Actually, I meant I didn't understand what you were saying because I couldn't understand your English, but whatever.
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Sounds interesting. What is it made of? Rice I presume?
Cheers to you too mate :cheers:
Btw what kind of booze do they have in China? I might visit in a few months, and quite frankly I am getting tired of Stolichnaya.
Sorry, I can't understand what you're saying.
But this discussion is getting boring anyway, so I'll just say you're right.
I really don't care who controls Tibet or Xinjiang. By point was that Indian intervention in those regions would be akin to what China is doing at present to India.
Both Xinjiang and Tibet were de facto independent during both the ROC and the Qing dynasty. It doesn't matter if the Peking government recognized it or not. The Tibetan government, for example, independently signed treaties with the British in India.
Thank you for your thought-provoking comment.
It seems you have run out of intelligent things to say, not that you had many intelligent things to say in the first place...
Before 1947, India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh were all one country, while Xinjiang and Tibet only became de facto part of China in the 50s.
Are you serious?
Even if Pakistan or Bangladesh wanted to unite with us, we wouldn't accept them for numerous reasons.
India no longer imports any foreign components for the production of Flankers, that's all I know. The technical details of production are rather hard to find, and they might not even be publicly disclosed, so I won't bother trying to find them.
The problem is, the Indian leadership is starting to increasingly see South Asia as its own backyard (and about time too). Would you be alright if India starts giving billions of dollars worth of military equipment to Taiwan, publicly supports Uighur seperatists, and claims parts of Tibet as its...
If India wanted to annex its neighbors, we would have done so long ago. We had numerous opportunities: 1971 war, Tamil insurgency in Sri Lanka, anti-monarchy revolution in Nepal...
Yes, they can all be produced in India.
Building something under license is not the same as designing something completely new from scratch - hence the problems with LCA's Kaveri engine despite years of experience in building Russian engines.
China will always maintain a quantitative edge over India, while India will try its hardest to maintain a qualitative edge.
The problem is that China may surpass India in the quality aspect as well, judging my recent trends.
Oh well, we will always have Bollywood, which China can never...
Neither Algeria nor Vietnam had liberation movements that were as decisive as Goa. Algeria and Vietnam both suffered extensive damage due to their independence movements.
The Indo-Portuguese War was unique because it was one of the few times that a third-world country won a clear victory...