A positive trend in relations between China
and India was facilitated after the then Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi’s
visit to China in December 1988, during which it was decided to set up a Joint
Working Group (JWG) for finding ways of resolving the boundary issue. Between
December 1988 and June 1993, progress was made in reducing tensions on the
border via Confidence-Building Measures (CBM), including mutually agreed-upon
force-level reductions at Sumdorong Chu in Arunachal Pradesh, regular meetings
of GOC-in-Cs of theatre commands of both sides that are responsible for all
sections of the disputed boundary, and advance notifications of military
exercises being held by these theatre commands. Seven rounds of JWG talks were
held during this period. During Sharad Pawar’s visit to Beijing in July 1992,
the first ever by an Indian Defence Minister, it was agreed to develop
academic, military, scientific and technological exchanges. A senior-level tri-services
delegation of China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) made a six-day goodwill
visit to India in December 1993, aimed at fostering CBMs between the armed
forces of the two countries. The visit was reciprocated by the Indian
Army’s Chief of the Army Staff (VOAS) Gen B C Joshi’s visit to China in July
1994. This was followed by the visit to China by the then Defence Minister, George
Fernandes, in April 2003. This was followed by a return visit by the then Minister
for National Defence (MND), Gen Cao Gangchuan, in March 2004. The Chief
of Air Staff (CAS) of the IAF, ACM A Y Tipnis, visited China in May 2001 and
this was reciprocated by the PLAAF’s Commander, Gen Qiao Qingchen, who visited
India in October 2006. In December 2004, Gen N C Vij, the then COAS,
visited China, the first by an Indian Army COAS in a decade, and both countries
agreed to deepen defence cooperation. In May 26, 2005, the PLA Army’s Chief
of the General Staff (CGS), Gen Liang Guanglie, visited India on a six-day tour. His
predecessor, Gen Fu Quanyu, had earlier visited India in May 1998. The then Indian
Defence Minister Pranab Mukherjee visited India in May 2006 and signed the
first ever MoU on Defence Exchanges between the Armed Forces of China and India.
In May 2007 Gen Joginder Jaswant Singh, Chairman COSC and COAS visited China. This
was the first time that the Indian armed forces’ Chairman COSC visited had
China and he was hosted by the then CGS of the PLA, Gen Liang Guanglie. From
November 4 to 7, 2008, the then Chief of Air Staff of the IAF, ACM Fali Homi
Major, paid an official visit to China, while the Commander of the PLA Navy was
also on a visit to India at roughly the same time. Chairman COSC and the
Indian Navy’s Chief of the Naval Staff (CNS), Admiral Sureesh Mehta, visited
China and participated in the International Fleet Review to mark the 60th
Anniversary Celebrations of the PLA Navy between April 19 and 25, 2009.
Earlier, the IN’s then CNS had visited China in March 1996, while the
PLAN’s Commander, Admiral Wu Shengli, visited India in November
2008.
While Indian Defence Ministers have
visited China thrice—in July 1992, April 2003 and May 2006, China’s Ministers
of National Defence have visited India thrice--in September 1994, March 2004
and September 2012. Gen Liang Guanglie, the present-day Defence Minister and
Vice-Chairman of China’s Central Military Commission (CMC), visited India from September
2 to 6, 2012. Accompanying him were 20 PLA Army officers hailing from the
Chengdu and Lanzhou Military Regions (MR), PLAN (from its South Sea Fleet) and
PLAAF senior officers, and the 2nd Artillery Corps.
The first Annual Defence Dialogue
(ADD) between China and India was held in Beijing in November 2007. The Indian
side was led by Bimal Julka, JS (G/Air), MoD, while the Chinese side was
led by Maj Gen Qian Li Hua, Chief of FAO, MND. The second ADD was held in Delhi on December 15, 2008 between the PLA’s then Deputy
Chief of General Staff, Lt Gen Ma Xiaotian, and India’s then Defence Secretary
Vijay Singh. The third ADD was held in in Beijing on
January 6, 2010 between the PLA’s then Deputy Chief of General Staff Lt Gen Ma
Xiaotian and India’s then Defence Secretary Pradeep Kumar. The fourth ADD was conducted in Delhi on December 9, 2011 between the PLA’s
then Deputy Chief of General Staff Lt Gen Ma Xiaotian and India’s Defence
Secretary Shashi Kant Sharma. The fifth ADD was held in
Beijing on January 14, 2013 between the PLA’s Deputy Chief of General Staff Lt
Gen Qi Jianghuo and India’s Defence Secretary Shashi Kant Sharma.
Since 2002, China and India have also
held six rounds of counter-terrorism dialogues. The first-ever dialogue on
counter-terrorism was held on April 23, 2002 between India’s joint secretary
(East Asia) in the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) and China’s
Director-General of the Asian Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
India’s then External Affairs Minister Jaswant Singh had formalised the
dialogue during his meeting with his Chinese counterpart Tang Jiaxuan on March
30, 2002. The 5th round of counter-terrorism dialogues was held in March 2012,
with Ashoke Mukherjee, Additional Secretary in MEA, leading the Indian side.
The 6th round was held on April 11 and 12, 2013 in Beijing, with the MEA’s
Additional Secretary, Navtej Sarna, leading the Indian side.
India and China held their first-ever
dialogue on Afghanistan on April 18, 2013 in Beijing The meeting took place in
the backdrop of talks between the National Security Advisers of India, China
and Russia, which were held in Moscow recently to discuss the situation in
Afghanistan. China also held a trilateral meeting with Russia and Pakistan
later. From the Indian side the talks on Afghanistan were led by Y K Sinha,
Additional Secretary, Pakistan Afghanistan Iran, (PAI) of India’s MEA. India’s
National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon is expected to visit Beijing in the coming weeks to establish
contacts with his new counterpart for Special Representatives talks on the
boundary dispute. Former Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi
has been appointed as State Councillor succeeding Dai Bingguo,
but he was yet to be officially designated as China's Special Representative
for boundary negotiations with India.
In addition to all the above, there have
been several reciprocal visits by senior-level military officials, as well as
joint military exercises. On November 14, 2003, the IN and PLAN conducted a
joint search-and-rescue exercise off the coast of Shanghai in the East China
Sea, a first for both countries. On November 18, 2003 an Indian delegation
headed by Lt Gen Mohinder Singh, GOC 4 Corps, visited PLA bases and academic
institutions in Beijing, and also visited Lhasa, capital of the Tibet
Autonomous Region (TAR), and Chengdu, capital of Sichuan Province. At the
invitation of Lt Gen Puri, Chief of India’s HQ Integrated Defence Staff, a PLA
delegation headed by Gen Wu Quanxu, Deputy CGS of the PLA Army, visited India
from December 10 to 15, 2003. On August 28, 2004 PLA and IA troops held a joint
mountaineering training programme in the border area of TAR, the first of its
kind between the two armed forces. Between August 18 and 25, 2005
Indian observers were invited to witness ‘Peace Mission-2005’, a one week-long
joint anti-terrorism military exercise that involved 10,000 troops from China
and Russia and which had started in Vladivostok in Russia’s Far East and later
had moved to eastern China’s Shandong Peninsula. In return, PLA observers were
invited during the Indian Army’s ‘Exercise Desert Strike’ in the western sector
in 2005. Between December 21 and 27, 2007, 100 personnel each from the PLA Army
and IA conducted the first-ever joint anti-terrorism military training
exercise—code-named ‘Hand-in-Hand’—in Kunming. Maj Gen Xiong Zuoming led the
PLA Army contingent. Wu Xiaoyi, Deputy Director of the Asian Affairs Bureau
under the Foreign Affairs Office of China’s MND and Lt Gen Ma Xiaotian, Deputy
CGS of the PLA were the senior-most observers from the Chinese side, while Lt
Gen Susheel Gupta, Deputy COAS of the IA, was the senior-most Indian observer.
Between December 6 and 12, 2008 a 147-member PLA Army team from the 1st Company
of Infantry Battalion of Chengdu MR, and IA troops from 8 Maratha Light
Infantry Battalion underwent joint tactical manoeuvres and drills;
inter-operability training; and joint command post procedures, finally
culminating in a joint counter-terrorist operational exercise with a simulated
enemy at Belgaum, Karnataka). Lt Gen Ma Xiaotian and Lt Gen Nobel Thamburaj,
the then GOC-in-C Southern Command, were the senior-most observers. In August
2009, Lt-Gen V K Singh, then the IA’s GOC-in-C Eastern Command, paid a
week-long visit to TAR. He was accompanied by the then GOC IV Corps (based in
Tezpur, Assam). Maj Gen Gurmeet Singh of the IA’s HQ Northern Command in June
2011 visited Beijing, Shanghai and Urumqi. Lt Gen Lang Youliang from the Tibet
Military District of the Chengdu MR led an eight-member PLA delegation to India
between November 3 and 9, 2011 and visited various IA establishments in New
Delhi, Kolkata and Mumbai, while a multi-command IA delegation headed by a
Maj-Gen made a daylong visit to Lhasa on July 11, 2012.
India and China on March 1, 2012 decided
to set up a maritime dialogue between the IN and PLAN. The decision came at the
end of a meeting between the then visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi
and his Indian counterpart S M Krishna.
Both countries held the second round of strategic economic talks in New Delhi on November 26, 2012. Zhang Ping, Chairman of China’s National Development and Reform Commission, and Indian Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia, co-chaired the dialogue. The two sides exchanged views to seek broader economic cooperation and promote coordination on macro-economic policy. They also resolved to strengthen cooperation in areas such as investment, infrastructure, high-technology, energy-saving and energy resources. The first meeting of the China-India Strategic Economic Dialogue was held in Beijing on September 26, 2011 and co-chaired by Zhang and Ahluwalia.
On August 26, 2012 Chinese Commerce Minister Chen Deming arrived in New Delhi on a two-day visit to hold the 9th round of talks with his Indian counterpart Anand Sharma under the framework of Joint Economic Group (JEG).
Both countries held the second round of strategic economic talks in New Delhi on November 26, 2012. Zhang Ping, Chairman of China’s National Development and Reform Commission, and Indian Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia, co-chaired the dialogue. The two sides exchanged views to seek broader economic cooperation and promote coordination on macro-economic policy. They also resolved to strengthen cooperation in areas such as investment, infrastructure, high-technology, energy-saving and energy resources. The first meeting of the China-India Strategic Economic Dialogue was held in Beijing on September 26, 2011 and co-chaired by Zhang and Ahluwalia.
On August 26, 2012 Chinese Commerce Minister Chen Deming arrived in New Delhi on a two-day visit to hold the 9th round of talks with his Indian counterpart Anand Sharma under the framework of Joint Economic Group (JEG).
CBMs Inked Thus Far
Maintenance of
Peace along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in the India-China Border on
September 7, 1993.
(http://www.stimson.org/research-pages/agreement-on-the-maintenance-of-peace-along-the-line-of-actual-control-in-the-india-china-border/)
In the first place, the Agreement
affirmed the view that the China-India boundary question shall be resolved
through peaceful and friendly consultations and that neither side shall use or
threaten to use force against the other by any means. Yet another important
highlight was that it stipulated that “pending an ultimate solution of the
boundary question between the two countries, the two sides shall strictly
observe the LAC between the two sides and that no activities of either side
shall overstep the line of actual control. In case of personnel of one side
crossing the LAC, upon being confirmed by the other side, they shall
immediately pull back to their own side of the LAC. It further provided that
whenever necessary, the two sides shall jointly check and determine the
segments of the LAC when they have different views as to its alignment.
Secondly, the agreement stipulated that
each side will keep its military forces in the area along the LAC to a minimum
level compatible with friendly and good neighbourly relations between the two
countries. It further reiterated that the two sides had agreed to reduce their
military forces along the LAC in conformity with the requirement of the
principle of mutual and equal security, with force-level ceilings to be
mutually agreed, and that the reduction of military forces shall be carried out
in stages in mutually agreed geographical locations sector-wise within the
areas along the LAC.
Thirdly, as regards military exercises,
the Agreement mentioned that each side shall give the other prior notification
of the military exercises of specified levels near the LAC permitted under the
Agreement.
Fourthly, in case of contingency or
other problems arising in the areas of LAC, the two sides shall deal with them
through meetings and friendly consultations between border personnel of the two
countries.
Fifthly, the two sides also agreed to
take adequate measures to ensure that air intrusions across the LAC do not take
place and that the two sides shall undertake mutual consultations in case such
intrusions occur.
Confidence-Building
Measures in the Military Field Along the Line of Actual Control in the
China-India Border Areas on November 29, 1996
(http://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/wjb/zzjg/yzs/gjlb/2711/2712/t15914.htm)
This Agreement was inked on November 29,
1996 during the visit of the then Chinese President Jiang Zemin to India. This
Agreement while reiterating and reaffirming the intent and spirit of the 1993,
state agreement, inter-alias, as CBMs, envisaged the
following:
1) The major
categories of armament to be reduced or limited include battle tanks, infantry
combat vehicles, guns (including howitzers) with 75mm or bigger calibre,
mortars with 120mm or bigger calibre, surface-to-surface missiles,
surface-to-air missiles and any other weapon system.
2) The two sides
shall exchange data on the military forces and armaments to be reduced or
limited and decide on ceilings on military forces and armaments to be kept by
each side within agreed geographic zones along the LAC.
3) In order to
maintain peace and tranquillity along the LAC and to prevent any tension in the
border areas due to misreading by either side of the other side’s intentions,
Article IV of the Agreement provides the following:
1. Both sides shall avoid holding
large-scale military exercises involving more than one Division (approximately
15,000 troops) in close proximity of the LAC. However, if such exercises are to
be conducted, the strategic direction of the main force involved shall not be
towards the other side.
2. If either side conducts a major
military exercise involving more than one Brigade Group (approximately 5,000
troops) in close proximity of the LAC, it shall give the other side prior
notification with regard to type, level, planned duration and area of exercise
as well as the number and type of units or formations participating in the
exercise.
3. The date of completion of the
exercise and de-induction of troops from the area of exercise shall be
intimated to the other side within five days of completion or de -induction.
4. Each side shall be entitled to obtain
timely clarification from the side undertaking the exercise in respect of date
specified in Paragraph 2 of the present Article.
With a view to
preventing air intrusions across the LAC and facilitating overflights and
landings by military aircraft, Article V provides that:
(1) Both sides shall take adequate
measures to ensure that air intrusions across the LAC do not take place.
However, if an intrusion does take place, it should cease as soon as it has
been detected and the incident shall be promptly investigated by the side
operating the aircraft. The results of the investigation shall be immediately
communicated, through diplomatic channels or at border personnel meetings, to
the other side.
(2) Subject to paragraphs 3 and 5 of
this Article, combat aircraft (to include fighter, bomber, reconnaissance,
military trainer, armed helicopter and other armed aircraft) shall not fly
within 10km of the LAC.
(3) If either side is required to
undertake flights of combat aircraft within 10km from the LAC, it shall give
the following information in advance to the other side, through diplomatic
channels:
a) Type and number of combat aircraft;
b) Height of the proposed flight (in
metres);
c) Proposed duration of flights
(normally not to exceed ten days);
d) Proposed timing of flights; and
e) Area of operations, defined in
latitude and longitude.
(4) Unarmed transport aircraft, survey
aircraft and helicopters shall be permitted to fly up to the LAC.
(5) No military aircraft of either side
shall fly across the LAC, except by prior permission. Military aircraft of
either side may fly across the LAC or overfly the other side’s airspace or land
on the other side only after obtaining the latter’s prior permission after providing
the latter with detailed information on the flight in accordance with the
international practices in this regard. Notwithstanding the above stipulation,
each side has the sovereign right to specify additional conditions, including
at short notice, for flights or landings of military aircraft of the other side
on its side of the LAC or through its airspace.
(6) In order to ensure flight safety in
emergency situations, the authorities designated by the two sides may contact
each other by the quickest means of communications available.
Similarly, with a view to preventing
dangerous military activities along the LAC, Article VI stipulates that:
(1) Neither side shall open fire, cause
bio-degradation, use hazardous chemicals, conduct blast operations or hunt with
guns or explosive within 2km from the LAC. This prohibition shall not apply to
routine firing activities in small arms firing ranges.
(2) If there is a need to conduct blast
operations within 2km of the LAC as part of developmental activities, the other
side shall be informed through diplomatic channels or by convening a border
personnel meeting, preferably five days in advance.
(3) While conducting exercises with live
ammunition in areas close to the LAC, precaution shall be taken to ensure that
a bullet or a missile does not accidentally fall on the other side across the LAC
line and cause harm to the personnel or property of the other side.
(4) If the border personnel of the two
sides come in a face-to-face situation due to differences on the alignment of
the LAC of for any other reason, they shall exercise self-restraint and take
all necessary steps to avoid an escalation of the situation. Both sides shall
also enter into immediate consultations through diplomatic and/or other
available channels to review the situation and prevent any escalation of
tension.
Article VII of the Agreement envisages
the following:
a. To maintain and expand the regime of
scheduled and flag meetings between their border representatives at designated
places along the LAC;
b. To maintain and expand
telecommunications links between the border meeting points at designated places
along the LAC; and
c. To establish step-by-step medium and
high-level contacts between the border authorities of the two sides.
Article VIII of the Agreement provides
the following guidelines:
1. Should the personnel of one side cross
the LAC and enter the other side because of unavoidable circumstances like
natural disasters, the other side shall extend all possible assistance to them
and inform their side, as soon as possible regarding the forced or inadvertent
entry across the LAC. The modalities of return of the concerned personnel to
their own side shall be settled through mutual consultations.
2. The two sides shall provide each
other, at the earliest possible, with information pertaining to natural
disasters and epidemic diseases in contiguous border areas which might affect
the other side. The exchange of information shall take place either through
diplomatic channels or at border personnel meetings.
Article X mentions following provisions:
1. Recognising that the full
implementation of some of the provisions of the present Agreement will depend
on the two sides arriving at a common understanding of the alignment of the LAC
in the China-India border areas, the two sides agree to speed up the process
clarification and confirmation of the LAC. As an initial step in this process,
they are clarifying the alignment of the LAC in those segments where they have
different perceptions. They also agree to exchange maps indicating their
respective perceptions of the entire alignment of the LAC as soon as possible.
2. Pending the completion of the process
of clarification and confirmation of the LAC, the two sides shall work out
modalities for implementing CBMs envisaged under his Agreement on an interim
basis, without prejudice to their respective positions on the alignment of the
LAC as well as on the boundary question.
Thus, it can be seen from various
provisions of different agreements and accords signed between China and India that
every conceivable aspect of military contingency has been thoughtfully
anticipated and ways and means to deftly handle them without precipitating the
matter have been envisaged.
Political
Parameters and Guiding Principles for the Settlement of the India-China
Boundary Question on June 23, 2003
16 rounds of talks have been conducted
thus far between the political representatives of both countries.
China and India agreed to
establish a strategic and cooperative partnership for peace and prosperity,
according to a joint statement signed by visiting Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao
and Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh in New Delhi Monday on April 11, 2005.
During the Chinese Premier’s April 8 to 12 visit the two sides agreed that
China-India relations have now acquired a ‘global and strategic character’.
Political
Parameters and Guiding Principles for the Settlement of the India-China
Boundary Question on April 11, 2005
Article III of this Protocol envisages the following provisions:
a. In the event of an alleged air
intrusion of its controlled airspace by the military aircraft of the other
side, either side may seek a Flag Meeting within 48 hours of the alleged air
intrusion in order to seek a clarification. The investigation shall be
completed by the other side and its results communicated through a Flag Meeting
within a period of four weeks.
b. If a military aircraft of either side
is required to fly across the LAC or to overfly the airspace of the other side,
prior permission shall be sought from the other side according to procedures
and formats to be mutually agreed upon.
c. If a military or civilian aircraft of
either side is required to fly across the LAC or to land on the other side of the
LAC in an emergency situation, the two sides will ensure flight safety in such
a situation by adhering to procedures to be mutually agreed upon.
Article V provides the following:
a. Both sides shall hold two additional
border meetings each year at Spanggur
Gap in the Western Sector, Nathu
La Pass in the Sikkim Sector and Bum La in the Eastern Sector, respectively, in celebration
of the National Day or Army Day of either side. Specific arrangements shall be
decided through consultation between the border forces of the two sides.
b. Both sides are in principle to expand
the mechanism of border meeting points to include Kibithu-Damai in the Eastern Sector and Lipulekh Pass/Qiang La in the Middle Sector. The precise
locations of these border meetings points will be decided through mutual
consultations.
c. Both sides shall conduct exchanges
between the relevant Military Regions of China and Army Commands of India.
Specific arrangements shall be decided upon through mutual consultations
between the relevant agencies under the Ministries of Defence of the two sides.
d. Both sides shall strengthen exchanges
between institutions of training of the two armed forces, and conduct exchanges
between institutions of sports and culture of the two armed forces. Specific
arrangements shall be decided upon through mutual consultations between the
relevant agencies under the Ministries of Defence of the two sides.
Memorandum
of Understanding (MoU) for Exchanges and Cooperation in the Field of Defence
Signed on May 29, 2006 in Beijing by China’s then Minister for National Defence Gen Cao Gangchuan and India’s Defence Minister Pranab Mukherjee, this MoU envisages the establishment of a mechanism to ensure frequent and regular exchanges between leaders and officials of the Defence Ministries and the armed forces of the two countries, in addition to developing an annual calendar for holding regular joint military exercises and training programmes (conducted by India’s National Defence College and China’s National Defence University under an exchange programme). In the past few years, the two countries had conducted joint naval manoeuvres, but the interaction between the ground forces had been limited to border meetings and mountaineering expeditions, and there had been no interaction between the air forces of the countries prior to this. The MoU signed between the two countries, thus, aimed at addressing these imperatives. Pranab Mukherjee also visited the Lanzhou MR, which controls the largest physical area of China’s seven military regions. Mukherjee’s visit to the headquarters of the Lanzhou MR was a significant step in the process of building bilateral trust and confidence on the part of China. These gains were further consolidated during the visit of Chinese President Hu Jintao to India in November 2006. In the Joint Declaration signed between the two countries on November 21, it was mentioned that ‘the exchange of visits in the field of defence has resulted in the building of mutual trust and enhancement of mutual understanding between the defence establishments of the two countries. Both sides shall fully implement the provisions of the MoU for exchanges and cooperation in the field of defence signed on May 29, 2006, which provides a sound foundation and institutional framework for further development of defence cooperation. Certain concrete steps were taken as a follow-up of the CBMs. For example, India’s armed forces and the PLA held a warm meeting at a new border point—Kibithu in the Anjwa district of Arunachal Pradesh—on November 18, 2006 on the eve of President Hu Jintao’s visit to India. The two sides discussed modalities for the conduct of troops along the LAC. Border meetings between personnel of the armed forces of the two countries have traditionally been held at Chushul in Ladakh, Nathu La in Sikkim, and Bum La in the Kamang district of Arunachal Pradesh.
Declaration
on Principles for Relations and Comprehensive Cooperation Between the People’s
Republic of China and the Republic of India on June 25, 2006
During Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan
Singh’s visit to China from January 13 to 15 2008, the two sides, for the first
time, formulated their own drafts on a possible framework agreement involving territorial
concessions as a way towards eventual resolution of the boundary dispute. While
this may be interpreted as a forward movement, the positions themselves appear
to indicate little change. Delhi insisted that the final settlement of the
boundary issue could not involve transfer of settled populations, while Beijing
proposed the division of populated areas into larger and smaller segments based
on population size and then considering some displacement.
Working Mechanism on Consultation and Coordination on
India-China Border Affairs on January 18, 2012
A brainchild of the then Chinese Premier
Wen Jiabao, its first meeting was held in Beijing on March 5 and 6, 2012. The
Indian delegation was led by Shri Gautam Bambawale, Joint Secretary (East Asia),
MEA, while the Chinese delegation was led by Deng Zhonghua, Director General,
Department of Boundary and Oceanic Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The
Second meeting was held at New Delhi on November 29 and 30, 2012. The Indian
delegation was led by Gautam Bambawale, Joint Secretary (East Asia) MEA and the
Chinese delegation was led by Ms Wang Xiaodu, Special Representative,
Department of Boundary and Oceanic Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
On March 22, 2013 China had proposed a border defence cooperation agreement to avoid any misunderstanding or flare-up along the LAC, but India is not rushing into it as she wants to study the proposal thoroughly. At the meeting, the visiting PLA Army delegation led by its Deputy CGS Lt Gen Qi Jianguo had proposed an agreement under which troops of the two countries will not tail each other if noticed during patrolling along the LAC. The proposal also has a clause which suggests that troops of either side will not fire at each other under any condition. However, the Indian side said that India wants to study the proposal thoroughly and do due diligence before taking any decision. This was the second meeting between Lt Gen Qi, who is in-charge for Foreign Cooperation and Intelligence in the PLA Army, and India Defence Secretary Shashi Kant Sharma in the last three months after they met at the ADD in January 2013. The Chinese side had discussed these proposals informally during the ADD also, but India had then asked it to submit these points in a formal manner at a later stage.
On March 22, 2013 China had proposed a border defence cooperation agreement to avoid any misunderstanding or flare-up along the LAC, but India is not rushing into it as she wants to study the proposal thoroughly. At the meeting, the visiting PLA Army delegation led by its Deputy CGS Lt Gen Qi Jianguo had proposed an agreement under which troops of the two countries will not tail each other if noticed during patrolling along the LAC. The proposal also has a clause which suggests that troops of either side will not fire at each other under any condition. However, the Indian side said that India wants to study the proposal thoroughly and do due diligence before taking any decision. This was the second meeting between Lt Gen Qi, who is in-charge for Foreign Cooperation and Intelligence in the PLA Army, and India Defence Secretary Shashi Kant Sharma in the last three months after they met at the ADD in January 2013. The Chinese side had discussed these proposals informally during the ADD also, but India had then asked it to submit these points in a formal manner at a later stage.