The
recent brutal border clashes between China and India caused about 20 deaths on
the Indian side and an unknown number of casualties on Chinese camp. People
might not know, but no bullet was fired by the opposing armies. There is a
compromise between the two countries not to shoot at the other side. The
soldiers fought hand-to-hand, with clubs embedded with nails or barbed wire,
and other blunt weapons and rocks. Some of the Indian men were pushed into the
icy waters of the Galwan river or over the mountain
ridges.
That
was a vicious confrontation, that brings us back to ancient practices. But it
is a good illustration of the strategic rivalry that is developing between these
two giants, both armed with sophisticated weaponry and nuclear capabilities. At
the local level, in their border disputes – there are at least three fronts
where those disputes are continually active – they go for sticks and nails. At
the diplomatic level, they play the complex game of subtle threats combined
with frequent high-level meetings and, on the Indian side, a special relationship
with the United States, a matter that is seen as a major issue by the Chinese.
It
is fascinating geopolitics but not for those who fight in the cold of the Himalayas.
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