HomeDefenceNathu La and Cho La, 1967: The three days that changed how India deterred China in Sikkim

Nathu La and Cho La, 1967: The three days that changed how India deterred China in Sikkim

A fierce, localised clash over a ridgeline fence became a turning point after 1962, testing India’s readiness and signalling that the mountain border would no longer be conceded by default.

December 19, 2025 / 16:55 IST
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Representative image
Representative image

In 1967, Sikkim was not yet an Indian state, but a protectorate where Indian troops guarded key passes on the old trade routes to Tibet. Nathu La, more than 14,000 feet up, was one of those choke points: narrow, steep, and tactically unforgiving, with dominant heights deciding who could see and hit whom first. After the 1962 war, both sides watched each other closely along this sector, but the confrontations stayed mostly limited to patrol standoffs.

Nathu La, September 1967: A fence line becomes a flashpoint The immediate trigger was not a sweeping offensive. It was work by Indian Army engineers to put up fencing from Nathu La towards Sebu La to mark the border. According to the Government of India’s Bharat Ranbhoomi Darshan account of the episode, Chinese troops objected, a scuffle followed, and the work continued. Soon after, the Chinese side opened fire with machine guns and artillery. India responded from stronger positions on higher ground, including Sebu La and a feature described as Camel’s Back, using heavy artillery to smash bunkers and push the attackers back. The exchange lasted about three days before a ceasefire, with India holding its ground.

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This mattered because it showed a different Indian posture from 1962: better prepared artillery, tighter local command and control, and a willingness to absorb the first shock and then escalate hard within the tactical box.

Cho La, October 1967: The confrontation moves along the ridge Less than a month later, the confrontation shifted to Cho La, another high pass in Sikkim. Bharat Ranbhoomi Darshan describes the Cho La clash as a result of Chinese troops entering what India regarded as its territory, after which fighting broke out. The Indian side again used the advantage of terrain and firepower to regain control of positions.