海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Incursion or fair play? Chinese, Indian troops face off along disputed border.

Chinese Premier Li Keqiang's choice of India as his first foreign trip seemed to signal a fresh turn between the rivals. But both sides' troops are waving the flag on disputed turf.

By Peter Ford, Staff Writer
Beijing

As Chinese and Indian troops face off again on a remote and barren Himalayan mountainside where the two sides fought a war 50 years ago, their governments are trying hard to play down the territorial dispute and prevent it from flaring into violence.

鈥淚t is a limited, localized incident in geography and scope,鈥 insisted Indian Foreign Ministry spokesman Syed Akbarudin in Delhi on Thursday.

鈥淐hina and India are wise and capable enough to handle the existing differences 鈥 while boosting friendly cooperation,鈥 Mr. Akbarudin鈥檚 Chinese counterpart, Hua Chunying, said in Beijing.

But the standoff in disputed territory, now entering its third week, is threatening to derail preparations for a visit to Delhi later this month by new Chinese Premier Li Keqiang. His choice of India for his first foreign trip had seemed to signal a fresh turn in relations between the neighboring rivals.

Two weeks ago, a platoon of Chinese People鈥檚 Liberation Army soldiers pitched tents in an area near the Tibetan border over which China and India both claim sovereignty. India complained about what it called an incursion into its territory, and sent soldiers who then pitched their own tents less than 100 yards from the Chinese encampment.

Three rounds of 鈥渇lag talks鈥 鈥 parleys between local military commanders 鈥 and diplomatic negotiations between Beijing and Delhi have so far failed to resolve the dispute. The Chinese unit, far from withdrawing, has been reinforced and resupplied, according to Indian officials.

'Problems inevitably arise'

China does not dispute the location of its soldiers, but claims they are in Chinese territory. 鈥淐hinese patrol troops have never crossed the line,鈥 insisted Ms. Hua last week, but added that since the border had never been officially demarcated 鈥減roblems inevitably arise one way or another.鈥

Since a brief border war in 1962, China and India have been separated by a 鈥淟ine of Actual Control,鈥 but where it runs is a matter of dispute. In northern Ladakh, extraordinarily harsh and high altitude desert country, a 12- to 15-mile-wide strip of no-man鈥檚 land claimed by both sides lies between the two countries鈥 differing versions of the Line of Actual Control. It is there that the current incident is playing out.

Neither country鈥檚 army is technically supposed to send patrols into this territory, but both acknowledge that they do so. Under a 2005 agreement, however, patrols that come across each other are meant to ignore each other so as to 鈥渁void any unfriendly complications,鈥 says Binod Singh, an Indian academic who teaches at Peking University鈥檚 South Asian Studies Center.

The Indians, accustomed to keeping an eye on passing Chinese patrols, were surprised when the PLA troops began to set up a camp on April 15, says Dr. Singh. Diplomatic overtures, flag talks, and a hurried visit to the site of the dispute by the Indian Army chief of staff then followed, but have failed to resolve the situation.

Chinese observers dismiss the spat, which has blown up in the wake of territorial disputes between China and several other neighbors, as insignificant. They say the close attention that the Indian media has paid to the incident has made it harder to resolve.聽

鈥淭his sort of thing has happened before,鈥 says Ye Hailin, a South Asia analyst at the China Academy for Social Sciences, a government linked think tank. The PLA pitched tents 鈥渢o show our stand on the issue鈥 of territorial sovereignty, adds Dr. Ye. 鈥淥ur military have always been there; they were following a pattern and they didn鈥檛 realize this would be a problem.鈥

鈥淪ince the border has never been officially delineated, both sides have different perceptions of the Line of Actual Control and both sides send out patrols 鈥ome unexpected incidents are natural,鈥 adds Lan Jianxue, an India expert at the China Institute of International Studies, a think tank linked to the Foreign Ministry.

Meanwhile in India...

Indian observers are more suspicious. 鈥淚t is not a coincidence that the Chinese made their move now, with Li Keqiang due to visit India in May,鈥 says Singh. 鈥淭hey want to assert their power and their presence 鈥 as a bargaining chip.鈥

It is unclear what Beijing might be seeking in return for a withdrawal of its soldiers; Indian press reports say PLA officers have complained during their flag talks about Indian construction in disputed territory. But the Chinese authorities have not mentioned any such complaints.

Indian Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid is due in Beijing next week to prepare for the Chinese premier鈥檚 visit later this month to India, but he has warned that events might change his plans, and the Chinese government has not confirmed his trip here.

Border incidents similar to the current standoff have flared up episodically in the past, and have generally died down soon enough. Chinese analysts expect a similar outcome this time.

鈥淏oth governments share a deep consensus at a high level that they should not let their overall bilateral relations be hostage to the boundary question,鈥 says Dr. Lan. 鈥淭his unexpected incident has been localized and it will not affect our relationship.鈥

In India, however, where many still smart from the memory of military defeat at Chinese hands in 1962, the mood is more belligerent, warns Singh. 鈥淭here is pressure on the Indian Army to do something tit-for-tat,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f that happens, who knows what kind of unfortunate event we might see.鈥