A former top Chinese negotiator’s statements on a trade-off between Tawang and Aksai Chin could mean a variety of things.

It is not easy to interpret remarks by a former senior Chinese
official on a possible trade-off between Tawang in Arunchal Pradesh,
which is claimed by China, and Aksai Chin in Jammu and Kashmir, claimed
by India.
Dai Bingguo, who was Beijing’s special representative or top
negotiator on the border dispute with his Indian counterparts between
2003 and 2013,
declared in an interview with the
China-Indian Dialogue
magazine recently that “The disputed territory in the eastern sector of
the China-India boundary, including Tawang, is inalienable from China’s
Tibet in terms of cultural background and administrative jurisdiction.”
He went on to add that India’s refusal to meet China’s “reasonable
requests” for a border compromise was the reason why the boundary
problem had proved to be so intractable. “If the Indian side takes care
of China’s concerns in the eastern sector of their border,” Dai said,
“the Chinese side will respond accordingly and address India’s concerns
elsewhere.”
Since the mid-1980s, Chinese negotiators have been demanding that
India give them the Tawang tract as part of a border settlement and
India has been rejecting the demand. Indian special representatives, who
were the serving national security advisors (Brajesh Mishra, J.N.
Dixit, M.K. Narayanan and Shiv Shankar Menon) had categorically told
their Chinese counterparts that to even raise the issue of India ceding
Tawang was to indicate that Beijing did not want to really settle the
dispute. In other words, the Chinese knew that India will not concede
Tawang and yet they kept on raising the idea of a swap involving India
conceding Tawang, a major town of the state and a premier centre of
Tibetan Buddhism. No Indian government could pass such a deal.

Dai Bingguo. Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Knowing this fully well, Dai insisted that the ball was in the Indian
court when he declared that “China and India are now standing in front
of the gate towards a final settlement… The gate is a framework solution
based on meaningful and mutually accepted adjustments. Now, the Indian
side holds the key to the gate.” However, we must enter a caveat here:
It must be emphasised that Dai is now retired and it is not clear how
much, if any, authority his remarks carry.
Tawang’s history
The issue of Tawang is a complex one. It is true, as Dai says, that
it was culturally Tibetan in that it was the town with one of the great
Tibetan monasteries, the place where the fifth Dalai Lama was born.
Dai’s claim that even the “British colonialists” respected China’s
jurisdiction over Tawang is ingenuous. The British position, and
following it the Indian one, has been that the Tibetans exercised only
ecclesiastical authority over the area, not temporal. That has been the
Chinese position with regard to the authority of the Dalai Lama in any
case.
In 1914, at a time when Tibet was independent, its representative
agreed, at a meeting in Shimla, to place it south of the McMahon Line,
which was agreed as the border between Tibet and India. A Chinese
plenipotentiary who was present in the meetings initialled the
agreement, though he did not finally sign it. The Chinese protests
thereafter were exclusively about the manner in which McMahon had
defined the Tibet-China border, not the India-Tibet boundary.
Communist China also did not raise the issue till 1959. Indeed, in
1962, China occupied Tawang and all of Arunachal Pradesh, but
subsequently withdrew behind the border formed by the McMahon Line. This
was in contrast to its behaviour in Ladakh, where it did not leave the
territory it occupied.
Since the mid-1980s, Indian negotiators have confronted the Chinese
claim that the Sino-Indian dispute in the eastern sector was more
serious and that India must make concessions, possibly the Tawang tract,
in order to resolve the dispute.
Dai’s interview is interesting. Last year, he published his memoirs
Strategic Dialogues and
there was no mention of Tawang in it. All he noted was that the
“Sino-Indian boundary has never been formally demarcated, but is a
traditional customary line formed by the people of the two nations”.
Refusing to acknowledge the McMahon Line that was created by the Simla
Accord of 1914, he said that the only accepted portion was the Sikkim
boundary formed by the 1890 Sino-British convention. The McMahon Line,
he insisted was “concocted” by the British and the representatives of
the local Tibetan government.
Dai pointed out that the April 2005 agreement on
Political Parameters and Agreed Principles for the Settlement of the India-China Border Question was the first political document between the two nations for resolving the border issue.
Article
III enjoined on both sides to “make meaningful and mutually acceptable
adjustments” with a view of working out “a package settlement to the
boundary question.” Article IV noted that the two sides should give “due
consideration to each other’s strategic and reasonable interests.”
Article V noted that the two sides need to take into account “historical
evidence, national sentiments, practical difficulties and reasonable
concerns and sensitivities.” Article VII said that both sides “shall
safeguard due interests of their settled populations in the border
areas.”
A simple reading of its clauses would suggest that the guidelines
would eventually lead to a more or less “as is/where is” position. The
only viable package was allegedly suggested by Zhou Enlai in 1960 and
Deng Xiaoping in 1980 – that in exchange for India surrendering its
claim of Aksai Chin, China would concede its claim on Arunachal Pradesh.
Article IV would suggest that India would do it on the basis of
accepting Aksai Chin as a strategic interest for China, while the latter
would agree to do the same in the case of Arunachal on the basis of
Article VII.
However, as Ranjit Kalha pointed out in
India-China Boundary Issues: Quest for Settlement
(2014), in 2007, confronted with the enhancement of the Indo-US
strategic relationship, the Chinese baulked and its foreign minister
Yang Jiechi blandly told his Indian counterpart that “the mere presence
of populated areas [in Arunachal] would not effect Chinese claims on the
boundary”. This was followed by other measures such as the denial of a
visa to an IAS officer of Arunachal Pradesh, issuing stapled visas for
visitors from Jammu and Kashmir and stepping up its patrolling of the
Line of Actual Control, especially in the areas where the Indian and
Chinese perceptions of the line overlapped. Simultaneously, it also
enhanced its nuclear ties with Pakistan to counter the Indo-US nuclear
deal.
Kalha believes that “the Chinese had decided to utilize the unsettled
border as a part of coercive diplomacy to put ‘pressure’ on India”.
Given the long and complicated history of Sino-Indian border
negotiations, multiple possibilities flow from Dai’s interview and his
specific reference to Tawang. It could well be simply the personal views
of a retired senior official. On the other hand by bringing the issue
of China’s claim on Tawang into the Indian public domain it could be a
calculated move aimed at putting India on the defensive. Finally, it
could actually presage a move back to give life to the 2005 political
parameters agreement. China is currently under a great deal of pressure
from internal as well as external developments. Historically these are
the moments in which it becomes more amenable to settle its disputes.
There are some hints in that direction in
another report
of Dai’s interview which notes that China did not see India as a rival
and neither did it seek to contain it. Not only was China “delighted”
with the evolution of India’s relations with other countries, including
the US, Dai went out of his way to laud India’s “independent foreign
policy” based on its pursuit of “strategic autonomy.”
Interestingly, the Dai interview coincides with the Sino-Indian spat
over the planned visit of the Dalai Lama to Tawang later this year, his
first since 2009. A Chinese spokesman
has said that
China was “gravely concerned” over the development and that it would
“bring serious damage to peace and stability of the border region and
China-India relations.” In his remarks, the spokesman accused the “Dalai
group” of putting on “dishonourable acts in the past on the boundary
question.” It is not exactly clear what he meant by that.
Tawang may well have emerged as the focus of Sino-Indian relations,
which revolve around the fulcrum of Tibet. Tawang is the most important
monastery of Tibetan Buddhism outside Tibet. It was the birthplace of
the fifth Dalai Lama and was established at his behest in 1680-81. What
the Chinese worry about it that it may be the place where the current
Dalai Lama, who is 81, decides to reincarnate. Even though they insist
that only they can certify a Dalai Lama, it could well lead to an
invidious position from their point of view.
India has long recognised that Tibet is part of China, but their
insecurities there have been fuelled by their own shoddy and, in the
past, brutal, handling of their minorities. The more recent Chinese
mishandling of their relations with India has resulted in New Delhi
refusing since 2010 to reiterate in joint statements that Tibet is part
of China. The current Indian government, which invited the Tibetan
government-in-exile prime minister for the inauguration of Prime
Minister Narendra Modi, has hardened the Indian position. In December
2016, President Pranab Mukherji became the first president in decades to
welcome the Dalai Lama in the Rashtrapati Bhavan, albeit on the
occasion of a function organised by the Kailash Satyarthi Foundation.
At the end of the day, given India’s categorical acceptance of
Chinese sovereignty over Tibet, Beijing needs to accept that New Delhi
has important equities in Tibet. These are not just born out of the
history of Tibetan Buddhism or geography, but the fact that Tibet has
been an important neighbour of India and our historical, cultural and
economic interaction has been going on since antiquity.
The Wire March 9, 2017