Hindustan Times (East UP)

Pangong disengagem­ent results in Naku La easing

- Shishir Gupta letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The impact of the disengagem­ent by the Indian Army and the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) of China on Pangong Tso has apparently led to an easing of tensions on Naku La, which saw friction and a face-off between the two militaries since May 2020. Situated south-west of the Kanchenjun­ga peak, the over 14,000-feet-high pass in north Sikkim had seen fisticuffs between the two armies on May 9, 2020, and as late as January 20, 2021, with injuries to troopers on both sides.

While the Narendra Modi government is tight-lipped about Naku La, Hindustan Times, after talking to top military commanders and diplomats, has learnt that the just like the Pangong Tso disengagem­ent, the easing of tensions on Naku La has been dictated by the highest levels in Beijing with a renewed effort to build trust and normalise relations. The decision-making authority in the PLA’s case is

the Central Military Commission headed by President Xi Jinping, who is also the commander-inchief of China’s defence forces.

“The speed at which the PLA has moved its troops beyond Finger 8 on the north bank of Pangong Tso towards Srijap plains and beyond as well as withdrawal of no less than 220 Chinese light tanks from south banks of Pangong Tso clearly shows that the instructio­ns have come from the highest level in Beijing,” said a former army chief. It is understood that Chinese disengagem­ent is more or less complete on the north bank and the exercise on south banks is to move from the lake to the Kailash Range.

According to a top Indian diplomat, Beijing’s decision to disengage from Pangong Tso starting on February 10 was not because its military positions were not tenable but to stop the downward spiral in bilateral relations since former Western Theatre Commander, General Zhao Zongqi, went on aggressive mode at Pangong Tso last May. “China had invested a lot in removing the 1962 conflict from Indian memory by making deliberate efforts to improve bilateral relations. All this went for a toss last May and a new generation of Indians born in the new millennium has again witnessed the perfidy of PLA and mistrust with China. Perhaps the disengagem­ent is part of an effort to stem the rapid slide in bilateral ties,” said a senior official.

According to senior military officers, Indian Army commanders raised the question of severe mistrust with their PLA countering parts, citing the continued friction at Naku La while the Pangong Tso disengagem­ent agreement was reached on February 10. It is learnt that just to prove that the PLA was committed to genuine disengagem­ent with the Indian Army, a battalion commander sought a meeting with his Indian counterpar­t at Naku La on the same day, assuring no further transgress­ion from the Chinese side.

In the past six years, PLA patrols have tended to come down the ridge past the Indian perception of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in the Naku La area as a result of which there have been physical face-offs. Although the Chinese base is well behind the ridge line, the PLA in the past has made an effort to cross Naku La and reach a wall constructe­d by local Indian graziers.

“The face-off around Naku La has been a new developmen­t of past six years and any easing of tension bodes well for bilateral ties. Reports indicate that the PLA has gone back to its permanent base, a template used in disengagem­ent in Galwan and Pangong Tso,” said the former army chief cited above.

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