Top News
|India Strategic Greets President Emmanuel Macron and the People of France on their National Day 14 of July | Viva la France | Qatar mourns passing away of former Emir Shaikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani. He was 74 | Australia to supply Uranium to power Indian Reactors after Modi, Albanese announce agreements on Defence and Nuclear Energy | Modi, New Zealand PM Christopher Luxon elevate ties to Strategic Partnership | 12 Pacts include cooperation in Indo-Pacific and Logistics Support to Naval Ships | Bilateral trade to double to about US $ 4 billion by 2030 | Indian Navy Commissions 6th Nilgiri class Stealth Frigate INS Mahendragiri | Future Wars will use AI but will be won by Trained Soldiers and Robust Military Power, says Rajnath Singh | Akashvani, the popular state-run All India Radio, is 90 | China recovers Reusable Rocket, as visualised in the 1962 James Bond film Dr No | US Elon Musk’s SpaceX was the First to do so, and China follows as the Second | Modi in Indonesia, and then Australia and New Zealand to strengthen Indo-Pacific partnerships | Defence, Minerals, AI top agenda | Jaishankar commends Qatar’s role in Iran-US Peace Talks | India building Semiconductors and Electronics clusters, in collaboration with Japanese and other companies: PM Modi | China conducts rare Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile Test, the first since 1980 | India Joins UN Global Dialogue on Artificial Intelligence in Geneva July 6-7 | LNG supplies resume through Strait of Hormuz after US, Iran Ceasefire | 15 of 20 Indian Fertiliser ships stuck in Hormuz set sail | India sourced Fuel from 40 countries during the Hormuz closure, says Modi | Modi signing Agreements with Australia to buy Uranium and Minerals | India creates 900 million Unique Health IDs towards Digital health ecosystem | India to double Gas buys from US from existing 2.2 million tonnes of LPG | Trump says Iran’s Nuclear Programme Obliterated in US bombings | Egypt inaugurates its new 22-acre Defence HQ, shaped as Octagon | US Celebrates 250 Years of Democracy, History and Power | India Strategic Greets All American Friends on this Blessed Occassion🙏😇🎉♥️💫 | India, Japan to boost bilateral trade from the existing $25b | Japan interested in utilising ISRO rockets for Space launches | Shipbuilding major for Japan or frigates Air Land and Naval Specific issues will cone on the table | J projects look at Notth East Think Tank exchanges | Semiconductor being developed in Assam with Japan Enhancing bilateral cooperation | Imp of quad Of co-op in info pacific | General Dhiraj Seth Took Over as India’s 31st Army chief on June 30 | He succeeds Gen Upendra Dwivedi who Retired after 40 Years of service | Gen Seth was commissioned into the Armoured Corps in 1986 | Gen Seth has commanded Strike formations and was also GOC of the important Delhi Area | India to Warmly Welcome Japanese PM Sanae Takaichi July 1-3 for Annual Summit | India sends Portable Field Hospital to Venezuela along with Doctors and Medicines | 41 Indian Army Para Field personnel sent under Op Amistad, or Friendship | Two IAF Boeing C 17 fly 15,000 km with Medics and Equipment to the faraway Friends | Iran reiterates exclusive right to control Strait of Hormuz | Iran also warned Safe Passage cannot be assured for Ships sailing away from its designated channels | Six Arab Gulf States call for Restoration of Freedom of Navigation in the strategic Strait | Iran warns: “Gulf States’ strategic survival at Mercy of Tehran’s Tolerance” | India, Switzerland to deepen Science and Tech Ties | Starmer resigns as UK Prime Minister amid mounting Labour Party pressure | US, Iran War Ends with a Binding Commitment from Iran to Never Produce Nuclear Weapons | Oil Starts Flowing Freely Through Strait of Hormuz | US and Iran both Allow Movement of Oil Tanker’s | ONGC to Invest $1.5 billion to Boost India’s Oil Storage by 33 % | Qatar Amir-gifted Boeing 747 is new US Air Force Presidential Jet | Meta and Reliance to set up a huge Global Digital Hub in Jamnagar | Modi, Trump meet warmly again, this time at G7 | Modi showers praise on Trump for his Middle East peace effort | Trump says We always had Tremendous Relationship with India | Trump praises Modi, jovially calling him ‘a killer’ for his negotiating skills at G7 | Modi said Freedom of Navigation in the Strait of Hormuz is A Must | Trump expressed condolences for the Indian sailors killed in US Navy attack in the Gulf | Trump said US and Iran will sign an MoU to end their war on Friday June 19 | All the G7 Leaders supported the Peace Effort | Modi, UAE President Shaikh Mohammed agree to work together on Middle East Peace, Security and Stability | Piyush Goyal discusses expanding partnership with Prince Albert II of Monaco
FOREIGN AFFAIRSHOMELAND SECURITY

Chinese shadow looms over India

By Sarosh Bana

Mumbai. The latest of a series of unprovoked transgressions of the LAC [Line of Actual Control] by Chinese troops on 9 December sparked a furore in Parliament, forcing the government to get Defence Minister Rajnath Singh to make a statement in both the Houses on this crucial issue.

In his brief statement, the Minister said: “On 9 December 2022, PLA troops tried to transgress the LAC in Yangtse area of Tawang Sector [in Arunachal Pradesh] and unilaterally change the status quo. The Chinese attempt was contested by our troops in a firm and resolute manner. The ensuing face-off led to a physical scuffle in which the Indian Army bravely prevented the PLA [People’s Liberation Army] from transgressing into our territory and compelled them to return to their posts. The scuffle led to injuries to a few personnel on both sides. I wish to share with this House that there are no fatalities or serious casualties on our side.”

Pointing out that the timely intervention of Indian military commanders caused the PLA soldiers to return to their locations, Rajnath Singh maintained, without elaborating: “As a follow-up of the incident, local Commander in the area held a Flag Meeting with his counterpart on 11 December 2022 to discuss the issue in accordance with established mechanisms. The Chinese side was asked to refrain from such actions and maintain peace and tranquillity along the border. The issue has also been taken up with the Chinese side through diplomatic channels.”

Refusing to take any questions on his statement, the Minister took his seat after mentioning: “I would like to assure this House that our forces are committed to protecting our territorial integrity and will continue to thwart any attempt made on it. I am confident that this entire House will stand united in supporting our soldiers in their brave effort.”

As fleeting as the clash was, soldiers were wounded on both the sides, with more PLA troops estimated to have been injured than the 20 on the Indian side, at least six of whom needed to be airlifted to Guwahati, in the adjoining state of Assam, for treatment. It was also the first physical combat between the two sides since the deadly clash in the Galwan Valley in eastern Ladakh in June 2020 that took a toll of 20 Indian jawans.

It is possible that the PLA’s was a tactical retreat and this scuffle was part of a wider design that may unfold in the days to come. The timing for the intrusion too proved awkward for India, which, after assuming the year-long Presidentship of G-20 on 1 December, was hosting G-20 Development Working Group (DWG) meetings in Mumbai from 13 to 16 December. The 19 G20 member-states include China and delegations from these countries are attending 215 meetings being hosted by the government across 56 cities, including those in all the seven northeastern states, including Arunachal.

A Chinese delegate, Hanwen Tang, was quoted as remarking that it had been for him “a great experience to enjoy Indian hospitality”, and that G20 provided “a great platform for India and China to discuss the important issues that concern the whole world”.

China had similarly embarrassed India internationally when its troops had waded into the Demchok and Chumar areas of the border Union Territory of Ladakh exactly when Chinese President Xi Jinping was meeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi at Ahmedabad in 2014.

Sixteen commander-level talks held hitherto between the two sides have not led to any permanent resolution, after over 5,000 PLA troops had breached the LAC in May 2020 to clash with Indian soldiers and overrun vast tracts of the eastern sector of Ladakh. In a more violent clash in the area a month later, 20 Indian jawans had been slain.

The 16th round of talks was held on 17 July and there is yet no indication of the next round of talks, even as China opens additional flanks of hostility along the border with the Himalayan states of Uttarakhand, Sikkim and Arunachal. India fears China’s intrusions are what it views as “salami slicing,” whereby Beijing seeks to scythe through Indian territory with the intent of redrawing the LAC.

India has reason to fear a progressive deterioration in its security environment, as Xi Jinping consolidates his political standing following his ascendance to a historic third five-year term as China’s President at the conclusion of the 20th congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) on 23 October.

The Chinese have been stung ever since Yangtse was captured by the Indian Army in response to the PLA intrusion into Sumdorong Chu in 1987-88. This area had also seen bloody conflict in the 1962 Sino-India war.

Yangtse has thus become one of some 25 areas along the LAC disputed by China and tension had been building up there since October, when Indian Army pickets with Hand-Held Thermal Imagers (HHTIs) noticed a sharp increase in PLA deployments under cover of darkness and heavy fog. Indian Commanders sent SITREPs (military situation reports) to Brigade headquarters asking for Quick Response Teams (QRTs) to buttress their ranks.

The PLA intruders were caught unawares when the Indian detachment they felt they would be outnumbering by a 6:1 superiority were reinforced by the QRTs that had till then remained out of sight. As the PLA tried to storm the outpost, the Indian forces formed a human chain round it. This resulted in hand-to-hand scuffles and soon both the sides started pelting each other with stones and beating each other with sticks. There were loud cheers and whooping from the Indian jawans when the PLA retreated.

There is an agreement between the two sides not to arm their soldiers with weapons within 2 km of the birder. However, Chinese started used barbed wire clubs to hit the Indian soldiers in earlier clashes, and now the Indian soldiers too carry longer sticks – lathis, they use commonly in villages to protect cows from animals – with barbed wire too.

Ever since it annexed Tibet in 1950, China extended itself to India’s frontiers and has historically claimed the entire 83,743-km² Arunachal Pradesh. In January 2021, Chinese workers backed by PLA troops crossed into the state to construct a village along the border separating it from Tibet. Acknowledging the move, the Ministry of External Affairs viewed the violation as part of China’s strategy to build civilian settlements in disputed frontier areas in an effort to buttress its claims to the region. Beijing, however, maintained that this encroachment was “beyond reproach” because it has “never recognised” Arunachal, which it calls Zangnan, or South Tibet.

Tibet had controlled present-day Tawang district until 1914, when it made a pact with British India delineating a common boundary that came to be known as the McMahon Line, named for the chief British negotiator, Sir Henry McMahon. China, however, refused to sign this principal agreement on the status and boundaries of Tibet as it considered Tibet subordinate to China and thus not empowered to enter into such treaties.

As with other neighbours, Beijing stays aggressive, rather than conceding the demands of Tibetans to rule themselves.

(Sarosh Bana is Executive Editor of Business India in Mumbai, Regional Editor, Indo-Pacific Region, of Germany’s Naval Forces, and India Correspondent of Sydney-based cyber security journal, Asia Pacific Security Magazine (APSM). He concentrates on Defence & Security, Cyber Security, International Affairs, Policy, Strategy, Space, Power & Energy, and Environment & Conservation.)

Related Articles

Back to top button