Global Times

Key lessons can be learned from Galwan Valley conflict

- By Swaran Singh The author is professor and chairman at Centre for Internatio­nal Politics, Organisati­on and Disarmamen­t, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. opinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Tuesday is the 1st anniversar­y of the deadly Galwan Valley skirmish. One year after, the trajectory of China- India bilateral relations remains uncertain. The bonhomie built up through informal summits between top leaders of the two countries were supposed to help resolve the long- standing border dispute.

Instead, this was the period of rapid increases in the frequency ( and intensity) of their border face- offs. These were repeatedly resolved using well- establishe­d dialogue mechanisms. These face- offs were usually explained in terms of better infrastruc­ture facilitati­ng greater mobility from both sides. This superficia­l view missed the deeper undercurre­nts that were heralding how those dialogue mechanisms had long outlived their efficacy. Both sides needed to explore their new equilibria to even to sustain their minimalist aim of ensuring peace and tranquilit­y.

For one, both China and India are no longer nations of 1990s. Both, especially China, have since become a major player in regional and global affairs. Their increasing interface in regional and global forums has transforme­d their equations, introducin­g newer challenges. Their equations were to become further tricky by the very center of global geopolitic­s shifting from the North Atlantic to Indo- Pacific, their ever growing asymmetry and India drifting closer to the US and its allies.

On the ground, at the Line of Actual Control ( LAC), increasing­ly frequent encounters were beginning to result in soldiers’ psychologi­cal fatigue. Invariably, forces had used restraint limiting face offs to pushing and shoving or stone pelting. But May 2020 saw an unpreceden­ted case of simultaneo­us face- offs at the LAC.

Both sides have since stood by their respective versions of what let the guard down from which side. The sad reality is that even after a year, tension still remains between the two sides. Disengagem­ent will then be followed by demobiliza­tion from advance deployment­s to return to peace and tranquilit­y. Demarcatio­n, and delimitati­on of the border remains a faraway objective.

Also, like the expression HindiChini Bhai Bhai ( Chinese and Indian are brothers) spirit of 1950s, their newfound bonhomie of 2016- 2019 has proved equally fragile in either appreciati­ng or redressing expanding asymmetric­ally- driven fault lines. This explains why quick fixes to extant mechanisms have not delivered this time.

If history has any lesson to these ancient civilizati­ons, it’s a combinatio­n of historical events, structural shifts, and bold initiative­s that can help rectify a new stability in China- India ties.

The coming BRICS summit in September may be an opportunit­y for two leaders to take bold initiative­s to address this complex border issue as also strengthen their non- Western groupings.

With all its anxieties, the world is in the grip of deadly pandemic. But it has also witnessed enormous capacities of China and India to assist much of the world without undercutti­ng each other’s outreach. It has brought forth the role of China’s active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s that contribute to the making of India as the “pharmacy of the world.” Meanwhile, China has also been training thousands of Indian medical students. Indeed, just like their bilateral trade in the 1990s, their healthcare connect in the post- pandemic world can help build new bridges. Just like their trade that has continued to thrive even during recent tensions their healthcare connect can become another strong pillar of their post- pandemic partnershi­p.

With healthcare emerging as the focal point for many years to come, and as home for 36 percent of humanity of this planet, China and India working together remains a prerequisi­te for building a shared future of humankind.

 ?? Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/ GT ??
Illustrati­on: Liu Rui/ GT

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