Battle in the Himalayas China and India are locked in a tense, deadly struggle for advantage on their disputed mountain border.
By Jin Wu and Steven Lee Myers July 18, 2020
China and India have stumbled once again into a bloody clash over some of the most inhospitable terrain on Earth.
A deadly brawl last month killed 20 Indian border troops and an unknown number of Chinese soldiers, punctuating a decades-old border dispute that has become one of the worlds most intractable geopolitical conflicts. It has inflamed tensions at a time when the world is consumed by the coronavirus pandemic, and it has scuttled recent efforts by the two Asian powers to set aside their historical differences.
In the weeks since, the two sides have tried to walk back from the brink, with military commanders and senior diplomats negotiating quietly to disengage. By late last week, satellite photographs indicated that Chinese troops had pulled out of one disputed area where a brawl sparked the latest tensions.
Even so, the broader dispute between the worlds two most populous nations, both armed with nuclear weapons, remains unresolved and dangerous. It involves a region called Ladakh, a sparsely populated area, high in the Himalayas, with close historical and cultural ties to Tibet. It was divided in the years after India gained independence from Britain in 1947 and the Communist Party established the Peoples Republic of China two years later.
The all-weather DSDBO Road connects Indias remote military camp to the center of Ladakh.
During its invasion of Tibet in 1950, Mao Zedongs China seized the northern part of Ladakh, called Aksai Chin, and has held it ever since in no small part because a crucial road connecting Tibet with another restive province, Xinjiang, runs through it. In 1962, the two countries went to war over the same terrain, but despite an overwhelming Chinese victory, the de facto frontier known as the Line of Actual Control remained roughly the same.
The clashes this spring and summer stemmed from Indias recent efforts to build up the road network on its side of the frontier, catching up belatedly, critics say to Chinas buildup on its side. Last year, India completed an all-weather road connecting Leh, the capital of Ladakh, to its northernmost outpost at Daulat Beg Oldi. In the last two decades, India has constructed nearly 5,000 kilometers of roads, allowing it to move military forces more easily along the mountainous border region.
China appeared alarmed by that and by Indias decision last year to impose direct national rule over the Ladakh region.
"China is very sensitive to Indian activity in the western sector, said M. Taylor Fravel, director of the Security Studies Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and it goes back to the reasons why it decided to fight in 1962 to defend that road that connected Xinjiang to Tibet.
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