KEY POINTS
  • Small miscalculations in a tense border standoff between India and China high in the Himalayas could lead to big mistakes, a former national security advisor to India, M. K. Narayanan said. 
  • Troops on both sides have been engaged in a dispute since May and in June, a fatal clash killed 20 Indian soldiers.
  • This week New Delhi and Beijing accused each other of firing in the air during renewed confrontation at the undemarcated border where opposing troops are positioned in close proximity.

SINGAPORE — Small miscalculations in a tense border standoff between India and China high in the Himalayas could lead to big mistakes, a former national security advisor to India said Wednesday. 

Troops on both sides have been engaged in a dispute since May and in June, a fatal clash killed 20 Indian soldiers. China did not disclose if its troops suffered any casualties. New Delhi and Beijing have been in talks to de-escalate the situation and disengage completely, but both sides have accused each other in recent weeks of breaching the informal border.