Beijing: This month's clash between Indian and Chinese soldiers at Yangtse in Arunachal Pradesh, weeks after President Xi Jinping began his unprecedented new five-year term, spells danger of 2023 too ending up as yet another blank year in the bilateral ties which nosedived after the PLA's misadventures in eastern Ladakh in 2020.
The Yangtse clash in which hundreds of Chinese soldiers made a vain bid to move into the Indian side of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) could cast a shadow over any thaw in the ties as both countries recently managed to work out disengagement in several points in eastern Ladakh through 16 rounds of excruciatingly arduous negotiations.
In his statement in the Parliament on the December 9 incident at the Yangtse area of Arunachal Pradesh's Tawang sector, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh said, "the Indian Army bravely prevented the PLA from encroaching on our territory and forced them to withdraw to their posts. Some soldiers from both sides were injured in the skirmish."
While the Chinese Foreign Ministry said the situation along the border with India was "generally stable", Senior Colonel Long Shaohua, spokesman of the Western Theatre Command of PLA, in a statement claimed that the clash took place when its troops on regular patrol on the Chinese side of the LAC were blocked by Indian soldiers.
"Our troops' response is professional, firm and standard, which has helped to stabilise the situation. Both sides have been under disengagement since then," Long said. Observers say that the PLA statement highlights that the Chinese military may continue its Ladakh tactics of trying to send patrols with hundreds of soldiers to take key positions along the 3,488 km-long un-demarcated LAC.
It is the first major clash between the Indian and Chinese armies since the fierce face-off in the Galwan Valley in June 2020 that marked the most serious military conflict between the two sides in decades. The ties between the two countries froze since then with India making it clear that peace and tranquillity at the border is the sine qua non for the overall development of bilateral ties.
After 16 rounds of military and diplomatic-level talks since 2020, the two sides disengaged the troops from various friction points, the last being the Patrolling Point 15 in the Gogra-Hotsprings area of eastern Ladakh. The Yangtse clash is also politically significant as it was the first major incident at the border after President Xi was re-elected for an unprecedented third five-year term at the once-in-a-five-year Congress of the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC) in October.
The Congress also re-appointed Xi, 69, as the Chairman of China's all-powerful Central Military Commission (CMC), the overall high command of the PLA. Under Xi's third term, China will have a new set of officials. This includes a new Foreign Minister as the incumbent, Wang Yi has been elevated to the CPC's high-level Political Bureau, which makes him China's powerful diplomat.
Wang along with National Security Advisor Ajit Doval is the Special Representative of the India-China boundary mechanism which has remained dormant in the present set of border standoffs. The new cabinet and officials will take charge after the annual session of China's parliament, the National People's Congress in March next year.