Los Angeles Times

Experts see a China-India war risk

One wrong move in Himalayan dispute could set off a wider conflict, they warn.

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SRINAGAR, India — As a months-long military standoff between India and China along their disputed mountain border protracts, experts warn that the nuclear-armed countries — which already have engaged in their bloodiest clash in decades — could unintentio­nally slide into war.

For 45 years, a series of agreements, written and unwritten, maintained an uneasy truce along the border on the eastern edge of the Himalayan region of Kashmir. But moves and clashes over the last few months have made the situation unpredicta­ble, raising the risk that a miscalcula­tion from either side could have serious consequenc­es that resonate beyond the cold-desert region.

“The situation is very dangerous on the ground and can spiral out of control,” said Lt. Gen. D.S. Hooda, who led the Indian military’s Northern Command from 2014 to 2016. “A lot will depend on whether the two sides are able to control the volatile situation and make sure it doesn’t spread to other areas.”

The two Asian giants have held several rounds of talks, mainly involving military commanders, without success. In a sign that the talks are now shifting to the political level, their defense ministers met in the Russian capital on Friday to try to end the impasse. It was the first high-level direct contact between the sides since the standoff erupted in the Ladakh region four months ago.

Last week, the world’s two most populous nations, which share thousands of miles of disputed border, accused each other of fresh provocatio­ns, including allegation­s of soldiers crossing into each other’s territory.

India said its soldiers thwarted “provocativ­e” movements by China’s military twice last week. In turn, China’s Defense Ministry accused Indian troops of crossing establishe­d lines of control and creating provocatio­ns along the border.

Tensions first erupted in early May with a brawl between soldiers from the two sides. The situation escalated dramatical­ly in June, when they fought with clubs, stones and fists, leaving 20 Indian soldiers dead and dozens wounded. China did not report any casualties.

The standoff is over disputed portions of a pristine landscape in a region that boasts the world’s highest landing strip and a glacier that feeds one of the largest irrigation systems in the world.

Hooda said that although he didn’t think either side was looking for fullscale war, the “real calamity” was the breakdown of existing agreements and protocols.

Wang Lian, a professor of internatio­nal relations at Peking University in Beijing, said the possibilit­y of open warfare was unlikely because both sides had shown restraint in recent encounters. But he also said that New Delhi was under pressure from domestic antiChina sentiment and had been emboldened by tougher U.S. measures against Beijing.

“I don’t think [India] would go so far as to escalate military conflict of a larger scale,” Wang said, “but I believe both sides are making some preparatio­ns.”

India and China share a disputed and undemarcat­ed 2,175-mile border, known as the Line of Actual Control, that stretches from the Ladakh region in the north to the Indian state of Sikkim.

The two nations fought a border war in 1962 that also spilled into Ladakh and ended in a fragile truce. Since then, troops from both sides have patrolled and guarded the undefined border area, according to protocols worked out by the two countries that included not using firearms against each other.

But defense analyst Rahul Bedi said India changed the rules of engagement along the border after the deadly June clash. He said local commanders had been given “freedom to initiate adequate and proportion­ate responses to any hostile acts” by Chinese troops.

Members of India’s strategic community, including defense analysts and retired generals, say China’s army is opening new fronts, deepening mistrust and delaying immediate disengagem­ent before winter, when temperatur­es in the region can fall to minus 60 degrees Fahrenheit. They argue that the cost of deployment­s through the winter would be punishing for an Indian economy already decimated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Another area of concern for India’s military is the country’s decades-old territoria­l dispute over Kashmir with archrival Pakistan, a key ally of China.

Indian military policymake­rs say that if a full-scale conflict erupts between India and China, Islamabad could throw its support behind Beijing, creating an even more dangerous situation for New Delhi.

Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan. Its eastern edge, the cold, high-altitude desert region of Ladakh, borders China on one side and Pakistan on the other and is home to the world’s only three-way nuclear-armed junction. Most Kashmiri Muslims on the Indian-held side support an armed movement that demands the territory be united either under Pakistani rule or as an independen­t country.

Gen. Bipin Rawat, India’s defense chief, warned Pakistan last week against exploiting the crisis with China.

“Pakistan could take advantage of any threat developing along northern borders [from China] and create trouble for us,” Rawat said, warning that Islamabad “may suffer heavy losses should they attempt any misadventu­re.”

India unilateral­ly declared Ladakh a federal territory and separated it from Kashmir in August 2019, ending its semiautono­mous status and straining the already prickly relationsh­ip between New Delhi and Beijing. China was among the countries to strongly condemn the move, raising it at internatio­nal forums including the United Nations Security Council.

According to some Indian and Chinese strategic experts, India’s move exacerbate­d existing tensions with China, leading to the June border clash.

“We are entering into a very difficult phase,” said Pravin Sawhney, a defense analyst and China expert. “Disengagem­ent is a criticalit­y to avoid war, which the two nations don’t want. But if any war breaks out, Pakistan will pitch in, and so would Kashmiris. It will be a three-front conflict.”

‘If any war breaks out, Pakistan will pitch in, and so would Kashmiris. It will be a three-front conflict.’ — Pravin Sawhney, a defense analyst and China expert

 ?? Mukhtar Khan Associated Press ?? AN INDIAN ARMY convoy traverses the highway linking Srinagar and Ladakh in the Indian-held portion of Kashmir. India and China have been locked in a standoff along their disputed Himalayan border since May.
Mukhtar Khan Associated Press AN INDIAN ARMY convoy traverses the highway linking Srinagar and Ladakh in the Indian-held portion of Kashmir. India and China have been locked in a standoff along their disputed Himalayan border since May.

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