China warns that a “forced decoupling” of its economy with India will hurt both countries

China has warned that a “forced decoupling” of its economy with India, following a clash in Eastern Ladakh last month that killed 20 Indian soldiers, would hurt both countries.

The Chinese ambassador to India Sun Weidong said that China is not a strategic threat to India and that the “general structure that we can’t live without each other remains unchanged”.

The statement came after New Delhi’s recent moves to ban or sideline Chinese business interests in one of the world’s biggest markets, even as the border remains tense with many more troops on the ground than usual.“China advocates win-win cooperation and opposes a zero-sum game,” Ambassador Sun Weidong wrote on Twitter. “Our economies are highly complementary, interwoven and interdependent. Forced decoupling is against the trend and will only lead to a ‘lose-lose’ outcome.”Officials of the nuclear-armed neighbours have been talking regularly to de-escalate the border standoff after the June 15 clash in the Galwan Valley of India’s Ladakh region when the Indian officials said soldiers were beaten to death with rocks and clubs.

The Ministry of External Affairs said in an online briefing that a troops disengagement process as agreed by the two sides had yet to be completed, and that another round of commander-level talks would be held soon.

“We expect that the Chinese side will sincerely work with us for complete disengagement and de-escalation and full restoration of peace and tranquility in the border areas at the earliest,” spokesman Anurag Srivastava said.

Analysts say the worst fighting between the giant countries in decades is likely to push India closerto the United States, both strategically and in trade. China and India fought a brief border war in 1962 and China is a close ally of Pakistan.