New Delhi: While the details of the ‘three-step roadmap’ agreement inked virtually between China’s Assistant Foreign Minister Wu Jianghao and Bhutan's Foreign Minister Lyonpo Tandi Dorji on October 15 remain shrouded in mystery, the fact that Chinese ‘dual-use’ ‘xiaokang’ (‘moderately prosperous’) villages are coming up southeast of the Doklam plateau may be indication that the Chinese ‘salami-slicing’ moves are aimed at gaining control of the Jampheri (Zompelri) Ridge.
The strategically-important Jampheri ridge is a geographical landmass that shoots up by about 500 metres from the craggy and desolate surroundings just north-northeast of the Chicken’s Neck or the Siliguri Corridor.
Usually identified as a Chinese tactic, ‘salami-slicing’ refers to the policy of slowly occupying disputed territory leading to a position where rival claimants have to ultimately accede to the new altered status quo in China’s favour.
Recently, satellite imagery tweeted on Tuesday by an acknowledged researcher with The Intel Lab said: “Disputed land between #Bhutan & #China near Doklam shows construction activity between 2020-21, multiple new villages spread through an area roughly 100 km² now dot the landscape, is this part of a new agreement or enforcement of #China's territorial claims?
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This area is very close to the Doklam (Doka La) plateau, located near the India-Bhutan-China trijunction that was the flashpoint of a 73-day eyeball-to-eyeball faceoff between India and China in 2017.
The developments acquire significance in the backdrop of China having recently framed a sweeping and comprehensive border law to be effective from January 1, 2022.