China and India have been engaged in a standoff in the Dokalam area of the Sikkim sector near the Bhutan tri-junction for over three weeks after a Chinese Army's construction party attempted to build a road.
"I am concerned about the standoff on the border, as obviously are so many in India," Alyssa Ayres, a former State Department official under the Obama administration, told PTI.
She said this was a new example of China looking to take "a tactical inch over and over again to slowly gain a strategic mile". In the South China Sea context, observers have focused on China's 'salami-slicing' tactics of smaller changes to the status quo, and that over time add up to something strategically significant," she said.
"Is this now the Chinese approach to the border with India? Can't be ruled out," Ayres said in response to a question.
However, Daniel Markey, Senior Research Professor in International Relations at the Paul H Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at the Johns Hopkins University, said he is not terribly concerned about India and China finding non- violent ways out of this border dispute alone.
"For decades, they have each shown an ability to manage these tensions diplomatically and by signalling on the ground without crossing into serious violence," he said.
"But I am much more worried about the possibility that this dispute will be harder to manage because of other tensions in the region, such as Tibet and Pakistan," Markey said.
In a policy paper in 2015, Markey had warned of armed confrontation between China and India and had said that the US has a major interest in preventing such confrontation.
Markey warned that if Washington were to remain neutral or favour China's position, India would perceive US policies as abandonment.
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