India, China seek to rebuild military trust to keep border calm

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After Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi met Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2025, steps to deepen ties followed.

After Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi met Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2025, steps to deepen ties followed.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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NEW DELHI – Top leaders in India and China want to maintain the peace along their border and are working to bridge a trust deficit between the militaries of the two countries, India’s senior-most army commander said.

“We are trying to increase trust between the military,” India’s army chief Upendra Dwivedi told reporters in New Delhi.

“The top leadership including prime minister, defence and foreign ministers have met in the last few months” and there is urgency in among the armed forces to keep the borders calm.

The general’s comments reinforce efforts by the political leaders to repair ties that hit a low after the worst border clash in decades left several soldiers dead in June 2020.

Both countries had agreed to pull back troops from the remaining friction points, paving the way for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s

visit to China last August

, his first in seven years.

In recent meetings with Chinese counterparts, Indian officials have made peace and stability along the 3,488km

disputed Himalayan border

central to efforts to normalise ties.

After Mr Modi met President Xi Jinping in 2025, steps to deepen ties followed, including the restoration of direct flights between the two countries, which had been suspended since the Covid-19 pandemic and the border crisis. Flights resumed in October.

The engagement comes amid US President Donald Trump’s decision to slap tariffs on both nations, upending trade flows.

India’s exports to the US face tariffs of up to 50 per cent, among the highest applied. Beijing and Washington have agreed to a fragile truce on tariffs and export controls. BLOOMBERG

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