China steps up construction along disputed Bhutan border
The new construction is 9 to 27km from the Doklam area at
the junction of the borders of India, Bhutan and China, where Indian and
Chinese troops were locked in standoff for more than two months in 2017. The
settlements would allow China to better control and monitor far-flung areas,
and potentially use them to establish security-focused installations, according
to one expert and the Indian defence source.
China has accelerated settlement-building along its disputed
border with Bhutan, with more than 200 structures, including two-story
buildings, under construction in six locations, according to satellite image
analysis conducted for Reuters.
The images and analysis supplied to Reuters by U.S. data
analytics firm HawkEye 360, which uses satellites to gather intelligence on
ground-level activities, and is vetted by two other experts, provide a detailed
look into China's recent construction along its frontier with Bhutan.
Construction-related activity in some of the locations along Bhutan's western
border has been underway since early 2020, with China initially building tracks
and clearing out areas, based on material provided by satellite imagery firms
Capella Space and Planet Labs, said Chris Biggers, the mission applications
director at HawkEye 360.
Images show the work speeded up in 2021. Smaller structures
were erected - possibly to house equipment and supplies - followed by the
laying of foundations and then the construction of buildings, Biggers said.
"To me, 2021 was the period for acceleration," Biggers said.
Two other experts who studied the locations of the new
construction and recent satellite images taken by Capella Space said all six
settlements appear to be in territory disputed by China and Bhutan - including
a contested tract of roughly 110 square kilometers - with little in the way of
resources or native population. "It is Bhutan's policy not to talk about
boundary issues in the public," Bhutan's foreign ministry said in response
to questions from Reuters. The ministry declined to comment further.
The construction suggests that China is bent on resolving
its border claims by giving its ambitions concrete form, said the experts and
one Indian defense source. China's foreign ministry said the construction is
"entirely for the improvement of the working and living conditions of the
local people."
"It is within China's sovereignty to carry out normal
construction activities on its territory," the ministry said. The ministry
declined to comment further. The villages also offer Beijing some strategic
value, two of the experts say. The new construction is 9 to 27km from the
Doklam area at the junction of the borders of India, Bhutan, and China, where
Indian and Chinese troops were locked in a standoff for more than two months in
2017.
The settlements would allow China to better control and
monitor far-flung areas and potentially use them to establish security-focused
installations, according to one expert and the Indian defense source. India's
foreign ministry did not respond to a request for comment.
Bhutan, a country of fewer than 800,000 people, has been
negotiating with Beijing for almost four decades to settle their 477-km border.
At issue for Bhutan is not just territorial integrity, but also concerns over
the potential security implications for India, which is the Himalayan kingdom's
main ally and economic partner. The Bhutanese foreign ministry said Bhutan and
China had agreed during the latest round of boundary negotiations in April 2021
to speed up the process of resolving their differences. It declined to discuss
the details of the plan to do so.
"All issues are discussed between Bhutan and China
within the framework of the Boundary Talks," the ministry said.
"China's village building across the claimed Bhutan border appears to be
designed to force Bhutan to yield to Chinese demands in their border
negotiations, now in their 24th round after 37 years," said Robert
Barnett, a professorial research associate at SOAS University of London, who is
an expert on Tibet and has studied the China-Bhutan border closely.
BORDER VILLAGES The settlements appear part of a plan
Beijing made public in 2017 to build more than 600 villages in border areas in
the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), which lies on the Chinese side of the
disputed border, said Barnett and M. Taylor Fravel, director of the Security
Studies Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Fravel said the construction indicated China likely wanted
to consolidate its control and improve infrastructure in border areas. The
Chinese-controlled TAR was established in 1965, six years after the Dalai Lama
fled Tibet in the wake of a failed uprising against Chinese rule.
Some of the villages near the border are built where there
has been no previous construction. China's government gives residents subsidies
to settle there, Barnett said. "All the cross-border villages in the
western Bhutan sector are sited in areas where no natural village would be
found since these areas are barely habitable," he said.
CHICKEN'S NECK Control over the remote Doklam plateau would
potentially give China greater access to the adjoining "Chicken's
Neck" area, a strategic strip of land that connects India to its
northeastern region.
India shares an unsettled 3,500-km border with China. Troops
from both countries remain deployed near each other in a separate border
dispute in the Ladakh region - about 1,100km from Doklam - where they clashed
in hand-to-hand combat in 2020. India has been closely monitoring Chinese
construction along its borders, the Indian defense source said, declining to be
named because of the sensitivity of the matter.
The satellite imagery suggests that neither India nor Bhutan
has responded on the ground to China's construction activities, Biggers said.
Nathan Ruser, a researcher at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute
research organization, added that it would be a challenge for India and Bhutan
to counter the Chinese construction.
"Any action taken against these Chinese installations
would necessarily put civilian populations at risk," Ruser said. "It
limits how India and Bhutan can combat Chinese encroachment into disputed
territories."
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