Secret Tibetan Military Force Raises Stakes in India-China Clash

  • Top Modi aide attended funeral of Tibetan killed along border
  • ‘The Indians are sending a message -- a very strong message’
Indian troops pay respects to their fallen comrade, Tibetan-origin special forces soldier Nyima Tenzin in Leh on Sept. 7.Photographer: Mohd Arhaan Archer/AFP via Getty Images
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At a funeral last week in the mountains of northern India, one of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s top aides paid respect to a Tibetan soldier killed on the front lines of deadly clashes with China.

Surrounded by troops waving the flags of both India and Tibet, Ram Madhav laid a wreath before the coffin during a ceremony that gave the deceased man full military honors. In a now-deleted tweet, the national general secretary of Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party said he hoped the soldier’s death would lead to peace along the “Indo-Tibetan border.”

The rare recognition of a secretive Indian military unit with Tibetan soldiers by itself threatened to escalate a border dispute that has killed dozens since May and tanked economic ties between the world’s most-populous nations. Even more significant was the suggestion that India questioned China’s sovereignty over Tibet -- a red line for Beijing, which sees separatism as a cause also worth fighting for in places from Xinjiang to Hong Kong to Taiwan.