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india's plans for China war revealed: start 2016-2018

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How China Will Fight Future Border Wars

Should a limited but high-intensity border conflict break out between China and India over the next five years, how exactly will the battles be fought? And where? The most likely answers to these two questions came from none other than Beijing’s People’s Daily Online, which on November 15 last year, while commenting on the Indian Army’s China-centric future force modernisation-cum-expansion plans due for implementation in the 12th Defence Plan, stated: “In an era when precision-guided weapons are developing rapidly, everyone with common sense knows that concentrated troops could be eliminated easily”. Translated for the layman, it means that A) the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) will realise its tactical objectives on the ground by resorting to massed fire-assaults delivered by a numerically superior deployed force comprising tactical non-line-of-sight battlefield support missiles (NLOS-BSM) and long-range multi-barrel rocket launchers (MBRL) capable of firing rockets equipped with sensor-fuzed munitions (SGM), and B) such rocket artillery-based weapons would be employed in tactical areas that are ideally suited for deployment of such weapons, i.e. the flat, locational deserts around eastern Ladakh and the foothills opposite Uttarakhand State. And it is exactly in these areas that, for the second year in a row, the PLA Army and the PLA Air Force (PLAAF) last year conducted Brigade-level live-fire exercises on the foot of the snowcapped mountains on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau at an altitude of more than 5,000 metres. Though the exercises, dubbed as Integrated Joint Operations (IJO), were conducted under the command of the Tibet Military District, which comes under the Chengdu Military Region (MR), a few select field artillery and armoured formations belonging to the Lanzhou MR also took part in the combined arms exercises, which got underway last July and lasted till last October.

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Weapon systems deployed by the PLA for the very first time in the exercises included the NORINCO-built 300mm PHL-05 MBRLs, Type 90 122mm MBRLs, PLZ-07 122mm tracked self-propelled howitzers, Type 95 PGZ-95 self-propelled air-defence artillery systems, Type 96G main battle tanks, Type 86G tracked infantry combat vehicles, Type 704 weapons locating radars, FN-6 MANPADS, and Mi-17V-5 assault helicopters capable of transporting special operations detachments. PLAAF elements deployed this time at Shigatse air base between last August and November included six Su-27SKs and Su-30MK2s and three J-10 combat aircraft. Shigatse is now being upgraded into Tibet’s first all-weather air base capable of sustaining high-intensity offensive air sorties, and is now protected by the HQ-12/KS-1A MR-SAM air defence system and a combination of FN-6 MANPADS and SmartHunter low-probability-og-intercept radars. And in another first for the PLAAF, a detachment of four J-10 MRCAs from the Chengdu Military Region began a two week-long deployment at Shigatse starting January 21, during which tactical airspace dominance exercises were conducted in coordination with the PLAAF’s ground-based airspace surveillance radar stations deployed within the Tibet Military District.

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Also deployed for exercises were the PLA Army’s NLOS-BSMs, which have been stockpiled in both Xinjiang and Aksai Chin. To date, 13 tunnels dug into the mountains have been built at Xiadulla, 98km from the Karakoram mountain pass between Ladakh and the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, while another similar NLOS-BSM storage facility is located at Qizil Jilga, 40km off the LAC in eastern Ladakh near the Western Tibet highway. It is believed that the NLOS-BSMs located in these areas will be employed against the Indian Air Force’s existing air bases and Advanced Landing Grounds in both Jammu & Kashmir and Uttarakhand.

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NLOS-BSMs for the PLA Army have been developed two state-owned entities: China National Precision Machinery Import & Export Corp (CPMIEC), and Aerospace Long-March International Trade Co Ltd (ALIT). The latter’s latest product is the P-20, which has been exported to Pakistan, where it known as the Hatf-9/Nasr. Capable of striking targets between 70km and 270km, the all-weather capable M-20, with a Mach 3 cruise speed, comes armed with both a 200kg unitary high-explosive (HE) blast-fragmentation warhead for engaging high-value and time-sensitive targets, as well as a sub-kiloton yield tactical nuclear warhead. Two P-20s housed inside cannisters are mounted on an 8 x 8 transporter/erector/launcher (TEL). For navigation purposes, use is made of a ring laser gyro-based inertial navigation system (RLG-INS) coupled to a GPS receiver (for receiving high-accuracy navigational updates in secure PY-code from China’s ‘Beidou’ constellation of GPS satellites), and an infra-red sensor for terminal homing that gives the missile a CEP of less than 10 metres. CPMIEC’s 2-tonne B-611M missile is designed to attack supply lines, warehouses, ballistic/cruise missile launch sites, SAM batteries, command-and-control centres, air bases, road/railway transportation hubs, and area targets in urban surroundings. Armed with a 480kg HE warhead, the B-611M has 280km range. Up to two cannister-mounted B-611Ms can be carried by a wheeled TEL. Another NLOS-BSM from CPMIEC is the P-12, which made its public debut in November 2006. Up to two P-12s are carried in an enclosed compartment mounted on a 6 x 6 TEL. The P-12 has a range of 150km, and it comes armed with either a 300kg HE blast fragmentation warhead, or a cluster warhead containing 19 anti-armour sub-munitions. Both the B-611M and P-12 have a CEP of about 2 metres when using a RLG-INS coupled to a GPS receiver, plus an optronic sensor for terminal homing. CPMIEC’s latest NLOS-BSM offering is the vertically-launched joint attack rocket & missile (JARM) system, which can fire both the 280km-range BP-12A and the 200km-range SY-400 from a common launch platform. The JARM, which made its public debut in November 2010, makes use of combined GPS-RLG-INS navigation systems to achieve a CEP of 3 metres A typical JARM Battery comprises ten 8 x 8 TELs housing either 80 SY-400s or 20 BP-12As, or a combination of both.

These NLOS-BSMs and MBRL rockets armed with SFMs are all equipped with micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) developed by China’s Kotel Micro Technique Co Ltd. The set of components manufactured include up to three SAK01-03 acceleration switches that interactively operate with one another and provide pressure and acceleration data that are then fed into the flight-guidance system, FKZD-01 vibration sensor, and the INS-M100 MEMS, operating at an RS422 bit-rate, measuring only 120mm x 120mm x 120mm, and using GPS data for its targetting system. This same company also supplies optronic terminal guidance sensors for the Fei Teng (FT)-1 and FT-3 precision-guided bombs developed by the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology (CALT), and for the Leishi (LS)-6 extended-range glide bomb and the (Leiting) LT-2 laser-guided bomb developed by the Luoyang Optical-Electronic Technology Development Centre (LOEC). In addition to such components, China’s NLOS-BSMs also reportedly make use of MEMS-based guidance equipment supplied by Norwegian electronics manufacturer, Sensonor. One such piece of hardware, the STIM202 Butterfly gyro, is a 55-gram miniature module that replaces previous-generation fibre-optic, ring-laser and mechanical gyros. The STIM202 is based on single-crystal silicon technology, can be configured in one-, two- or three-axis capability, and offers 24-bit resolution plus an RS422 bit-rate. The STIM202 is so small and light that the designers of a missile system can use two of the modules to provide the weapon’s on-board guidance module with back-up redundancy, which was never a possibility with previous-generation guidance components.

In addition to deploying NLOS-BSMs and MBRLs in greater numbers, the PLA Army is also increasing the deployed strength of its main battle tanks (MBT) and infantry combat vehicles (ICV) that are attached to select formations within the PLA’s Chengdu and Lanzhou Military Regions (MR). In early March last year, the 1st Tank Battalion of the 348th Mechanised Infantry Regiment of the 37th Motor Infantry Division of the 13th Group Army in Chengdu commissioned the Type 96G MBT into its ORBAT, marking it the third Type 96G MBT-equipped unit in the western mountainous region opposite northeastern India. The first two units are the 149th Mechanised Infantry Division and the 52nd Mountain Brigade, all presently based in southeastern Tibet. Earlier, on March 17, 2010 the PLA had for the first time in its history deployed MBTs in the Tibet (Xizang) Military District, these too being Type 96G MBTs.

TRISHUL: How China Will Fight Future Border Wars


Some relevant comments

There is already an on-going proxy war between China and India, which began in the mid-1970s when both China and Pakistan began coordinating with one another for subverting India militarily. When it comes to full-scale hostilities for the future, it is still four to six years away and will involve only a high-intensity limited border war in which the nuclear escalatory ladder will not be completely climbed, i.e. at the most threats of using tactical nuclear weapons will be made by China. Therefore, to deter China, what India first and foremost needs are not SLBMs, but tactical nuclear warheads capable of being launched by Nirbhay ALCMs and land-launched Shaurya TBMs.
TRISHUL: ‘Desi’ Yellow Journalism At Its Very Best

so after reading this article what I understand is, the PLA would start the hostilities at a time and place of its own choosing by mobilising their RRFs supported with its own integral air assets and artillery as well as the PLAAF to quickly try and break INDIAN defences and capture tawang.while simultaneously resorting to use of NLOS-BSMs and artillery both tube and rocket as well as cruise missiles to neutralise IAF bases and forward ALGs and important c&c installations as well as logistics bases and important infrastructure nodes besides using their SOFs to destroy all of the above as well as SAM sites and SSM sites.

this simultaneous action would result in INDIA not being able to use its air assets effectively, and cutting off the defending forces from the other parts of the country so as to not facilitate any reinforcements. Thereby achieving victory in a short span of time. it is quite likely that the same approach would be used capture or engage other parts of INDIA facing China and who knows the PLA might also use its presence in *** to open another front against INDIA.

what we are eagerly waiting for is 1)how the INDIAN armed forces is planning to counter them???
2)incase we are able to stop the first set of mobilised RRFs,how would we be looking to stop the other arriving RRFs???

3)how are we going to tackle the EW and IW and cyber warfare capabilities of the chinese??
4)I strogly believe that INDIA's traditional stance of a defensive defence would not help, rather we should switch to Active Defence,wherein as and when the PLA mobilisation is spotted through means of HUMINT and other intelligence inputs, we should look to deploy our NLOS-BSMs, cruise missiles and shaurya missiles to immediately bring down the infrastructure in the TAR that facilitates speedy mobilisation of troops of the PLA, simultaneously we should look at destroying the air bases present in the TAR as well as the TBM launch sites and c&c nodes and logistics bases. apart from all this we should try and launch a counter attack, sufficiently backed by TBMs,cruise missiles and artillery as well as air power, into the enemy territory to tie down PLA's resources. and should the PLA choose to open another front in *** and aksai chin INDIA should be careful and launch surgical pre-emptive strikes in these areas without attacking pakistani installations and ensuring minimum collateral damage.

This way we would be able to significantly gain a foothold vis-a-vis the chinese and pbviously for all these to happen a multi layered Air Defence is required, besides imparting sufficient air defence assets to the field formations of the army.

now a point to note is china might not like even a status-quo as it might have so many ramifications for china as far as its strategic goal is concerned, so it might choose to escalate the war by striking deep within INDIA by using its TBMs and LACMs besides using sophisticated cyber attacks to destabilise the INDIAN economy, if so, then i believe even we should look to acquire deep strike capability using steep dive cruise missiles to target PLA's mainland air bases and LACM launch sites.PLAN might resort to using their SSNs to attack a few INDIAN cities in southern INDIA, what is to be asked is if our ASW capability is good enough to stop such a thing???

its very much possible given how the chinese doctrine advocates such 'key points strike' to break the enemy early on and seize the initiative.
TRISHUL: How China Will Fight Future Border Wars

Firstly, they’re not fighting PLA troops within ***, but personnel of the PLA’s construction corps. They’re unarmed and are involved in only civil engineering works. Secondly, no one’s seeking any base inside ***, least of all the Chinese. What the PLA wants is to set up a network of SIGINT stations in an arc around the FATA region of northwest Pakistan so that communications of Uighur separatists located there as well as in Xinjiang can be monitored. Thirdly, as of early 2011, China has stopped referring to the state of J & K as a disputed territory under India’s administrative control and now officially regards the entire state of J & K to be disputed territory, meaning the LAC ends at Uttarakhand and does not proceed up to Aksai Chin! Consequently, what this means is that in future, if a limited high-intensity border war breaks out between China & India, it will be waged in this very area, and not in northeast India’s Tawang Tract. And that’s why the PLA is beefing up its military infrastructure and warfighting capabilities in both Aksai China & ***. And that’s precisely why the Indian Army wants to raise an air-assault division that will be deployed during peacetime in the eastern sector (so that it always stays acclimatised for high-altitude warfare) but not for waging war in northeast India. Given the omni-role and omni-directional nature of such an air-assault division (now that the Mi-17V-5s and C-17As are being procured to ensure swift deployments), it will be easy for the Army to quickly deploy such a division to any trouble-spot all along India’s northern borders, be it in Sikkim, Uttarakhand or J & K. Bottomline: there’s no serious threat to Arunachal Pradesh from the PLA since no meaningful territorial gains are possible there. On the other hand, the Aksai Chin is of great strategic importance to China and therefore will be the principal battleground, with the areas around Sikkim and Uttarakhand serving as secondary pressure-points for staging distracting feints.
The BrahMos-1’s Block-3 rounds are the ones that have a 550km-range and they have been built so from the start.
TRISHUL: PLA’s New ‘Airborne’ Accretions



The above article is a very accurate description of China's war preparations. Currently, india estimates that it can develop a reasonably reliable nuclear delivery vehicle in 4 to 6 years to threaten China, and will fight a limited war against China in the border area immediately thereafter to cement its hold on Southern Tibet.
 
China is responding to india's military mobilization. According to Chinese news report, the 14th group army is deploying to Southern Tibet for combat.

中国第14军早就准备到藏南打一仗。如今,中印争端加剧,印度防长频频到藏南叫嚣挑战中国底线,中国已经准备动手教训阿三了。但单靠一个13军的149快反师和西藏几支山地部队,还很难教训印度。所以,中印开战,解放军驻云南的14集团军精锐丛林师肯定要增援藏南。细心的网民可以发现,近期央视不断报道14军丛机战部队在高海拔山地训练,包括动用精锐的96主战坦克演习,显示了14军在中印争端中建功立业的壮志雄心。第14集团军军部位于云南省省会昆明市,隶属成都军区,是1985年由14军改编的,下辖40,41师,32师和原11军31师4个步兵师,炮兵第4师、一个坦克旅和一个高炮旅。Chinese news report

Also according to Chinese news reports, China has unveiled its "india killer" DF-25 MRBM deliberately timed with india's Agni-5 test to send New Delhi a message.
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据俄罗斯军事平等网3月1日报道,一种不明型号的中国弹道导弹的照片近日出现在了互联网上。该导弹的外形很容易让人联想到前苏联生产的SS-20“先锋”陆基机动式中程弹道导弹(已在1988—1991年间销毁)。

俄媒称,从照片上看,这种神秘导弹的运输—发射装置被安装在6×6轮式汽车底盘上(原文如此:应为12×12)。中国另一种弹道导弹——DF-21A(射程2500千米)采用的则是5×5底盘。有专家认为,此次公开的很可能是中国新研制的DF-25型机动式中程弹道导弹系统(射程可能在3200千米左右)。之前曾有观点认为,DF-25的两级推进装置可能来自DF-31,会采用WS-2500型5×5轮式底盘(仿制自俄罗斯的MAZ-543)。

俄媒称,除此之外,中国此前研制的DF-41洲际弹道导弹也计划使用MAZ-547V型6×6轮式汽车底盘。中方曾从白俄罗斯购得6辆MAZ-547V。不过,DF-41的研制工作已在数年前终止。此次新出现的照片表明,之前原计划用于DF-41的部分MAZ-547V可能被用来发展DF-25系统。

俄媒称,有分析人士指出,所谓的DF-25照片可能是被中方有意公布出来,目的是回应印度计划开始进行的“烈火-V”弹道导弹测试计划。需要强调的是,此前还未曾出现过有关DF-25的任何照片。

Chinese news report
 
And the Indians are gonna be farting around watching the awesome Chinese fireworks display and clapping their hands in glee! What kind of a nonsensical one sided crappo analysis is this? Where did it come from? No prizes for guessing! Beijing’s People’s Daily Online!!! Where else?
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An indian military professional wrote this article. He is describing China's battle plans from india's point of view.
 
Is that really what it's called DF-25 India Killer vs DF-21 Carrier Killer ???
People are asking in other forums about this new TEL pic.
 
Stop fantasying children now :lol: not going to happe:Dn.... Lets put in this way: It is more likely US will attack Pakistan tomorrow then china doing the same to India.
(I know its a rough example was going to replace with Iran but please its fun)
 
Stop fantasying children now :lol: not going to happe:Dn.... Lets put in this way: It is more likely US will attack Pakistan tomorrow then china doing the same to India.
(I know its a rough example was going to replace with Iran but please its fun)

You are entitled your opinion as flawed as it maybe. Back to topic it would be nice to meet Chinese in New Dehli
 
Predicting when a war is gonna happen is the most stupid thing to do.We don't know what happens in 1 hour coming,lets not even think of 4 or 5 years in the future.
 
Another pic of "India Killer" (SinoChallenger, is this for real???)

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Predicting when a war is gonna happen is the most stupid thing to do.We don't know what happens in 1 hour coming,lets not even think of 4 or 5 years in the future.

Maybe so but it would be nice to see India and some Indians put in their rightful place by China.
 
The truth is india has no good counter to China's rocket artillery and SRBM strikes from Tibet. We take out your forward air fields and army bases, and then attack with massive infantry columns and tanks in Ladakh to cut the supply line to Siachen glacier. Then Pakistan attacks from PAKashmir and roll indian army back to Haryana and Punjab State.
 
Another pic of "India Killer" (SinoChallenger, is this for real???)

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Can't you read Chinese? I posted the full article in Chinese on page 1. It's the real DF-25, not PS'd. Rumored to carry ten 300+ kiloton yield nuclear MIRV warheads!
 
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