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Australia should support India in the Himalayas

Maybe your braindead leaders should have thought twice about threatening to invade AK and GB every week then.

Now it is Pakistan's interest to diminish Indian presence in the area, so we will certainly support any actions that help to achieve this.

If you get involved ............You make get slapped down ........... AND IT wont be India that does it

it will take just one PHONE CALL .....
 
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If you get involved ............You make get slapped down ........... AND IT wont be India that does it

it will take just one PHONE CALL .....

Yes I can imagine that phonecall will be something like this:

"Hallo mr dolan trump sir?? pleej save us frum evil pakistan!!!"

"No thanks" *click*
 
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Australia export to china 140 billion

Australia export to india 8 billion

Yes numbers dont lie.

Good thing china is not so narrow minded like third world Indians.

But i have feeling china will slowly tighten the screw. First target will be 40 billion Australian coal export to China. And then probably go after other exports and find alternatives in latin America. Specially agricultural items.
The Australian is so desperate to keep China coal deal that they agree to use Chinese rmb for the trade and anger the US. Lol. The very reason why Saddam Hussein hanged by US.
 
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The Australian is so desperate to keep China coal deal that they agree to use Chinese rmb for the trade and anger the US. Lol. The very reason why Saddam Hussein hanged by US.
Yes i was surprised to see Australians are this much desperate.

But i don't think begging will help them. Hope china show some mercy.
 
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Yes I can imagine that phonecall will be something like this:

"Hallo mr dolan trump sir?? pleej save us frum evil pakistan!!!"

"No thanks" *click*

Remember " we shall bomb you back to stone age "
https://historynewsnetwork.org/article/30347

TRUST ME you pakistanis are doing diddly sqat ......... USA has your number

I say again..........FORGET your bravado............. STAY OUT OF IT
 
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Remember " we shall bomb you back to stone age "
https://historynewsnetwork.org/article/30347

TRUST ME you pakistanis are doing diddly sqat ......... USA has your number

I say again..........FORGET your bravado............. STAY OUT OF IT

You're actually braindead if you think the US would ever attack Pakistan, or do anything beyond sending some supplies. Remember when you cried to them about Pakistan using f-16's last year on 27th February and they did literally nothing?

Face it. India has no friends that would ever go to war for them, even your saviour israel has premptively bailed out.
 
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If Canberra wants a “comprehensive strategic partnership”with New Delhi, some courageous steps are needed.

GettyImages-1221083881.jpg


An Indian Border Security Force soldier guards a highway as Indian army convoy travels towards Leh, bordering China, on 19 June in Gagangir, India (Yawar Nazir/Getty Images)
Published 22 Jun 2020 12:00   1 Comments

The conflict between India and China on their disputed Himalayan border may be an important turning point in their relationship. Australia should take the opportunity to show firm support for India over the issue.

Last week’s fighting between Indian and Chinese troops in Ladakh was the bloodiest fighting between the two countries since 1967. We may never know the full details of this incident. The Indian military is keeping firm control of information on their side, and Beijing is saying little at all.

The confrontation appears to have been part of a comprehensive Chinese post-Covid strategy that has included assertiveness in the South China Sea and Senkaku/Daikyo islands and cyber attacks against Australia. Beijing seems to have been pushing the envelope on its interpretation of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in the Himalayas and somehow fighting got out of hand. In broad terms, the incident comes from years of “salami slicing” by Chinese forces along the LAC, with India almost always on the defensive.

This confrontation may signal a sea change in the Sino-Indian relationship. The tactical détente of the last two years is surely over. We’re unlikely to see Prime Minister Narendra Modi and President Xi Jinping strolling arm in arm, as we saw in the summits at Wuhan in 2018 and Mamallapuram in 2019. Correctly handled, this incident could push India substantially closer to its Quad partners, including Australia.

Importantly, despite a de-escalation in fighting, there is a high likelihood of further clashes in weeks to come as each side probes for weaknesses right along the LAC, and we need to be ready for this.

There’s been much talk about building the Australia-India relationship, but in reality it is moving at a snail’s pace.

What can and should Australia do to further its own agenda on the India relationship? While we should be rightly leery of becoming too closely involved in the specifics of someone else’s territorial claims, we must also support key partners against bullying, just as we would like their support in times of need.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo set the tone for India’s Western partners by extending his “deepest condolences to the people of India”. A State Department spokesman also pointedly recalled PLA incursions over the LAC in 2014, commenting that “The PLA invaded this contested area … whether that was a negotiating tactic or … just a punch in the nose to demonstrate their superiority, I don’t know”.

Other countries let their Heads of Mission in Delhi do the talking. The Japanese, French, Italian and German ambassadors also offered their condolences. Australia took a similar approach, with Barry O’Farrell, Australia’s High Commissioner, conveying his condolences to the families of the dead Indian soldiers. O’Farrell added, in a barb to Beijing, that “both India and Australia are grappling with the implications of creeping authoritarianism and the risks it poses of democracy, transparency and openness”.

Should Australia take comfort in positioning itself alongside Japan and European partners, or should it seize the opportunity to demonstrate clear support for India?

Foreign Minister Marise Payne’s forthright speech at the National Security College last week seemed to signal a shift in Australia’s approach from “small target” diplomacy to more fearless engagement with the world. Perhaps we should use that principle in building our relationship with India.

There’s been much talk about building the Australia-India relationship, but in reality it is moving at a snail’s pace. The recent Morrison-Modi virtual summit was long on rhetoric and pretty short on substance. Promises to hold 2+2 Foreign and Defence secretaries dialogues and an agreement on defence logistics exchange are useful but are unlikely to add significant momentum to the relationship. If Australia is serious about building a “comprehensive strategic partnership” with India, as is claimed, then it will need to take some clear – and possibly even courageous – steps.

In fact, the Indian bureaucracy has an excruciatingly long memory about which countries have (or have not) supported it at critical turning points. India is not necessarily the easiest country to engage with, but Australia has also sometimes had a particularly tin ear in dealing with New Delhi.

Australia’s loud moralising about India’s 1998 nuclear tests was long trotted out by Indian interlocutors who want to emphasise our untrustworthiness. Kevin Rudd’s imprudent decision to withdraw from the first-version Quad in 2008 – announced in the presence of the Chinese foreign minister – is also long remembered by those who wish to keep Australia at arm’s length (whether or not it is justified in substance).

In contrast, Japan’s public support for India during the 2017 standoff between Indian and Chinese forces at Doklam (when the Japanese ambassador criticised China’s road building activities) is remembered in Delhi as an act of a dependable partner. But the Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop, then in Delhi, diplomatically avoided making any statement supporting India over Doklam, preferring to talk about China’s actions in the South China Sea. Why are we still shy of explicitly linking China’s activities in the two regions?

Many will argue that with Australia-China relations at their lowest point for decades, now is not the time to poke Beijing in the eye about the Himalayas. They might well be right, but we need to clearly demonstrate to India in public statements that its relationship with Australia and other Quad countries provides meaningful benefits. As the regional security environment deteriorates, the India relationship will become increasingly important, and we must be prepared to invest in it.

This article is part of a two-year project being undertaken by the National Security College on the Indian Ocean, with the support of the Department of Defence.

https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/australia-should-support-india-himalayas

Be careful what you wish for? :coffee:
Don't ever set a dangerous precedent and give China a valid reason and excuse to intervene in any of India conflict with any of her neighbours including Nepal, Myanmar or Sri Lanka.

Scot Morrison may appear stupid let hope he is not that stupid and shortsighted.

This simply demonstrate that India knew that her military is no match against China today.
Better to go back to the negotiating table and sesettled it peacefully.


The Australian is so desperate to keep China coal deal that they agree to use Chinese rmb for the trade and anger the US. Lol. The very reason why Saddam Hussein hanged by US.
Australia don't have a choice. China is their biggest customer and the customer is always right.
It is either gets paid in RMB or no deal.
All BRICS deals are in non US dollars.
 
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wishfull thinking from the Zionist op, Australia in the himalayas... yeah nice joke that will not happen LOL.
 
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I think the same could be said for you pakistanis

Let India & China sought it out themselves

Why you lot itching to get involved THEN you say to others mind your own business . Hypocrisy is the word i think

My opinion on Australian involvement was as an AUSTRALIAN just like my opinions on Pakistan's matters are as a Pakistani. Besides, both Pakistan and China have fought wars and battles with India whereas Australia has no real issues with China and should learn to live with China as a future super power.
 
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Australia is a nation without an independent foreign policy and had been a slave to British empire in 19th Century and now to the American Empire, I wont pay much heed to what they have to say. And as for Indians here claiming they share a common enemy with Australia, the answer is a BIG NO. You share a common ally and that is the US, clowns sitting in Canberra are making an enemy out of China for no reason other than that. India can cry to heavens about China, but the reality remains India is incapable of doing anything to hurt Chinese juggernaut and no amount of chest thumping can change that, if there is to be a war with China, India will have to fight and loose all by itself.
 
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Lol. There is so much butt hurt on here, even when it is an Australian article. People on here especially cheerleaders should introspect to see if they are in any position to criticise/sermon Australia (on US) as they themselves survive on Chinese droppings and have no choice but to hold pom poms ready for each and every Chinese action.
 
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Australia export to china 140 billion

Australia export to india 8 billion

Yes numbers dont lie.

Good thing china is not so narrow minded like third world Indians.

But i have feeling china will slowly tighten the screw. First target will be 40 billion Australian coal export to China. And then probably go after other exports and find alternatives in latin America. Specially agricultural items.

Do you have any idea what Australia export to china?
Its coal gas meat metal minerals and other raw product.
Now let's see how much import from china ?
58 billion .....thats all plastic garbage you have in your rear yard useless junk.

So it will great to hit china. They had a great awakening and doing it.

So anyways in this trade china will be looser.

My opinion on Australian involvement was as an AUSTRALIAN just like my opinions on Pakistan's matters are as a Pakistani. Besides, both Pakistan and China have fought wars and battles with India whereas Australia has no real issues with China and should learn to live with China as a future super power.

As a pakistani aussie ,you already know what they think of you.
Also how older Australian hate china and its trade.

They see china as a big enemy for taking over their land business and import of corruption .
 
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Do you have any idea what Australia export to china?
Its coal gas meat metal minerals and other raw product.
Now let's see how much import from china ?
58 billion .....thats all plastic garbage you have in your rear yard useless junk.

So it will great to hit china. They had a great awakening and doing it.

So anyways in this trade china will be looser.



As a pakistani aussie ,you already know what they think of you.
Also how older Australian hate china and its trade.

They see china as a big enemy for taking over their land business and import of corruption .
Lol.

Some time i wonder why china and india was same in 1990 and why china is 15 trillion usd economy after 30 years and india still not 3 yet.

Then I read comments from indians.

Then everything make sense.
 
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Lol.

Some time i wonder why china and india was same in 1990 and why china is 15 trillion usd economy after 30 years and india still not 3 yet.

Then I read comments from indians.

Then everything make sense.

If I am allowed to make dictatorship rule. I can change your country too.
One child policy will you allow that ? Even for your Supreme commander
No right to vote.

So what ever morsel chinese got they paid very heavy debt for it.

Even filthy pigs eat heavy and live lazy in comfort . But humans are not meant for it. ( not calling them pig just figure of speech).
Your and our nation choose to live with gairat than extra buttered bread.
 
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