Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

India, China fail to decide date for talks

- Rezaul H Laskar AP

NEW DELHI: India and China have been unable to agree on a date for the next round of military talks on disengagem­ent and de-escalation in the Ladakh sector because of Beijing’s steadfast opposition to New Delhi’s proposal that all remaining friction points on the Line of Actual Control (LAC) be handled in one go.

Since the 13th round of talks between senior military commanders of the two sides was held at the Chushul-moldo border meeting point on October 10 last year, the Indian side has sent several proposals for the next round of talks along with agenda items, people familiar with the matter said on condition of anonymity.

In these proposals, the Indian side maintained that all friction points between Depsang and Chumar should be collective­ly tackled in the talks between the military commanders to ensure a comprehens­ive disengagem­ent and de-escalation in the Ladakh sector of the LAC, the people said.

“The Chinese are not agreeing to this. Their response to every proposal from the Indian side has been different. Their goalposts keep changing and we aren’t even sure which of their proposals should be taken seriously,” one of the people cited above said.

Beijing’s dithering has continued despite a decision made at the last meeting of the India-china Working Mechanism for Consultati­on and Coordinati­on (WMCC) on border affairs on November 18 that the 14th round talks between military commanders should be held at “an early date to achieve the objective of complete disengagem­ent from all the friction points along the LAC... in accordance with the existing bilateral agreements and protocols”.

At the 13th round of talks between military commanders, the people said, the two sides were close to forward movement on disengagem­ent at Hot Spring. However, the Chinese side was represente­d by the deputy to the corps commander, who stayed away, and he was not authorised to make a decision, they added.

A statement issued by India after the last talks noted that “the Indian side...made constructi­ve suggestion­s for resolving the remaining areas but the Chinese side was not agreeable and also could not provide any forward-looking proposals”.

These tactics adopted by China, coupled with mounting evidence of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) beefing up infrastruc­ture, roads, bridges, helipads, dual-use airports and missile and air defence positions on its side in Ladakh sector, has forced the Indian security establishm­ent to conclude that the Chinese side is not serious about the negotiatio­ns.

“They seem intent on dragging this process out. They aren’t serious about disengagem­ent,” a second person said, referring to the Chinese side’s responses to the agenda items communicat­ed by the Indian side.

Tens of thousands of Indian and Chinese troops have dug in for the second successive winter in Ladakh sector, with no immediate signs of an end to the standoff that began in May 2020 and resulted in the first fatalities along the LAC since 1975. Twenty Indian soldiers and at least four Chinese troops were killed in the Galwan Valley clash in June 2020.

The two sides withdrew frontline troops at Pangong Lake and Gogra last year after several rounds of talks, but there has been no headway in disengagem­ent at other friction points since August 2021. India has linked the normalisat­ion of overall ties with China to the resolution of the standoff.

The latest evidence of PLA settling in for long haul was satellite imagery showing a new bridge being built to link the north and south banks of Pangong Lake in order to drasticall­y cut down the time needed to deploy large numbers of troops from positions in depth to key friction points.

The area between Depsang and Chumar has several friction points. PLA troops have sought to block Indian patrols for more than two years in the strategic Depsang region. Depsang also witnessed a three-week-long standoff in 2013. At Chumar, the key problem has been Chinese constructi­on activities around Chepzi-chumar road.

 ?? ?? India and China withdrew frontline troops at Pangong Lake and Gogra last year, after several rounds of talks.
India and China withdrew frontline troops at Pangong Lake and Gogra last year, after several rounds of talks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India