A ‘consensus’ was reached at a meeting in New Delhi over the weekend between the government and leaders of India’s opposition parties that the five-week long military standoff with China in the Sikkim region should be resolved peacefully.
The headlines have begun moving away from the topic as if an unseen hand is guiding. The standoff could be inching its way toward denouement.
‘De-escalation’ is the new mantra. The good part is that the clamor for war with China by hotheads in India does not reflect the official thinking (anymore).
China probably widening road in Doklam
Meanwhile, there is much greater clarity about what really happened on the ground.
First, contrary to what India media claimed, there has been no Chinese ‘intrusion’ on to India’s sacred soil. On the contrary, Indian military moved into Doklam on the China-Bhutan border, which has been under Chinese control all along.
Second, reports projected that a standoff ensued as China started building a road in Doklam. But there is evidence now that a road was already in existence for over a decade at least and China was probably widening it.
Third, India claimed that its intervention was at the request of Bhutan. China disputed the claim. Significantly, after a visit to Thimphu by the spouse of the Chinese ambassador in Delhi and her meeting with the Bhutanese king last week, Beijing maintains that Bhutan did not seek Indian military intervention.
Fourth, and most importantly, China maintains that it is within its sovereign right to build roads in an area under its control. Whereas, Indian reports sensed a ‘mission creep’ with a hidden Chinese agenda to eventually threaten the Siliguri corridor, a hundred kilometers to the south, which connects India’s restive northeast with the hinterland.

However, this ‘threat perception’ appears to be based on an exaggerated notion since the Chumbi Valley in Tibet which leads toward the Indian border itself is a narrow corridor flanked by steep mountains, which India dominates. A former Indian corps commander Lt Gen KJ Singh put it this way:
‘‘Treacherous mountainous jungle terrain and (a) total absence of connectivity limits application of force levels and will reduce it to a slogging crawl. (Any) such offensives need logistic sustenance, (as the) narrow Chumbi valley, dominated on both flanks, with limited deployment spaces and acclimatization challenges is a virtual death trap. While granting credit to (the) Chinese for favorable force ratios, its actual efficacy has to be discounted as force multipliers have severe limitation in application due to weather and terrain.’’
All things taken into account, therefore, the current standoff is not so much about territory as the ‘great game’ over Bhutan.
India has been treating Bhutan as its ‘protectorate’ ever since Great Britain left the subcontinent in 1947. But lately, through the past decade or so, China started nibbling away at Indian influence by working on fault lines that had begun appearing in India-Bhutan relations over time.
India harbors a deep sense of disquiet about China’s direct dealings with Bhutan, especially on border disputes. By the military intervention in Doklam, India has inserted itself as the proverbial elephant in the room. This is one thing.
‘High-stakes’ election in Bhutan next year
Interestingly, the current standoff is playing out in the run-up to a crucial parliamentary election in Bhutan, which is due in mid-2018.
The forthcoming election will be a high stakes affair for New Delhi, which is keen that the present ‘pro-India’ Bhutanese prime minister Tshering Tobgay secures a renewed mandate. (He deposed his ‘pro-China’ predecessor Jigme Thinley in the 2013 election with some Indian manipulation from the back stage.)
To be sure, a calibrated brinkmanship seems to characterize the current standoff – in both Indian and Chinese behavior. Bhutan says nothing much.
Bhutan must be aware of the great game by its two giant neighbors over its strategic autonomy. Sadly, it is caught up in a debt trap. According to the International Monetary Fund, Bhutan’s government debt now stands at 118% of GDP, with India by far the largest creditor, accounting for 64% of Bhutan’s total debt. Of course, much of India’s ‘aid’ effectively promoted project exports to Bhutan by Indian companies.
As a former Indian ambassador and top expert on Himalayan affairs, P Stobdan wrote last week, India’s “colonial-style approach of buying loyalty through economic aid” may not work anymore. Do not be surprised if Bhutan views China’s ‘One Belt, One Road’ as the salvation – following Nepal’s footfalls.
If so, it must be the mother of all ironies because India is waging a relentless whispering campaign against the Belt and Road, warning that it leads to ‘debt trap’.
Bhutanese nationalism and resentment of Indian ‘hegemony’, is, no doubt, a strong undercurrent, and Delhi cannot ignore it much longer.
Intervention in neighboring countries to browbeat them is a grotesque foreign-policy legacy left behind by decades of successive Congress Party governments in India. It is an archaic mindset.
On Sri Lanka, Prime Minister Narendra Modi brought in refreshingly new thinking to India’s policy and a tumultuous relationship (which tragically took the life of former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi) steadied almost overnight.
A similar imaginative approach is needed vis-à-vis Bhutan.

I think chinese are more obsessed with war than indians…..we hear threats and twisted facts from their state controlled press….chinese press has no independence and hence no credibility….. chinese have all been bullies….be it in the Himalayan region or south china sea….chinese are crying as why indians are interfering in disputed land b/w china and bhutan…..well dokalam is a tri-junction and u chinkies should not have poked ur nose into disputed area of POK
World’s largest failed democrazy country?
China is better than India. China outperformed India, the world’s largest failed democrazy country, on every single level. Food for thought. The "upkeep cost" to run India’s system is too expensive for a poor country. India is a country where they discuss. Everyday sit down and discuss. There is no ending to the discussion. Other reasons? Evolution, culture, history & IQ.
http://tinyurl.com/hcmmju3
Evolution, Culture & IQ
East Asian (Confucianism)
http://tinyurl.com/zg7592a
Bhutan is a independent country. It should make its decision by itself. Indian should stop interfere its decision, include boundary negotiation and debt loan, with a name of "friendship", actually, "bully".
Ken Kwan If they partner with china the bhutanese race itself will go extinct like it happenned to tibetians
Bhutan will hold out for as long as it has India’s unstinted moral/financial/military support & is also supported by a great majority of the world’s democracies.
Both Nepal & Bhutan do not want to end up as one-party national security states like China. In reality, China is extremely rattled by the fact that Bhutan will in the years emerge as the world’s richest country on a per capita basis once all the planned 15 hydroelectric projects involving financial investments from Bangladesh & Iran reach fruition under the BIMSTEC initiative. This in turn will lead Bhutan to lean increasingly towards Bangladesh & India for financial sustenance, which in turn will cause Bhutan to simply ignore China & for China this is the ultimate insult: imagine a permanent member of the UNSC still not be diplomatically recognized by a UN member-state like Bhutan! Everyone knowledgeable on such matters knows this & that’s why even US, EU is now raising voices against China’s ulterior motives.
Bhutan will not surrender Doklam to China. And for those who don’t know it yet, the IA’s soldiers never crossed from Doka La for entering Bhutan’s Doklam Plateau. Instead, the Brigade-strong IMTRAT team that is always present in Bhutan sent 300 of its soldiers & officers to the Doklam Plateau to halt the PLA’s road construction there.
Why has China incursed into bhutanese territory? Elementary, to teach Bhutan a lesson for not attending the BRI Summit in Beijing & boycotting it like India did, & by extension also try to draw a wedge between Bhutan & India because Bhutan is now actively discussing with India & Bangladesh the development of several hydroelectric projects in which all 3 countries will be risk-sharing financial investors. If this happens, China will lose all prospective economic leverage since the BICM/BIMSTEC economic corridors will start succeeding, thereby rendering BRI inconsequential. So, China wants to prove that BRI is far superior to BIMSTEC/BICM. Hence it is exerting pressure on Bhutan so that Thimpu buckles & opts for BRI instead of BICM/BIMSTEC.
Bravo! Bravo! Wake up the people of Bhutan, before you end up like over half the population in India having to defecate in the open for the next 300 years and livng miserable like 50% of them below the poverty line. Absolutely no progress, which is India’s ultimate aim for the people of Bhutan. For as long as your are miserably poor , you’ll be obliged to grovel at their feet like the outcastes in India.
Firstly, neither the Indian official breifings nor the media outlets ever claimed of any chinese ‘intrusion’ on to Indian soil but a mere your psycho-babble fig to sooth your Chinese paymasters. However, we did have a geo-strategic and mandatory legal stake in the determination of the tr-junction which was sought to be push forward by the Chinese from Batang-la to Gamochen.
Secondly, the standoff ensued as China did change the status-quo by attempting to build a military road on the existing grazing or dirt tracks from Batang-la to Dokla and even this fact was duly acknowledged by Indian media outlets since it was in the official Chinese briefings from day one.
Thirdly, nothing officially have come out about either from Chinese embassy or the Bhutanese king about the meeting, so what you are saying is either pure speculative rubbish or a frivoulous attempts at shadow-boxing.
And, even if Indian Army wasn’t formally asked to intervene then too it’s a matter between India and Bhutan and if found offensive then it’s for the Bhutanese to protest, which is clearly not the case here.
Fourthly, I pity you ‘coz as per you only china has sovereign right over the Doklam and since Bhutan is a smaller country it’s soveriegn rights could be altogether discounted.
And, lastly I find you hoplessly loaded to consider that high interest loans and chinese labor intensive OBOR could find any rightfully thinking Bhutanese taker when they can easily find soft-loans and generate a lot of local jobs all on their own.
So, regardless of whatver bull-shit you have dished out here the dynamic of Indo-Bhutanese hydro-electric trade are soundly based on laws of physics and geographical realities where soft-loans, shortest transimission losses and huge captive buyer could solely make the cut.
At last, a more balanced and insightful piece from a "Kumar". Not to mention at least he is sticking to the fact that China has not intruded into Indian territory (the exact opposite is true). And that revelation on Bhutan’s coming election definitely casts some light on the motives why Modi and company is trying to pick up a fight.
Why would anybody not want to diversify its portfolio in this case?
India has set a debt trap for Bhutan.. You want us to fall at your feet in exhaustion.. Debt bondage is a game played by India to Bhutan in the name of friendship.. However, you can never from Bhutan no matter how much you try. If you do you are digging your own grave..and you want us but you can not make us fall at your feet. Our leaders are too smart to outsmart.. Let modi try. We will beat him.. Don’t ever think of annexing Bhutan..bhutan is your worst nightmare.. Even british of the past with the mightiest army regretted their unprovoked offence against Kingdom Bhutan…It doesn’t take a single army to win the unprovoked war… Please know that Bhutan sits on top of you.. And we will never sell our freedom to you without a fight to the finish.. Every inch of our soil will be defended..
With India as Bhutan’s largest creditor at 64%, yes, it would be "a great debt reliever".
The world changed after British came to asia 300 years back before that it was nice like if you are walking in the road….the emperor will come in disguise he will ask for a glass of water to a farmer he will give him water,food,juice then emperor will unmask his disguise & then he will give 10 acres land & some jewels……i miss all these things man
Every country it will be like that….when congress was boss for 60 years everyone went & llcked their arse…..now there will be new party & new bosses so people will go & beg please please please give me something if they like your face they will give something otherwise they will say "no vacancy" board……even china is also like that when new bosses come like what we do in India you will also do…..only in some countries like Japan there will be loyalty,merit,honesty like that same way India/US relationship will also be like that after they have got what they want they will dump us in the garbage for now this is the way the world is
Oh my my, Belt and Road loans will of course be a great debt reliever to Bhutan and will not promote coloniallism.
Asia must learn the lesson and realise that Asian countries cannot rely on outside assistance in time of crisis. A united Asia is unbeatable!
Show how desperate Taiwanese tourism industry is, after celebrating with the western media like this one for getting rid of mainland tourists from their island.
If Bhutan have not get rid of the Nepali migrants, it would have been annexed by now.