INTL India - China border crisis (Main Thread)

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....

India, China and the Quad’s defining test

29 Jun 2021 | Arzan Tarapore

The Quad is stronger than ever. The informal ‘minilateral’ grouping of Australia, India, Japan and the United States has in the past year held its first stand-alone ministerial meeting and its first leaders’ summit, and launched an ambitious project to deliver Covid-19 vaccines. This ‘golden age’ of the Quad is a product of newfound Indian enthusiasm for the grouping, in turn spurred by the military crisis in Ladakh, where India faces ongoing Chinese troop incursions across the two countries’ disputed border.

But the Quad is not bulletproof. Some experts have suggested that the economic and diplomatic effects of the devastating second wave of the pandemic in India will preoccupy the Indian government, sapping the Quad of capacity for any new initiatives. Others counter that India remains committed to competition with China—which is what really matters for the Quad—although its partners always expected ‘two steps forward, one step back’ from India.

The pandemic may well prove to be a hiccup in the Quad’s evolution; but a potentially much larger disruption may come from the ongoing Ladakh crisis itself. As I argue in a new ASPI Strategic Insights paper, the crisis has greatly increased the risk of a border war between India and China, which would present a defining test of the Quad. A possible war could either strengthen or enervate the Quad—depending on how India and its partners, including Australia, act now to shape the strategic environment.

Risk is a function of likelihood and consequence. The likelihood of war on the India–China border is still low—both countries would prefer to avoid it—but has risen since the crisis began. Both countries have greatly expanded their military deployments on the border, and backed them with new permanent infrastructure to resupply and reinforce them. China has proved its revisionist intent with large and costly military incursions, although its specific objectives and plans remain unknown. And the interaction of both countries’ military strategies and doctrines would, on the threshold of conflict, promote escalation.

The consequences of a possible conflict would be dire for both belligerents and for the region. China —assuming it is the provocateur of conflict—would likely face some political rebuke from states that consider themselves its competitors, but it will work strenuously to reduce those costs, and would likely have priced them in to its calculations of whether to fight. India will suffer high tactical costs on the border, and may also suffer wider harm, if China uses coercive cyberattacks against strategic or dual-use targets.

In a costly war, the repercussions may spill over to damage India’s recently developing strategic partnerships, especially with the United States and Australia. Despite generally favourable views of the US, the Indian strategic elite still harbours some latent suspicions. This was highlighted in two episodes in April 2021, when the US Navy conducted a freedom of navigation patrol through the Indian exclusive economic zone, and when the US was slow in delivering Covid-19 vaccine raw materials and other relief. Both instances quickly receded from the Indian public imagination—thanks to quick correctives from Washington—but they did reveal that, under some conditions, Indian perceptions of its new partnerships can be quickly coloured by distrust.

A China–India border war may create exactly those conditions. There is a chance that conflict may result in a redoubled Indian commitment to the Quad, if New Delhi judges that it has no option but to seek more external assistance. Conversely, unless a conflict is managed well by India and its partners, it is more likely to result in Indian disaffection with the Quad. India deepened Quad cooperation during the Ladakh crisis partly as a deterrent signal to China, and partly because the Quad is still full of promise. However, after a conflict—when China hasn’t been deterred and has probably imposed significant costs on India—the Quad’s utility would have been tested, and probably not ameliorated India’s wartime disadvantage.

The task before Quad governments is to be sensitised to this risk and implement mitigation strategies before a possible conflict, to buttress the coalition in advance. As I outline in the ASPI paper, they could do this at three levels. First, they could offer operational support—such as intelligence or resupply of key equipment, as the US already has done in the Ladakh crisis—although Quad partners’ role here would be limited. Second, they could provide support in other theatres or domains—with a naval show of force, for example, although cyber operations would probably be more meaningful in deterring conflict or dampening its costs. Third, they could provide political and diplomatic support—signalling to Beijing that a conflict would harm its regional political standing.

For Quad members, the main goal would be to deter conflict in the first place, and, failing that, to preserve the long-term strategic partnership with India for the sake of maintaining as powerful and energetic a coalition as possible to counterbalance China in the long term.

Author
Arzan Tarapore is a South Asia research scholar at Stanford University’s Asia-Pacific Research Center and a senior non-resident fellow at the National Bureau of Asian Research. Image: Government of India/Wikimedia Commons.

Related Posts
 

Zagdid

Veteran Member

Man-portable HJ-12 anti-tank missile makes PLA debut in Tibet
By Liu XuanzunPublished: Jul 25, 2021 08:04 PM

5a3c33ba-5edc-4d59-a2bb-6721e6fa6115.jpeg


China's domestically developed HJ-12 man-portable anti-tank missile, previously known as a made-for-export weapon, is confirmed to be in service with the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA), after it made its debut in a recent exercise organized by the PLA Tibet Military Command.

The top-attack, fire-and-forget missile, often compared with the US' Javelin, can destroy any main battle tank in the world, and will significantly boost the PLA infantry forces' anti-tank capabilities, experts said on Sunday.

A brigade affiliated with the PLA Tibet Military Command recently conducted a series of exercises deep in the plateau region, according to a statement the command released on Thursday.

A photo attached to the statement shows that a soldier was carrying a portable anti-tank missile that can be carried by a single person during the exercise, and a report by Shanghai-based news website eastday.com on Friday identified it as the HJ-12, as the weapon made its first public appearance in PLA service.

By providing individual soldiers with the capability to independently destroy a tank more effectively than older weapons, the commissioning of the HJ-12 will significantly boost the PLA's anti-tank capabilities, observers said.

Developed by the state-owned China North Industries Group Corporation (NORINCO), the HJ-12, or the Red Arrow 12, was put on exhibit for the first time at Airshow China 2014 in Zhuhai, South China's Guangdong Province.

Comparable with the US' Javelin missile, the HJ-12 is equipped with advanced focal plane array infrared guidance system with lock-on before launch and fire-and-forget systems, eastday.com reported.

When performing a top-attack, the HJ-12 can destroy any type of main battle tank in the world, as the missile can penetrate homogeneous steel armor as thick as 1,100 millimeters protected by explosive reaction armor, eastday.com quoted a report by China Central Television as saying.

The HJ-12 also offers strong anti-jamming capabilities with more types of guidance systems, Wei Dongxu, a Beijing-based military expert, told the Global Times.

In addition to tanks, the HJ-12 can launch precision strikes on hostile bunkers, fortifications and buildings, Wei said.

The export version of the HJ-12, the HJ-12E, saw its first delivery to an undisclosed foreign buyer in early 2020, NORINCO revealed in March that year, labeling the weapon as a high-end product.

It was the first time a third-generation anti-tank weapon system developed by the Chinese company has been exported, NORINCO said in a statement, without disclosing the name of the buyer, the quantity purchased or the value of the deal.
 

Zagdid

Veteran Member

Report: China Bans Vessels Crewed By Indian Seafarers

PUBLISHED JUL 25, 2021 11:44 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE


India's seafarers have long been a significant presence in the global fleet, but in the COVID-19 era they face new obstacles to employment. The Indian government's primary vaccine, Covaxin, is not certified by the WHO and is therefore not accepted by some international vessel operators as a qualifying vaccination. In addition, the Chinese government has quietly enacted a ban on Indian seafarers, according to the All India Seafarers Union.

India has an active pharmaceutical industry and it has developed three of its own vaccines, Covaxin, Covishield and Corbevax. Covaxin, a two-shot vaccine manufactured by Hyderabad-based Bharat Biotech, has been available under an emergency use authorization since January, but it is not yet approved by the World Health Organization. According to the union, certain shipping companies have denied permission to board to seafarers who have received Covaxin.

"We have taken up this issue with the government. Those who have taken two doses of [competing vaccine] Covishield are getting jobs on vessels in other countries," said the union's working president, Abhijeet Sangle. "But many who took Covaxin are being denied jobs in some countries in Europe, the U.S., Malaysia, Hong Kong and China."

In addition, according to the union, China has enacted an unofficial berthing ban on vessels that have Indian crewmembers, vaccinated or not. Since March 21, the All India Seafarers Union claims, Chinese authorities have been quietly asking ship owners not to send Indian seafarers if they wish for their vessels to call at Chinese ports. Capt. Sanjay Parashar, a member of India's National Shipping Board, confirmed the astonishing claim in a statement to the Times of India.

"[China] has asked foreign shipping companies that they can lift or unload the cargo from China only if they agree to its terms, which is not to employ Indian crew on board their vessels," Parashar said. "There is a commercial cost to it. Either you have to divert your ship which means adding to your fuel cost or replace the Indian crew, which too costs the company a lot."
Capt. Rakesh Coelho, India branch manager for Zodiac Maritime, confirmed to Times of India that some foreign shipping companies are taking more seafarers from the Philippines, China and Vietnam in response to the ban.

India is one of the biggest seafaring nations: it sends nearly 250,000 of its citizens to sea every year, and the majority of them work in foreign trade.
 

Zagdid

Veteran Member

Chinese President Xi Jinping visiting Tibet is a threat to India, says senior US Congressman
Xi on Wednesday last made an unannounced three-day trip to Nyingchi in Tibet, close to the border with Arunachal Pradesh

Updated At: Jul 27, 2021 03:13 PM (IST)

Chinese President Xi Jinping visiting Tibet last week is a threat to India, an influential US lawmaker has said, accusing the Joe Biden-led administration of not doing enough to stop the Chinese "march".

Xi on Wednesday last made an unannounced three-day trip to Nyingchi in Tibet, close to the border with Arunachal Pradesh. Xi, who is also general secretary of the Communist Party of China, met top officials of the Tibet Military Command and reviewed development projects in the region.

In an interview to Fox News, Republican Congressman Devin Nunes said: "Just last week, you had Xi Jinping, the Chinese dictator, on the border with India, in Tibet, claiming victory. This was the first time in 30 years, I believe, that a Chinese dictator had been to Tibet, and also threatening India, over a billion people and also a nuclear power; threatening India that he's going to build a big water project, possibly cut off water to India."

During his visit to Nyingchi, Xi visited the Nyang River Bridge to inspect the ecological preservation in the basin of the Brahmaputra river, which is called Yarlung Zangbo in Tibetan language.

China this year approved plans to build a huge dam over the Brahmaputra river during the current 14th Five-Year Plan, which raised concerns in the riparian states of India and Bangladesh.

“So, no matter what you plug into the propaganda machine, you can build all the narratives you want here in Washington, DC, but then there's reality. The reality is that the Chinese are on the march, and the (President Joe) Biden administration is letting them do whatever they want," Nunes said.

A senior Republican in the House of Representatives representing the 42nd Congressional district of California, Nunes was the chairman of the powerful House Intelligence Committee from 2015 to 2019.

Xi's visit to Tibet took place amidst the current India-China military tensions in eastern Ladakh. PTI
 

jward

passin' thru
India-China Border Talks Fail As Each Side Pursues Troop Build-Up Amid Threats
Tyler Durden's Photo

by Tyler Durden
Tuesday, Oct 12, 2021 - 09:10 PM
Authored by Dave DeCamp via AntiWar.com,
Talks between India and China over the disputed border region in the Himalayas have broken down, with each side blaming the other for the failed negotiations. Tensions have been high between the two powers along the Line of Actual Control (LAC), which separates Indian-controlled territory from Chinese-controlled territory.
In 2020, Chinese and Indian troops fought several skirmishes along the LAC, including one in June 2020 that turned deadly. The failed talks mean that India and China will continue to have troops forwardly deployed in Ladakh, where the skirmishes took place. China has blamed the failure on what it called "unreasonable demands" from India.
Indian fighter jet flies over the Ladakh region, via Reuters
"The Chinese side has made great efforts and fully demonstrated its sincerity to promote the de-escalation of the border situation," said Long Shaohua, a spokesman for China’s Western Theater Command. "But the Indian side still insists on unreasonable and unrealistic demands, making the negotiations more difficult."
India rejected the Chinese claim and said it made "constructive suggestions" but that the Chinese were "not agreeable" and "could not provide any forward-looking proposals." Before the talks concluded, India’s army chief said China is building up troops on its side of the disputed border and building infrastructure.
"So, it means that they are there to stay. We are keeping a close watch on all these developments, but if they are there to stay, we are there to stay, too," said Gen. M.M. Naravane.
According to a description of heightened tensions in India's media:
Southeast of Galwan Valley is where 20 Indian and at least four Chinese soldiers died in clashes in June 2020, Hot Springs lies in the Chang Chenmo river valley, close to Kongka La, a pass that marks the Line of Actual Control. India’s Patrolling Point 15, it is not a launchpad for any offensive action though the area did see action before and during the 1962 war.
China’s unwillingness to pull back its platoon-sized unit from Hot Springs is a sign of the difficulties that lie in normalising the situation. The PLA has traditionally had a major base east of Kongka La.

A 2004 CIA map of the disputed Kashmir region with red circles corresponding to 2020 conflicts.

Since the deadly June 2020 skirmish, the US has stepped up military cooperation with India, including a new military pact that shares more satellite data with New Delhi. With this increased intelligence sharing, India can keep a better eye on Chinese troops.
* * *
Meanwhile, here's Rabobank's take...
The Global Times is also doing its usual job, but this time threatening war with India again ("New Delhi needs to be clear about one thing: it will not get the border the way it wants. If it starts a war, it will definitely lose. Any political manoeuvring and pressure will be ignored by China.")
I'm a little late to this extraordinary editorial by GT on bordre standoff. It presents the dispute in very uncomplicated terms. China is more powerful, so it will do what it wants to and India must deal with it. Case closed. India sleepwalks on border issue: Global Times editorial - Global Times
— Sreemoy Talukdar (@sreemoytalukdar) October 12, 2021
PLA tank exercises were reportedly held last night. Of course, one would logically presume there are more than enough fish for China to fry on the domestic and another geographic front….so ’Tra la la?’
 

jward

passin' thru
With all eyes on Taiwan, tensions are building on another Chinese frontier: India

Analysis by Brad Lendon, CNN
Updated 5:45 AM ET, Wed October 13, 2021

A version of this story appeared in CNN's Meanwhile in China newsletter, a three-times-a-week update exploring what you need to know about the country's rise and how it impacts the world. Sign up here.
Hong Kong (CNN)China's increased military activity in the Taiwan Strait may have grabbed all the headlines in recent weeks, but thousands of miles to the west, another simmering territorial dispute on the country's borders looks more likely to boil over first.
Just 16 months ago, Chinese and Indian troops fought a deadly hand-to-hand battle in the Himalayas along the Line of Actual Control (LAC), the ill-defined de facto border between the two nuclear powers.
And now, tensions appear to be rising again.
According to unverified reports, troops from both sides have been briefly detained by the other, as military positions are fortified and talks to deescalate the situation seem at an impasse.


In 1962, India and China went to war over the remote, inhospitable border regions high in the mountains, eventually establishing the LAC. But the two countries do not agree on its precise location and both regularly accuse the other of overstepping it, or seeking to expand their territory. Since then, they have had a series of mostly non-lethal scuffles over the position of the border -- until the June 2020 clash, the deadliest on the LAC in more than 40 years.
After that battle, in which at least 20 Indian and four Chinese troops were killed, respective military leaders have held face-to-face talks to dampen lingering tensions.
The 13th of those meetings was held Sunday -- and it didn't end well. Earlier discussions had made some progress in calming the border, but a statement from the Indian Defense Ministry on Monday accused China of no longer cooperating.
"The Indian side pointed out that the situation along the LAC had been caused by unilateral attempts of the Chinese side to alter the status quo and in violation of the bilateral agreements," the statement said.

"The Indian side therefore made constructive suggestions for resolving the remaining areas but the Chinese side was not agreeable and also could not provide any forward-looking proposals."
Beijing sees the situation differently.
"China has made great efforts to promote the easing and cooling of the border situation and fully demonstrated its sincerity in order to maintain the overall situation of the relations between the two militaries. However, India still insisted on the unreasonable and unrealistic demands, which made the negotiations more difficult," said a statement from Col. Long Shaohua, spokesperson for the People's Liberation Army (PLA) Western Theater Command.
An extensive article in China's state-run Global Times tabloid ratcheted up the rhetoric, accusing India of "triggering new incidents along the eastern section of the border."
An Indian army convoy travels through Zoji La, a high mountain pass bordering China on June 13 in Ladakh, India.


An Indian army convoy travels through Zoji La, a high mountain pass bordering China on June 13 in Ladakh, India.

After reports earlier this year that real progress was being made, including satellite photos showing China dismantling border garrisons, the Himalayan flashpoint has largely fallen off the world's radar -- even more so given the recent focus on Taiwan.
But over the past few weeks, both Indian and Chinese media have run stories about the unverified fresh confrontations along the LAC, all of which have reportedly been resolved peacefully.
Global Times said the unverified encounters had strained relations along the border.
"Chinese experts have warned of the risks of a new conflict, saying that China should not only refuse to give in to India's arrogant demands at the negotiating table, but also be prepared to defend against new Indian military aggression," the report said.

That was followed by claims from PLA garrisons on the Himalayan frontier, describing "tense daily working conditions" with alarms going off, commanders leading patrols at the front and soldiers "writing appeals for battle assignments," according to Global Times.
The report also touted Chinese efforts to build infrastructure in the region, saying the moves had boosted troops' morale and ability to move to hotspots along the LAC.
As to why the India-China border situation should be heating up now, Chinese state media offers a familiar answer. Just as it does concerning tensions over Taiwan -- near which Chinese warplanes have flown more than 150 sorties this month alone -- Global Times points a finger at the United States.

"(India) sees that Washington attaches great importance to New Delhi, as US President Joe Biden has frequently interacted with the Indian government since taking office, and jointly discussed plans to thwart China's growth," Lin Minwang, professor with the Institute of International Studies at Fudan University, is quoted as saying in the Global Times report.
Indeed, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi joined Biden and the prime minsters of Australia and Japan in Washington last month for the first in-person meeting of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, better known as "the Quad" -- an informal strategic forum of four democratic countries with a vested interest in countering China's rise in Asia.
In an opinion piece after the Quad summit, Li Haidong, professor at the Institute of International Relations of the China Foreign Affairs University, wrote the Quad members "will not stop hyping up the 'China threat' theory."
Amid the PLA Air Force incursions around Taiwan earlier this month, the Global Times said the US and Japan were pushing the situation around the self-ruled island to the brink, "creating a sense of urgency that the war maybe triggered at any time."
And a headline over Monday's Global Times story on the Himalayas said PLA border troops were "prepared for upcoming confrontations."
Taiwan and the Himalayas may be 2,800 miles (4,500 kilometers) apart and completely different environments, but in both territorial disputes with Beijing, the temperature appears to be rising -- and according to China, the US is at the center of it all.

 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
China sends in 100 rocket launchers to fortify border with India
  • Both sides send more supplies to high-altitude areas as winter approaches and boundary talks falter
  • PLA has the edge but weather is the real enemy, analyst says






The PLA’s PCL-181 advanced vehicle-mounted howitzer weighs about 20 tonnes. Photo: Handout

The PLA’s PCL-181 advanced vehicle-mounted howitzer weighs about 20 tonnes. Photo: Handout
China has deployed more than 100 advanced long-range rocket launchers to its high-altitude borders with India, according to a source close to the Chinese military, as the two sides remain deadlocked over their protracted boundary disputes.
The source said the People’s Liberation Army was ramping up defences in preparation for the Himalayan winter and in response to the Indian Army’s deployment of three regiments with M777 ultra-light howitzers along the contested Line of Actual Control (LAC) with China.
“The PLA has deployed more than 100 PCL-181 light, truck-mounted howitzers along borders with India. The firing range of this Chinese-developed launcher is double that of the M777,” the source said.
“The latest development of the border talks reminded the PLA to remain vigilant even though winter is coming.”





India releases footage of troops at China-India border in July ahead of India-China military talks
In yet another round of border talks earlier this month, PLA military commanders failed to persuade their Indian counterparts to pull back more troops from the strategic area in the high-altitude Depsang Plains, Bloomberg reported on Monday.


With no resolution in sight and winter on the way, Chinese and Indian troops have been stockpiling supplies, as the region becomes inaccessible.

As part of those preparations, both sides have been fortifying their border defences with the short-range weapons in recent months.

Indian media outlets reported in September that the Indian Army had used helicopters to deploy the M777s to the front line, while other heavier artillery guns were transported in via roads built in the past few years.

And in China, state broadcaster CCTV reported in August that PCL-181s had been deployed at the border. The report said the 181 was only 20 tonnes so the PLA’s biggest military transport aircraft could carry at least two and other supplies to front lines in one flight.
The M777 howitzer is a towed 155 mm artillery piece. Photo: Handout
The M777 howitzer is a towed 155 mm artillery piece. Photo: Handout

China has also been equipping troops in high-altitude areas in the country’s west with long-range launchers.

In April, CCTV reported that another artillery brigade equipped with the more powerful PCL-191 vehicle-mounted howitzers, which have a longer range than the 181s, had been sent to an area 5,200 metres (17,000 feet) above sea level in Xinjiang.
The PCL-191 launcher can carry bigger rounds than ones loaded by the PCL-181, extending its firing range up to 500km (310 miles), according to Chinese military magazine, Modern Ships.

Macau-based military expert Antony Wong Tong said China had the advantage with both powerful short and long-range launchers in the border area.
China, India deadlocked over troops near key Himalayan pass
18 Oct 2021
1634660630904.png

“In terms of weapons and equipment, the PLA has overwhelming superiority … but the most challenging enemy in the winter is not weapons, but the weather,” Wong said.

Rajeev Ranjan Chaturvedy, associate professor at Nalanda University, said the Indian military had also made contingency preparations for the winter deployment.
“India is mindful of numerical asymmetry with the PLA. So, rather than matching numbers, India’s focus has been tapping technology,” he said, adding that the Indian military has a huge experience in the winter conditions.




PLA forces conduct drill in Tibet: experts call it a warning to China’s neighbour India


01:27
PLA forces conduct drill in Tibet: experts call it a warning to China’s neighbour India

PLA forces conduct drill in Tibet: experts call it a warning to China’s neighbour India
Beijing-based military expert Zhou Chenming said the PLA’s Western Theatre Command, which oversees the borders with India, had increased grain storage in frontline observation posts along the LAC for the winter.

“Enough food, water and other supplies to feed the troops for up to four months should be delivered to troops stations in the mountains as traffic will be cut from November,” Zhou said.
“The first priority of the PLA soldiers is to learn how to survive on their own during the winter.”
 

jward

passin' thru
China hasn't pulled back forces it mobilised across India's eastern borders
SECTIONS
China hasn't pulled back forces it mobilised across India's eastern borders
By
Manu Pubby
, ET BureauLast Updated: Oct 20, 2021, 06:47 AM IST
Eastern Army Commander Lt Gen Manoj Pande said there has been some increase in the training activity of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) of China in depth areas across the LAC over the past year.
eastern-ladakh.jpg
APHe said troops have been rehearsing to respond to various contingencies that may arise.
China has not pulled back reserve formations that it had mobilised across India's eastern border as well after tensions arose in Ladakh last year and has been focusing its training on integrated joint operations, a senior Army official said on Tuesday, sharing concern that the so-called model villages being developed by China along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) may have a military role in addition to civilian use.

Eastern Army Commander Lt Gen Manoj Pande said there has been some increase in the training activity of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) of China in depth areas across the LAC over the past year.

"The annual training exercise that the PLA carries out, there has been some increase in the level of activity but in the depth areas. Secondly, some of the reserve formations of the PLA that were mobilised continue to remain in their training areas but that again is in their operational depth," Pande said, adding that there has been an increase in the scale and duration of PLA exercises as well.

While there has been no significant increase in Indian deployments along the border, India's focus has been on enhancing surveillance by upgrading technology and increasing the mobility of troops, he said.

"We have taken a number of measures, the foremost being enhancing our surveillance both close to the LAC as well as in depth areas. We are synergising efforts of all surveillance resources from the strategic level that includes satellite images to the tactical level with soldiers deployed on the LAC," said Pande.

He said troops have been rehearsing to respond to various contingencies that may arise.

Noting the rise of "model" villages being developed by China close to the LAC, the Army commander said there are concerns that they could have a military role as well. "As per their strategy they have developed model villages along the border. We are concerned on how they can have a dual use purpose," he said.
 

jward

passin' thru
India, China border emerging as a bigger flashpoint than Taiwan for a short, sharp war; all bets are off

India has been forced to respond. It has matched Chinese force posture and deployments along the high Himalayas but so far, despite some success, it has been unable to get China to withdraw its massive deployment of troops and equipment


Sreemoy Talukdar October 28, 2021 17:30:13 IST

India, China border emerging as a bigger flashpoint than Taiwan for a short, sharp war; all bets are off

File image of Eastern Ladakh. PTI


On 20 October, Chinese soldiers invaded an unsuspecting India over multiple points across the McMahon Line. They also intruded into Ladakh, starting a brief, devastating war. That was in 1962. Nearly six decades have passed. Both countries have managed to avoid a repetition. The boundary dispute hasn’t been solved, yet India and China have been able to get along due to a series of agreements and mechanisms aimed at managing the border, allowing the bilateral relationship to flourish.

There have been occasional conflicts and stand-offs, but the mechanisms in place have largely held. Since the pandemic, however, it is evident that those protocols, agreements and arrangements along the LAC are not working, and both countries need a new modus vivendi. There has been a distinct hardening of position on China’s part as it tries to match territorial control with its boundary claims, and in so doing it has taken a series of audacious, unilateral actions since April 2020, violating at least four agreements that served the purpose of maintaining peace and tranquility along the border.
India has been forced to respond. It has matched Chinese force posture and deployments along the high Himalayas but so far, despite some success, it has been unable to get China to withdraw its massive deployment of troops and equipment from along the border or walk back from the areas where the PLA intruders remain encroached.

India’s main leverage vis-a-vis China (or what New Delhi considers as its chief leverage) — restoration of normalcy in bilateral ties — isn’t working. China has so far given the impression that it is not ready to give up its territorial gains in lieu of restoring normalcy. What’s more, recent developments suggest not only is China unwilling to restore the pre-April 2020 status quo, it appears ready to up the ante. Beijing is taking a series of operational and tactical steps that may only result in further intensifying of tension along the LAC in both the western and eastern sectors, and even a short, sharp conflict to “settle” the differences.
The conclusion is unnerving, but it cannot be ruled out.
On Wednesday, India responded to China’s adoption of a new ‘border law’ that seeks to formalise Beijing’s territorial gains along its border with both India and Bhutan.

According to reports that cite Chinese State media Xinhua as the source, China’s new law for the “protection and exploitation of the country’s land border areas” passed by the rubber stamp National People’s Congress on 23 October, declares that “the sovereignty and territorial integrity of… China are sacred and inviolable”, and the State has been asked to “take measures to safeguard territorial integrity and land boundaries and guard against and combat any act that undermines [these]”.
Though not aimed specifically at India, the text of the legislature is incendiary and provocative, and it comes flush in the middle of an ongoing 17-month standoff between two countries that share a 3488-kilometre border. It is likely that the law will have a bearing on the current India-China border negotiations — an indication that didn’t escape New Delhi.
India responded by saying that it is “concerned” with the developments, and the statement made by MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi, usually a reticent speaker very guarded with words, betrays both a sense of defiance and an apprehension that China is up to some new mischief.

India said it expects that “China will avoid undertaking action under the pretext of this law which could unilaterally alter the situation in the India-China border areas” and clarified that “such unilateral move will have no bearing on the arrangements that both sides have already reached earlier, whether it is on the Boundary Question or for maintaining peace and tranquillity along the LAC in India-China Border areas.”
India also made it clear “that the passage of this new law does not in our view confer any legitimacy to the so-called China Pakistan ‘Boundary Agreement’ of 1963 which Government of India has consistently maintained is an illegal and invalid agreement” and noted that the law “has provisions to carry out reorganisation of districts in the border areas.”
The first thing to note about India’s response is the tough language that indicates questions about China’s intent — a result of the complete breakdown of trust and communication mechanism between both sides. Second, India is apprehensive that China may use provisions of the law to legalise its illegal land-grab along the LAC and present India with a set of new bottom lines during negotiations.

Third, in India’s mention of ‘reorganisation of border districts’ as provisions of the law lies the anxiety that China may pursue its age-old tactic of using civilian settlers along the border to reinforce boundary claims with even greater vigour and legislative sanction. Fourth, the reference to 1963 Pakistan-China boundary agreement indicates India contests the “finality” of Chinese claim on any part of Kashmir that remains under Chinese control even if Beijing tries to formalise such a claim through legislative fiat. Finally, a sense of foreboding permeates India’s statement — a pointer perhaps to the trajectory of bilateral ties and steady ratcheting up of tension by China through unilateral actions.
India’s worries are not misplaced. Article 22 of China’s border law states that PLA “shall carry out border duties” including “organising drills” and “resolutely prevent, stop and combat invasion, encroachment, provocation and other acts”. Taken along with the declaration that China’s territory and sovereignty are “inviolable”, it suggests while China’s territories are inviolable, China is free to violate the territories of other States and any pushback will be deemed as “provocation”, that should be “resolutely prevented”, if needed through “combat.” China is simply saying that “my territory is mine, but yours is a matter of negotiation”.

Alongside, the law also states that the state shall “take measures to strengthen border defence, support economic and social development as well as opening-up in border areas, improve public services and infrastructure in such areas, encourage and support people’s life and work there…”
Analysts point out that with China, ‘de jure’ always follows ‘de facto’, so the definitive push for civilian settlement and administrative measures to improve their livelihood — what the law calls for — is aimed at creating ‘facts on the ground’ that will make it even harder for India to achieve its objective of pre-April 2020 status quo. We already know through Lt Gen Manoj Pande, Commanding-in-Chief of the Eastern Command that takes care of the borders from Sikkim to Arunachal Pradesh, that China is constructing ‘dual use’ villages along the border.

There is more. A report in Nikkei Asia points out that under the law — passed by China’s top legislative body and scheduled to be operative from 1 January, 2022 — “the People’s Armed Police Force and the Public Security Bureau, which are in charge of maintaining public order in China, can be mobilised to guard borders in addition to the People’s Liberation Army” implying greater streamlining of response in case of a border conflict.
In addition, the report says “a provision on the protection of water resources is believed to have been made with India in mind” in terms of controlling transboundary rivers and lakes, and the report adds that China is ”flirting with the possibility of limiting the volume of the water of river Brahmaputra during conflicts, citing ‘protection and reasonable use’ as stipulated in the law.”
Experts question the veracity of claim since over 70 percent of the river’s catchment area falls in India, still it is hard to escape the indication that China is spoiling for a fight.

We should also see the promulgation of this new law by China in the backdrop of recent developments. China seems to be taking a series of operational and tactical measures to strengthen its revanchist claims along the land border with India.
For instance, China is ramping up the scale, duration, intensity and frequency of its military drills. A series of Indian media reports point to an intensification of tension along the LAC in Arunachal Pradesh. Quoting Lt Gen Pande, the chief of Army’s Eastern Command, The Times of India reports that many PLA “reserve formations” continue to remain deployed in ‘depth areas’ across the 1,346-kilometre eastern sector and “there has also been an increase in the scale and duration of PLA exercises, with a focus on integrated joint operations, this year.
But these exercises are taking place in their traditional training areas in the depth.” The report also points to increasing troop presence and infrastructure activity in areas such as Asapila in Arunachal Pradesh.
Hindustan Times quotes from an “activity matrix” prepared by the Indian Army to report PLA’s increased activities in sectors such as Lungro La, Zimithang and Bum La in Arunachal Pradesh. According to the report, the PLA carried out 90 patrols in the Lungro La area from January 2020 to October 2021 compared to about 40 between January 2018 and December 2019.
There has been a corresponding rise in PLA’s area domination patrols and a sharp jump in visits by senior PLA officers, mainly to the Lungro La area north of Tawang — “up from 10 visits in the two years before the Ladakh border row erupted to 40 in 2020-21 (till September).”

Similar increase in activities has also been noted by the Indian Army in Zimithang and Bum La sectors where Indian surveillance has “picked up increased vehicular movement due to infrastructure development activities and a large number of excavators and bulldozers to keep road axes open.”
Indian Express reports that in Zimithang sector, the area domination patrols (ADPs) have gone up from “12 in 2018 to 16 in 2019, 22 in 2020 and 24 till September this year. In Lungro La, this jump has been the most marked. Till September, the PLA has held 25 ADPs in the area, going up from 10 last year, compared to four and six in 2019 and 2018, respectively.”
This is a clear indication that China is hardening its force posture and taking incremental coercive steps to intimidate India. In a past couple of months, there have been several reports of China stepping up night drills and deploying more new-generation equipment close to Indian border.

China’s Xinjiang Military Division has been rotating its large field formations deployed along the LAC in Ladakh since earlier this year, indicating that the “Chinese have no intention as yet of de-inducting.”
More recently, China has released videos of PLA conducting high-altitude drills in Tibet that involves fighter jets dropping sorties, troops bringing down drones and ground force howitzers making precision strikes, which, according to Chinese media, are aimed as a “warning to India.”
China is also deploying more than 100 long-range rocket launchers along the border to counter India’s deployment of M777 ultra-light howitzers and running tank drills. China relies on psychological warfare to subdue its adversary to ‘win without fighting’ but the resultant intensification of tension results in a dangerous security spiral.
Alongside, there is an increase in pinprick incursions by the PLA combined with upping of rhetoric. For instance, China called vice president Venkaiah Naidu’s recent Arunachal Pradesh visit “provocative”, triggering an acerbic response from India.

We must also note tactical developments that include Chinese claims of striking an MoU with Bhutan on boundary talks to “break deadlock caused by India”. This is aimed at unsettling India and bringing New Delhi under more pressure because China’s border negotiations with Bhutan are central to India’s national security, specifically because it brings India’s vulnerability over the Siliguri Corridor into play.
It is also worth noting, as Tibetologist and China expert Claude Arpi pointed out in his column for News18, that China is planning to “extend the Aksai Chin road to the north of Arunachal Pradesh bringing far greater mobility for the troops, while linking the Ladakh and the Sikkim/Arunachal front.”

Arpi adds that “by reaching north of the McMahon Line, the new G219 extension will completely change the strategic stakes in the region. India has no choice but to take measures to develop this remote area…”
All hands point towards an increasing possibility of a conflict that may involve kinetic action below the nuclear threshold. Apart from the fact that India must be ready for such an eventuality — and all indications are that India is alert to the danger — the question is why is China hardening its coercive posture vis-à-vis India?
According to Gautam Bambawale, former Indian ambassador to China, in Economic Times, “One of the necessary conditions for China to have undertaken her military aggression in eastern Ladakh was an asymmetry of power between the two nations. China’s economy is now five times that of India’s and her military and technological power is also more than ours. This made Beijing confident she could attempt military coercion on our borders.”
This realist logic informs much of the India-China dynamic.
As the more powerful actor in Asia and aspiring global hegemon, China is using all tools in its box to keep India unsettled and slow its rise. As analyst Yun Sun of Stimson Center had written in War on the Rocks, “Recognising India’s historical influence in South Asia, its capability as a regional power, and its global potential, China’s policy toward India has largely followed a pattern of balancing India in South Asia…”
Given India’s population size, willingness to carry out tough reforms and the upward curve of its economic growth — at some point of time in the future India will garner enough financial strength to convert its economic prowess into greater military muscle. Once that happens, India’s ability to push back against Chinese coercion and even engage in a security competition with Beijing will become greater.

In line with realist logic and China’s hierarchical view of Asia, as the superior military and economic power China is keen to trap the asymmetry between the two sides, even if it comes at the cost of disruption in bilateral ties.
In his essay in Foreign Affairs on US-China great-power rivalry, political scientist John J Mearsheimer writes, “Convincing adversaries that they cannot achieve quick and decisive wins deters wars.”
This holds useful lesson for India in the context of the boundary standoff. If India is able to convince China that a “short, sharp war” will likely be a misadventure instead of helping China achieve its objective, the current spiral in ties may be arrested.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
From Bloomberg Balance of Power October 30 2021

Delivered to my email inbox

India Deploys U.S. Weapons to Fortify Disputed Border With China
India has deployed recently acquired U.S.-made weaponry along its border with China, part of a new offensive force to bolster its capabilities as the countries remain deadlocked over disputed territory in the Himalayas, Sudhi Ranjan Sen reports.

1635612140825.png
 

Zagdid

Veteran Member
China needs a 'pick-up' scrimmage game before going after Taiwan. India is thinking more like this would be classic rivalry game. China's 'stuff' has never been proven in warfare. China's last test saw lowly Vietnam sending them packing.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
China To Build Special Forces Base In Tajikistan On Afghan Border
BY TYLER DURDEN
ZERO HEDGE
SATURDAY, OCT 30, 2021 - 08:45 AM

Amid persisting rumors that China is eyeing a future military presence at abandoned American bases inside Afghanistan, the neighboring country of Tajikistan has confirmed China has been approved to construct a special forces base on the Tajik-Afghan border.

The Chinese military outpost will reportedly be located in the eastern Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Province in the Pamir mountains, coming at a moment of heightened border security as thousands of Afghans have in recent months sought to flee hardline Taliban rule.


File image: Tajik and Chinese troops during joint drills.


However, while it's Chinese funded, a Tajik parliament spokesman said the base will host a special forces unit of the national police, and rejected that Chinese troops would be directly deployed there. But the question of joint training operations wasn't ruled out.

However, according to US media arm RFERL, China is being allowed to expand its military footprint elsewhere in the central Asian country:

In a separate development, the Tajik government has offered to transfer full control of a preexisting Chinese military base in the country to Beijing and waive any future rent in exchange for military aid from China, according to a communique sent from the Chinese Embassy in Dushanbe to Tajikistan’s Foreign Ministry and seen by RFE/RL’s Tajik Service.
Additionally the publication concludes, "The two developments paint a picture of a growing Chinese military footprint in the Central Asian country as Beijing and its neighbors in the region turn their attention toward an increasingly tenuous security situation in Afghanistan since the Taliban's mid-August takeover."

RFERL quotes a geopolitical analyst at London's Royal United Services Institute, Raffaello Pantucci, to say of the new special forces base: "This decision to build such a facility is one of only a few known examples for China around the world."



Underscoring that China is being greenlighted to build more outposts in Tajikistan after constructing the new base, an official of Tajik parliament’s lower house, Tolibkhon Azimzoda, confirmed the facility will be under direct command of Tajikistan’s Ministry of Internal Affairs, which in turn will allow China to be exempt from all customs duties for machinery and equipment.

Despite the Tajik government currently downplaying that Chinese forces would be deployed on the border at the new base, it's highly likely that at the very least there will be training deployments there in support of local Tajik security forces. Interestingly, this comes at a time that central Asian countries are also allowing an increased Russian presence amid the ongoing security breakdown in nearby Afghanistan.

China To Build Special Forces Base In Tajikistan On Afghan Border | ZeroHedge
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
China To Build Special Forces Base In Tajikistan On Afghan Border
BY TYLER DURDEN
ZERO HEDGE
SATURDAY, OCT 30, 2021 - 08:45 AM

Amid persisting rumors that China is eyeing a future military presence at abandoned American bases inside Afghanistan, the neighboring country of Tajikistan has confirmed China has been approved to construct a special forces base on the Tajik-Afghan border.

The Chinese military outpost will reportedly be located in the eastern Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Province in the Pamir mountains, coming at a moment of heightened border security as thousands of Afghans have in recent months sought to flee hardline Taliban rule.


File image: Tajik and Chinese troops during joint drills.


However, while it's Chinese funded, a Tajik parliament spokesman said the base will host a special forces unit of the national police, and rejected that Chinese troops would be directly deployed there. But the question of joint training operations wasn't ruled out.

However, according to US media arm RFERL, China is being allowed to expand its military footprint elsewhere in the central Asian country:


Additionally the publication concludes, "The two developments paint a picture of a growing Chinese military footprint in the Central Asian country as Beijing and its neighbors in the region turn their attention toward an increasingly tenuous security situation in Afghanistan since the Taliban's mid-August takeover."

RFERL quotes a geopolitical analyst at London's Royal United Services Institute, Raffaello Pantucci, to say of the new special forces base: "This decision to build such a facility is one of only a few known examples for China around the world."



Underscoring that China is being greenlighted to build more outposts in Tajikistan after constructing the new base, an official of Tajik parliament’s lower house, Tolibkhon Azimzoda, confirmed the facility will be under direct command of Tajikistan’s Ministry of Internal Affairs, which in turn will allow China to be exempt from all customs duties for machinery and equipment.

Despite the Tajik government currently downplaying that Chinese forces would be deployed on the border at the new base, it's highly likely that at the very least there will be training deployments there in support of local Tajik security forces. Interestingly, this comes at a time that central Asian countries are also allowing an increased Russian presence amid the ongoing security breakdown in nearby Afghanistan.

China To Build Special Forces Base In Tajikistan On Afghan Border | ZeroHedge
A Chinese base in Tajikistan is an end run around the Himalayas.
 

jward

passin' thru
Amid border row with India, China says military preparing for ‘next stage’
By

4-5 minutes


The Chinese military has conducted “major operations related to border defence” and strengthened training under combat conditions to build a modern armed force, the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC) has said in a key resolution released on Tuesday.
Watch: With China on mind, army set to get firepower boost with more M777 guns

The Indian Army is set to scale up its capabilities with more M777 ultra-light howitzers that can be swiftly deployed and redeployed in mountains, amid the ongoing border row with China in Ladakh, people familiar with the developments said on Sunday. India ordered 145 howitzers from the US for $750 million in November 2016. “The army will receive 56...
The resolution, only the third such one to be adopted in 100 years, on the CPC’s “achievements and historical experiences” also admitted that the party’s leadership over the military was “obviously lacking” for a period of time but has “made a fundamental turn for the better”.
The resolution was passed at the end of a four-day, closed-door meeting of the CPC’s central committee held in Beijing last week.

In what could be interpreted as a message to adversaries, the resolution said: “Devoting intense focus to combat effectiveness as the sole criterion that matters most and to their fundamental purpose of being able to fight and win, the people’s armed forces have strengthened their strategic forces and new-domain forces with new combat capabilities, and they have improved command systems and capacity for joint operations.”
Defence mobilisation has been improved and “greater unity” has been cultivated between the military and the government and between the military and civilians, it said.
The strong support for the People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) transformation in the key document comes in the backdrop of the ongoing standoff with the Indian military along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh.
The document didn’t mention India but gave an indication of the PLA’s preparation for wars along its land and maritime borders.
“They (the military) have conducted major operations related to border defence, protecting China’s maritime rights, countering terrorism and maintaining stability, disaster rescue and relief, fighting Covid-19, peacekeeping and escort services, humanitarian assistance, and international military cooperation,” the document said.
“They have worked hard to address ‘peacetime ills’, vigorously strengthened training under combat conditions, and built strong, well-structured, and modern border defence, coastal defence, and air defence systems,” it added.
China currently has land border disputes with India and Bhutan and maritime disputes with several neighbours over conflicting claims in the South China Sea and with Japan in the East China Sea.

Troop training and battle preparedness have been bolstered across the board, the document said, adding that the military has accelerated efforts to modernise “…military theory, organisation, personnel, and weaponry and equipment and to integrate mechanisation with the application of information and smart technologies within the military”.
The CPC under the presidency of Xi Jinping, who is also chairperson of the Central Military Commission (CMC), has reversed the trend of the CPC’s weakening control of China’s vast armed forces, the resolution indicated.
“For a period of time, the party’s leadership over the military was obviously lacking. If this problem had not been completely solved, it would not only have diminished the military’s combat capacity, but also undermined the key political principle that the party commands the gun.”

The resolution named four top generals - Guo Boxiong, Xu Caihou, Fang Fenghui, and Zhang Yang - who have been punished for corruption during Xi’s ongoing reign.
They were “…thoroughly investigated and punished, and their negative influence was completely eliminated. With this, the political environment in the people’s armed forces has made a fundamental turn for the better”.
“…the people’s military has been through an all-around revolutionary restructuring under the firm leadership of the party in preparation for the next stage, while our defence capabilities have grown in step with our economic strength.”
 

jward

passin' thru
China Builds Bridge Across Ladakh's Pangong Lake That Was Key Flashpoint
The bridge, which is being constructed across a part of Pangong lake that falls within Chinese territory, connects both banks of the lake

All IndiaReported by Vishnu Som, Edited by Debanish AchomUpdated: January 03, 2022 5:41 pm IST
China Builds Bridge Across Ladakh's Pangong Lake That Was Key Flashpoint

A Chinese bridge has come up across Pangong lake in eastern Ladakh


New Delhi:
Satellite imagery accessed by geo-intelligence expert Damien Symon indicates that China may be constructing a bridge across Pangong lake in eastern Ladakh.

The bridge, which is being constructed across a part of the lake that falls within Chinese territory, connects both banks of the lake and gives China the ability of quickly move soldiers and heavy weaponry.

The tweet by Mr Symon shows the bridge almost complete across a narrow part of the lake.

Media reports of #PangongTso allege a new bridge is under construction connecting the north & south bank of the lake, in turn enhancing road connectivity for #China's troops in the area, GEOINT of the area identifies the location & progress of the alleged structure https://t.co/b9budT3DZZpic.twitter.com/IdBl5rkDhR
— Damien Symon (@detresfa_) January 3, 2022
Last year, Indian soldiers had moved atop the key Kailash range on the south bank of Pangong lake, thereby gaining an early edge over Chinese forces in the area.

With the completion of this bridge, China will have multiple routes to induct additional soldiers into the contentious area which saw a face-off between soldiers of both sides, until Beijing and New Delhi decided to disengage from the area.

Since 2020, more than 50,000 troops from India and China have been deployed in eastern Ladakh from the Depsang plains to the north and to the Demchok area further south.

In June 2020, 20 Indian soldiers were killed in action in a violent faceoff in the Galwan river area. China says four of their soldiers were killed, while India maintains China suffered over 40 casualties.

Over a year later, in July last year, India and China agreed to mutually withdraw 2 km from the clash site. This followed talks between National Security Adviser Ajit Doval and China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi.


1641269779355.png


Army sources have also told NDTV that a new video from an official Chinese media handle on twitter, which shows a Chinese flag being unfurled in Galwan valley, does not violate the demilitarised zone between the two countries in the area.

 

OldArcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Watch for China to go after India, the same time they attempt to take Taiwan. If they’re successful in both endeavors, they’ll finally go for Siberia. Like us, they have many, many contingency plans ready to go…

OA
 

jward

passin' thru
I thought there was a time, and a number of voices, in the recent past who thought "this" would be what popped off first.
I dunno, need a bigger poster board here to keep track of all the hot spots, and their interconnectedness. .. . It is interesting, in a strictly clinical, intellectually engaging exercise front row seat to history kinda way.

..in the ole human heart breaking at the coming toll kinda way, it is breathtakingly disturbing : (

Watch for China to go after India, the same time they attempt to take Taiwan. If they’re successful in both endeavors, they’ll finally go for Siberia. Like us, they have many, many contingency plans ready to go…

OA
 

mecoastie

Veteran Member
I thought there was a time, and a number of voices, in the recent past who thought "this" would be what popped off first.
I dunno, need a bigger poster board here to keep track of all the hot spots, and their interconnectedness. .. . It is interesting, in a strictly clinical, intellectually engaging exercise front row seat to history kinda way.

..in the ole human heart breaking at the coming toll kinda way, it is breathtakingly disturbing : (

This is the one I feel is most likely to go nuclear. China pushes hard at India and India launches.
 

jward

passin' thru
Uhoh. Bingo card all outta squares, and here's yet another hopeful hotspot ;/









Indo-Pacific News - Watching the CCP-China Threat
@IndoPac_Info

54m

#China encroaching along #Nepal border A Nepalese govt report leaked to the BBC accuses China of encroaching into Nepal along their shared border. The report was commissioned last September following claims that China had trespassed in the Humla district. https://bbc.com/news/world-asi
View: https://twitter.com/IndoPac_Info/status/1490896128350429188?s=20&t=2y5eyz_yqxSQK4JL3wkdQA
 

jward

passin' thru
Tensions been picking up in this sector lately, too. . .

China provokes India again, Chinese aircraft flies close to LAC in Ladakh
A Chinese aircraft came very close to the Indian positions right on the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh. India has taken up the matter with the Chinese army.

Manjeet Negi
Manjeet Negi
New DelhiJuly 8, 2022UPDATED: July 8, 2022 14:35 IST


A Chinese aircraft flew close to Indian positions on the LAC in eastern Ladakh (File photo)


A Chinese aircraft came very close to Indian positions right on the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh in the last week of June. The Indian Air Force (IAF) reacted quickly and activated its assets to tackle any possible misadventure, top sources in the government told India Today.


This was one of the first incidents of a possible air space violation in the last few months by the Chinese side in the eastern Ladakh sector, they said.
The Chinese aircraft was picked up by an IAF radar deployed in the border area, the sources said. The incident took place at a time when the Chinese Air Force is holding a major exercise in areas controlled by it near eastern Ladakh, and has used air defence weapons in a major way during the drills.
The matter was taken up by the Indian side, as per the established norms, with the Chinese and they were asked to prevent any such incident in future, the sources said. Since then, the Chinese have not done any such thing in the border areas with India.
The Indian side has taken strong measures in the eastern Ladakh sector to deter any possible misadventure by the Chinese, like what they did in 2020.


Live TV
--- ENDS ---
READ | Two years of Galwan: India-China border standoff is now a battle for agility
ALSO READ | US General calls Chinese infrastructure near India border in Ladakh 'alarming'

 
Top