Bhim Shumsher was allied with
Kuomintang China in the north and the
British Raj in India in the south, both of whom had interests in Nepal. He received the
Delhi Durbar Medal from Britain in 1911 and the
Order of the Sacred Tripod (寶鼎勳章) on 23 February 1932 from the
Republic of China. Bhim Shumsher contained the British interests in Nepal to economic support in exchange for
Gurkha soldiers for the British Army. He invited
William Birdwood, commander-in-chief of the British forces in India, to Kathmandu in 1930. Bhim Shumsher visited
Calcutta in 1931 to meet with viceroy
Lord Irwin about their relations with
Tibet, since the British wanted to develop a trade route with Tibet via Nepal. Relations between Tibet and Nepal were deteriorating, however, and the British wanted to mediate the dispute. After his visit to India, he was honored by Indian and Chinese governments. The threat of an armed Tibetan-Nepalese conflict arose in the spring of 1930. Relations between Tibet and Nepal had soured since August 1929 because of what Bhim Shumsher saw as
Lhasa's maltreatment of S. Gyalpo, a Tibetan-Nepalese who was arrested in the city; Bhim Shumsher's diplomats said that Gyalpo was a Nepalese subject, and the Tibetans disagreed. Gyalpo escaped from custody, and sought shelter at the Nepalese embassy in Lhasa. Tibetan police entered the embassy and took Gyalpo away; the move outraged Bhim Shumsher, who ordered the mobilization of troops in preparation for war against Tibet in February 1930. Tensions between the countries placed a heavy burden on Tibetan military defense, and
Chiang Kai-shek informed the
13th Dalai Lama of his willingness to send troops and officials to assist the Tibetans in their fight against the Nepalese. Although the Dalai Lama tactfully declined what he saw as the entry of Han Chinese troops (and officials) into Tibet, Chiang Kai-shek continued to display goodwill towards the Tibetans by promising to exercise diplomatic pressure on British India and Nepal in the Tibetan-Nepalese dispute. The head of the
Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission and Chiang Kai-Shek's key deputy,
Ma Fuxiang, arranged for a diplomatic initiative with Nepal on behalf of Chiang. Chiang's officials reached Kathmandu via India in September 1930 to meet Bhim Shumsher, who was informed that they came to "offer the services of the Chinese government to settle the dispute." ==Ancestry==