and deployments in line
with current conditions,” Ms. Hua said at a daily news briefing in Beijing.
While vowing that China would “protect territorial sovereignty,” she added that
“the Chinese government values the development of good-neighbor relations with
India.”
India’s Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, is scheduled to
visit China next week for an international conference, which may have placed
pressure on Chinese and Indian officials to find a solution before he arrived.
Still, some experts warned that relief could be temporary.
“Another standoff is completely possible,” said Zhang Li, an expert on India at
Sichuan University in southwest China. “We shouldn’t be overly optimistic.”
The disputed territory, 34 square
miles of an area called the Doklam Plateau, is not claimed by India. It lies on
the border of Bhutan and China, but India sees it as a buffer zone that is
close to other disputed areas with China and not too far from the strategically
vital strip of land known as the chicken neck.
The narrow passage connects the bulk of India to its northeastern
states, and India is always vigilant about any military activity in the
vicinity.
Tensions erupted in June when India sent troops to halt a plan by
China to extend an unpaved road on the Doklam Plateau, where China, India and
the kingdom of Bhutan meet. India maintained
that it was acting on behalf of Bhutan, a close ally.
Chinese officials were furious and demanded that India pull back.
The standoff seemed to grow more tense by the day. Videos emerged of soldiers
throwing rocks and bumping torsos.
Chinese news outlets produced anti-India propaganda with racist
themes. Some analysts warned of the possibility of war breaking out, with both
countries swelling with nationalism and eager to demonstrate muscle.
Behind the scenes, though, the two countries continued to talk,
despite the toll the dispute had taken on relations, and were able to find a
way out of the impasse.
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