Washington: The US is closely monitoring the border row between India and China and does not want the situation to escalate, a senior Trump administration official has said.
The official told the reporters during a conference call on Friday, ahead of the next week's 2+2 India-US Ministerial in New Delhi, that the Trump administration was providing support to India through defence sales, joint military exercises and information sharing.
"These are all areas where we cooperate with the Indians on, and not just as it relates to the tensions in the Himalayas," the official said.
India and China are locked in a bitter border standoff in eastern Ladakh since early May that has significantly strained the bilateral ties.
Both sides have held a series of diplomatic and military talks to resolve the row. However, no breakthrough has been achieved to end the standoff.
China unsuccessfully attempted to occupy Indian territory on the southern bank of Pangong Lake in the last week of August.
Read:|'US will probably discuss India-China border situation during 2+2 dialogue'
In response to a question, the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that the US was having an ongoing dialogue with Indian about increased cooperation in Southeast Asia, and not simply about the South China Sea.
"And we encourage their involvement. That cuts across development investments, it cuts across security cooperation, and then it also involves presence. So, we welcome greater Indian participation in Southeast Asia across all three of those areas," said the official.