The 9th round of Corps Commander-level talks among India and China will occur on Sunday, emphasizing a commonly adequate timetable to separate from friction points along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh.
The military-level talks are taking place at the Moldo line point on the Chinese side of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh. Like the past couple of gatherings, a representative from the Ministry of External Affairs was an essential part of the most recent military talks.
The past meets
The eighth and last round of military talks occurred on November 6 at Chushul, during which the two sides comprehensively examined the separation of troops from straight friction points. “The two sides consented to execute the significant agreement genuinely came to by the heads of the two nations, guarantee their bleeding-edge troops practice restriction and abstain from misconception and erroneous conclusion,” said a joint explanation gave after the eight-round of talks.

India and China standoff has now entered its 9th month as the two sides proceed with deployment of troops, gunnery firearms, tanks, and heavily clad vehicles nearby.
What to expect from this round?
The military-talks are focused on first facilitating pressure on Pangong Lake’s northern bank, which is where the clash first occurred in May a year ago starting vicious conflicts.
According to the prior proposition, the ‘Finger’ area on the northern bank of the Pangong Lake could transform into a brief a dead zone with Indian or Chinese soldiers not doing patrols as a measure to ease strains and discover an advancement in the deadlock.
For a staged de-escalation, the petulant clash zone between Finger 4 to Finger 8 could turn into a no watching zone for some time, according to the proposition.
On the off chance that this brought about the de-induction of troops and a draw-back to positions as of April 2020 in the following stage, India would empty statures involved on the Kailash range on the southern side.