Border dispute arose after India recognised Tibet as part of China: CDS Chauhan

Update: 2026-02-14 19:28 GMT

Dehradun: Chief of Defence Staff General Anil Chauhan said the border dispute with China followed India’s recognition of Tibet as part of the that country in 1954 with the signing of Panchsheel Agreement.

The chief of defence staff (CDS) was delivering a lecture on ‘Frontiers, Borders and LAC: The Middle Sector’ under the India Himalayan International Strategic Forum think tank at Lok Bhavan here on Friday.

Chauhan said, “In 1954, India officially recognised Tibet as part of China, the two countries signed the Panchsheel Agreement.”

Following the agreement, “India considered itself to have settled its northern border. This was the only area that we believed had not been settled through a formal treaty,” he said.

The CDS said that the legitimacy of this border for India was based on the Panchsheel Agreement, which it believed demarcated by identifying six passes -- Shipki La, Mana, Niti, Kungri Bingri, Darma and Lipulekh -- through which trade and pilgrimage would take place.

He said, “However, China believed that this agreement was only for trade and nowhere reflected China’s position on any specific border dispute. Therefore, it became a border dispute.”

General Chauhan said, “Then prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru probably knew that we had a border similar to the McMahon Line in the past, and we had some claims in the Ladakh region, but it was not clearly defined. That is why he probably wanted to proceed with the Panchsheel Agreement.”

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