Chinese
incursion leaves India on verge of crisis
The
platoon of Chinese soldiers slipped across the boundary into India in
the middle of the night, according to Indian officials. They were
ferried across the bitterly cold moonscape in Chinese army vehicles,
then got out to traverse a dry creek bed with a helicopter hovering
overhead for protection.
2
May, 2013
They
finally reached their destination and pitched a tent in the barren
Depsang Valley in the Ladakh region, a symbolic claim of sovereignty
deep inside Indian-held territory. So stealthy was the operation that
India did not discover the incursion until a day later, Indian
officials said.
China
denies any incursion, but Indian officials say that for two weeks,
the soldiers have refused to move back over the so-called Line of
Actual Control that divides Indian-ruled territory from Chinese-run
land, leaving the government on the verge of a crisis with its
powerful northeastern neighbor.
Indian
officials fear that if they react with force, the face-off could
escalate into a battle with the powerful People's Liberation Army.
But doing nothing would leave a Chinese outpost deep in territory
India has ruled since independence.
"If
they have come 19 kilometers into India, it is not a minor LAC
violation. It is a deliberate military operation. And even as India
protests, more tents have come up," said Sujit Dutta, a China
specialist at the Jamia Milia Islamia university in New Delhi.
"Clearly,
the Chinese are testing India to see how far they can go," he
said.
That
is not China's stated view.
Chinese
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Thursday that Chinese
troops had been carrying out normal patrols and had not crossed the
boundary.
"China
is firmly opposed to any acts that involve crossing the Line of
Actual Control and sabotaging the status quo," she said at a
daily briefing in Beijing as she was repeatedly questioned about the
dispute.
Hua
said talks to defuse the dispute were ongoing and that it should not
affect relations. "As we pointed out many times, the China-India
border issue is one which was left over from the past. The two sides
reached important consensus that this issue should not affect the
overall bilateral relations," Hua said.
Local
army commanders from both sides have held three meetings over the
crisis, according to Indian officials. India's foreign secretary
called in the Chinese ambassador to register a strong protest. Yet
the troops did not move, and even pitched a second tent, Indian
officials said.
The
timing of the crisis, weeks before Chinese Premier Li Keqiang is to
visit India, has surprised many here. The Chinese leader's decision
to make India his first trip abroad since taking office two months
ago had been seen as an important gesture toward strengthening ties
between rival powers that have longstanding border disputes but also
growing trade relations.
Manoj
Joshi, a defense analyst at the New Delhi-based Observer Research
Foundation, said the timing of the incursion raises questions about
"whether there is infighting within the Chinese leadership, or
whether someone is trying to upstage Li."
Indian
External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid said Wednesday that while
he had no plans to cancel a trip to Beijing next week to prepare for
Li's visit, the government could reconsider in the coming week.
"A
week is a long time in politics," he told reporters.
Indian
politicians accused the scandal-plagued government of Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh of floundering in fear before China.
"China
realizes that India has a weak government, and a prime minister who
is powerless," said Yashwant Sinha, a former foreign minister
from the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party.
He
demanded a stronger response. "A bully will back off the moment
it realizes that it's dealing with a country which will not submit to
its will," Sinha said.
Former
Defense Minister Mulayam Singh Yadav called the government "cowardly
and incompetent." He warned that China was trying to annex more
territory to add to the spoils it took following its victory over
India in a brief 1962 border war.
Defense
Minister A.K. Antony countered that India is "united in its
commitment to take every possible step to safeguard our interests."
Supporters
of the right-wing Shiv Sena party burned effigies of Singh, Antony
and other top officials Wednesday, demanding India retaliate by
barring Chinese imports.
China
is India's biggest trading partner, with bilateral trade heavily
skewed in China's favor, crossing $75 billion in 2011.
Analysts
feel linking a troop withdrawal to continued trade could work.
"The
Chinese have to learn that such aggression cannot be delinked from
trade," Dutta said.
Though
the two countries have held 15 rounds of talks, their border disputes
remain unresolved. India says China is occupying 38,000 square
kilometers (15,000 square miles) in the Aksai Chin plateau in the
western Himalayas, while China claims around 90,000 square kilometers
(35,000 square miles) in India's northeastern state of Arunachal
Pradesh.
Analysts
said they were baffled by Beijing's motives, since its actions could
force India to move closer to Beijing's biggest rival, the United
States.
"The
Chinese for some reason don't seem able to see that," said
Joshi.
China's
aggressive posture could also force India to accelerate its own
military modernization program, analysts said.
The
stand-off may eventually be resolved diplomatically, "but what
it really shows is the PLA's contempt for our military capability,"
former Indian navy chief Sushil Kumar wrote in The Indian Express
newspaper.
It
could also push the government to agree to the army's longstanding
demand to create its own strike corps on the border.
"By
needling the Indians, they are helping us to accelerate our
modernization," Joshi said.
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