As Chinese and Indian security forces square off on a remote plateau in the Himalaya mountains, it is has become clear over two months into the showdown that it’s not really about China building a road in an area disputed between China and Bhutan.
As always when China is involved in a confrontation near or across its frontiers — be it the border war with India in 1962, skirmishes with the Soviets along the Amur river in 1969, or military raids across Vietnam’s northern border in 1979 — there is a hidden political agenda.
In 1962, China wanted to assert its influence in the Third World where until then India had been a leading voice. In 1969, China had to show it would not hesitate to challenge their main enemy at that time, “the Soviet revisionists”, by military means. In 1979, China sought to “punish” Vietnam for intervening in Cambodia and ousting the pro-Beijing Khmer Rouge regime.
This time, China is attempting to drive a wedge between Bhutan and its traditional ally India, China’s main and traditional geopolitical rival. Most recently, China is frustrated with India’s reluctance to join its One Belt One Road infrastructure development initiative. Unresolved border issues are another bilateral problem, as is the long-time presence of the Dalai Lama and his Tibetan government in exile in India.
In June, Chinese construction workers protected by People’s Liberation Army soldiers moved into the Doklam plateau, an area which the Bhutanese claim as their territory and which the Chinese call Donglang and likewise claim as theirs. India does not claim Doklam, but supports Bhutan on the unresolved border issue.
Less than 50 kilometers from the stand-off area is the Bhutanese town of Haa, the center for the Indian Military Training Team, or IMTRAT, which is responsible for training the Royal Bhutan Army (RBA). Doklam is also located on the western flank of the Chumbi valley, the narrow salient between western Bhutan and the mountainous Indian state of Sikkim.
Any Chinese attempt to widen that corridor, giving its security forces more room to maneuver in a sensitive border area, would be perceived as a threat to India’s security.

India obviously interpreted China’s move as a provocation and moved troops into the disputed area to disrupt the construction of the road. China has not said why it is building the road in an area it claims to have held for “centuries.” The sensitive construction comes at a time China is revving up its US$1 trillion One Belt One Road global infrastructure building spree.
India’s reaction to the roadworks may have been exactly what the Chinese wanted. It appears that India was left with no choice but to walk right into a diplomatic trap. The move has made India appear as the belligerent party and at the same time caused concern in Bhutan where India’s military presence is a politically sensitive issue.
There is currently a good all-weather road down the Chumbi valley. Nathula, the mountain pass where China meets the Indian state of Sikkim, is already a major post for cross-border trade with India and many Chinese goods are re-exported to Bhutan. However, direct imports from India account for 75% of Bhutan’s total trade, while 85% of its exports are sent to India.
There is some trade across the Bhutan border with China as well, with Bhutanese carrying medicinal herbs on yak or horseback to China and returning with electronics and other manufactures. But the volume of that trade is small and the road China intends to build does not appear to be for expanding trade — especially since Bhutan and China, despite more than twenty rounds of talks, have not yet demarcated their shared border.
In recent years China had begun courting Bhutan, the only neighboring country with which Beijing does not yet have diplomatic relations. That courtship, some analysts suggest, could reset the prevailing India-dominated balance of power in the Himalayas.

Throughout modern history, Bhutan has depended heavily on India. The tiny Himalayan kingdom is tied to Delhi through treaties signed with the British colonial power in 1910 and independent India in 1949 and 2007.
The first two treaties gave Bhutan a high degree of internal autonomy but its foreign relations were still guided by India, in effect making it an Indian protectorate. The 2007 treaty granted Bhutan more independence over its foreign affairs.
India not only trains the Royal Bhutan Army, but also pays the salaries of its troops. And the Border Road Organization, an outfit affiliated with the Indian Army, has built roads all over Bhutan. For India’s security planners, Bhutan is of utmost strategic importance as it lies south of the crest of the Himalayas, or the northern line of defense against China.
China’s claim to territories south of that defense line was the pretext for a massive Chinese attack in 1962, where Chinese troops invaded large areas in the eastern Himalayas and then withdrew after inflicting a crushing defeat on Indian army units in the area.
Despite its long-time dependence on India, Bhutan has in recent decades gained more independence. It became a member of the United Nations in 1971 and its 2007 treaty with India — a revised version of that signed in 1949 — states only that the two countries “shall cooperate closely with each other on issues relating to their national interests. Neither government shall allow the use of its territory for activities harmful to the national security and interests of the other.”

In a bid to counter India’s influence in Bhutan, China has deployed its usual “soft diplomacy.” Chinese circus artists, acrobats and footballers have recently traveled to Bhutan, and a limited number of Bhutanese students have received scholarships to study in China.
Tourism has expanded as well. Nineteen Chinese tourists visited Bhutan a decade ago; now it is more than 9,000 a year, or 19% of its annual total arrivals. Chinese travelers have become a major source of income for the small kingdom of less than a million people.
Last August, Bhutan and China representatives met for yet another round of border talks. According to a statement issued by the Chinese foreign ministry after the talks: “Although Bhutan and China have not established diplomatic relations yet, it will not hold back the mutually beneficial cooperation between the two countries.
The Bhutanese side is willing to continue deepening exchanges in such fields as tourism, religion, culture and agriculture and further lift the cooperation level with China.”
The current conflict has thus placed Bhutan on the horns of a complicated dilemma. On June 29, the Bhutanese foreign ministry stated publicly that “[China’s] construction of the road inside Bhutanese territory is a direct violation of the agreements and affects the process of demarcating the boundary between the two countries.”

A month later, Bhutan’s ambassador to India, Vetsop Namgyel, attended a function at China’s New Delhi embassy to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the founding of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army. His top-level attendance was significant considering China and Bhutan do not yet share diplomatic relations.
On August 2, the Chinese foreign ministry issued a new statement saying that “the China-Bhutan boundary issue is one between China and Bhutan. It has nothing to do with India” and “India has no right to make territorial demands on Bhutan’s behalf.” India, the Chinese foreign ministry went on to say, has not only “violated China’s sovereignty” but also “challenged Bhutan’s sovereignty and independence.”
China has suggested in principle that it would give up its other territorial claims in northern Bhutan if Thimphu agrees to give up its claim to the Doklam plateau — a proposal that India would see as detrimental to its national interests and a violation of the 2007 treaty it holds with Bhutan.
At the same time, Bhutan is eager to lessen its dependence on India and show the world that it is a truly independent nation. The Doklam dispute has therefore led to mixed reactions in Bhutan. The Bhutanese don’t want the Chinese so close to home, but India’s overt intervention could be viewed as reverting to the status of an Indian protectorate.
That view could influence local electoral politics. P. Stobdan, a well-known Indian security analyst, argued in a July 11 article for the Indian website The Wire that, “the next election in Bhutan in October 2018 will be fought on pro- versus anti-Indian slogans.”
That would no doubt be music to China’s ears — and if so Beijing would have achieved exactly what it envisaged when it started constructing an obscure road to nowhere in Doklam.

True that.
Richard Chen I thins case, The Chinese was right. Singh was grasping for straw.
Indai should stand up to China and be ready for a war. Same time India should establish more contacts with all nations who were threatened by china like Vietnam, Cambodia, Thiland, Philipines and Japan. Giving Brahmo Missiles to vietnam was a good move.mean while it may be a good idea to cut down on chinese imports to india which is almost ninety billion a year.
Mahendra Pratap Singh your knowledge is the one that’s limited… Just because someone has a Chinese name does not mean they are from the PRC.
Jeby Cherian , Chinese dream only of happiness and prosperity, freedom from poverty and hunger. Politics ??? Haven’t you heard about politics being the last refuge of the scoundrels.
I thought it is clear that Doklam is effectively under Chinese control, why the need to explain the purpose of building the road. And Neville Maxwells has put the record right about the 1962 Sino-India war, why still say that the Chinese attack based on the pretext of their claim south of the invalid McMahon line when the Indian unilaterally moved north of the infamous McMahon line.
The initial Bhutanese demarche to China on the road building was probably after arm twisting by India. Subsequent to this, there is only silence from Bhutan when they realized India’s treachery to flood Bhutan with the Indian army. Till now there is zero invitation by Bhutan to India to intervene on it’s behalf.
That India is now being view as the guilty party is due to their own folly. Let’s see how Modi face the other BRICS’s leaders in the coming BRICS meeting.
I had to wade through such a long article for what? That China wants a direct relationship with Bhutan? Anyone following the news knows that! But I do find that your article seems is pro-China in that it belittles Bhutan in using such words as protectorate that Bhutan rightly objects to and in various other ways that sheds an air of humiliation on Bhutan. That may be the real purpose of this article since nothing in it is new and beyond the ordinary.
India knows that the OBOR will certainly cause a new revolution in India against the about 30million in northern India (also call themselves as the descendants of the Aryan race). Currently, there is a Maoist movement in India, the only country in the World that actually has more than 30 million of slaves.
Despite India diverse and different classes of people, I note that India has tried to promote the "Equal Opportunity" policy as part of her balancing acts to resolve her socio-economic issues. The real China-India border conflict truly has nothing to do with India’s population or their socio-economic problems. It is about Buthan and Nepal, the desire strategic road to South Asia sea. Without India, China can easily annex or just swall them like it happened to Tibet: A new comi revolution.
Your level of knowledge shows any news about outside world in China is fully controlled by ruling party or state no knowledge of geography or relevant matters happening elsewhere
Kang Hta Wa And I hope if your wish come true then you will join them in "population reduction" so that we’ll have fewer people like you. You should be ashamed to think war as an option to solve over population issue. There are better ways, and killing is not one of em.
Harish Arora LOL, I should have say India is world power, and as strong as its master USA,…. Except all stats if development at bottom of earth, but since it live in a upside down world, it suite them fine….
Jeby Cherian lol…. Did I say delusional…
Jo Snow Sour grapes? India has two things what China can only dream of – freedom and democracy! Enough said!
It is typical of Indian full of them self. The Chinese and the rest Eurasian are happy with Indian not in OBOR, and Chinese don,t care about india as long as it off our land. Indian merchanst can find greener pastures, and Chinese will still make money off them. I say let Indian soak in their delusion and rot it’s way to balkanization…
Wont blame your knowledge, this happens when state controls information.
In Mao dynasty
The hair grows old with ageing years,
The teeth grows old,the eyes & ears,
But while the ageing season speeds
One thing is young for ever there
Greed for Bhutanese Land
I couldn’t agree more! There are way too many people (i.e., Chinese and Indian). WW III involving China, India, USA with some nuclear bombs would address this over population problem!!! I hope it will happen sooner rather than later!!!
Currently there are three major forces globally that are acting by use of violence and aggression. 1. Communists (a political ideology) 2. Christianity, and 3. Islam. Second and third are classed as religious ideologies but their global posturing for conversions has reduced them to soft aggressive political tools under the garb of peaceful religion, only to fool the international civility. These aggressive ideologies must be identified and isolated in the greater interests of global peace. Religious conversions by policy must be decried and denounced globally as inhuman, unethical, uncivilised, unsocial, barbaric and a threat to modern civilisation. Hence it must be decried on every global civil platform. Hope the international responsible community realises and acts upon it.
Not sure which world we’re in that China think India is a Geopolitical rival. Certainly not something I’ve ever heard any Chinese seriously say.
You say this is about China not being happy bout India not joining OBOR, but everything I’ve read is India being agitated that OBOR is somehow a plot to isolate / surrond them. China has huge trade surplus against India these days (and actually getting bigger fast. ) so it would seem odd that they’d be the side that’s more concerned about all this, if things just continue as it is it’s pretty clear who’s winning here.
If anything, the entire underlying problem maybe that India think this is about India vs China but on the Chinese side India hardly register as an issue. So India is reading too much into things while Chinese aren’t really giving thoughts to them when it comes to that particular area.
That Bhutan basically has no diplomatic relationship with any non-India country ( that matters to them internationally. ) is not something the Chinese are thrilled about, but it’s also not something anyone but the niche specialist in that field really even think about .
This situation could get ugly if only because the two sides seem to read each other completely wrong at the same time. and this article seem to put that problem on full display giving what would appear to almost anyone that looks at Chinese strategy what seems like completely bewildering analysis on Chinese motives
A very enlightening post but it relates more to a growing global issue of over population than mere localised Asian problem. World is innundated with weeds of human beings or Homo Sapiens. This is d root cause for majority of problems globally that has turned human beings as monsters. It is time that global forces acted in reducing this monster of over population, or else WW III is the last choice by nature.