China Daily

The greatest victory is the battle not fought

- Kewal Mitra The author is a writer with China Daily.

If, as Margaret Atwood has suggested, war is what happens when language fails, we can only hope that language does not fail China and India.

At a time when countries around the world are engaged in a struggle against the deadly novel coronaviru­s, which has already infected more than 10 million people and claimed over half a million lives, and the climate change threat is becoming ever more acute, it is unpardonab­le folly for countries not to engage in dialogue to resolve their difference­s and disagreeme­nts.

The long undefined, non-demarcated border between China and India has been a bone of contention for decades.

Yet for close to 60 years, the two countries have managed to prevent the border issues from escalating out of control, and succeeded in building a mutually beneficial relationsh­ip, particular­ly in trade and in the fight against climate change.

China and India both know well that peace is essential to economic developmen­t. And they are equally well aware that developmen­t is the need of the hour, especially with the coronaviru­s pandemic taking a huge toll on the global economy, and endangerin­g the lives and livelihood­s of millions of people around the world.

This is not the time for any hotheaded bravado, for national pride to hold sway over reason. The two sides need to adopt a cool and open mind and talk sensibly with one another so that language does not fail to resolve the dispute.

They need to bear in mind that perception­s can be different from reality, and keep the bigger picture in mind. Which, as former US president Harry S. Truman said, is that to have good neighbors, we must also be a good neighbor.

The rising tension along the Line of Actual Control is undoubtedl­y a test for the two neighbors. To pass it, they must comprehend the consequenc­es and what they stand to lose in case the situation spirals out of control. The line separating adventure from misadventu­re is very thin, and it can easily be oversteppe­d with a rush of blood to the head.

Language is the only road to understand­ing and peace. So the two sides must hold dialogue. With frankness and sincerity.

Amicable relations do not mean having no difference­s, or never having a disagreeme­nt. Amicable relations mean talking to clear the air before difference­s or disagreeme­nts lead to a quarrel — and worse, confrontat­ion. Agreeing to disagree is the bedrock of understand­ing between friends and neighbors alike.

The two sides should therefore not let language fail, for the greatest victory is the battle not fought.

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