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China Builds Bridge Across Ladakh's Pangong Lake That Was Key Flashpoint

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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.
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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.

CommentsArmy 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.
 
China Builds Bridge Over Pangong Lake: PLA Trying To Stoke Tensions In Ladakh Again?
Reports of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) displaying their flag in Galwan Valley and building a bridge over the Pangong Lake in Ladakh caused concern in New Delhi today.

China Builds Bridge Over Pangong Lake: PLA Trying To Stoke Tensions In Ladakh Again?
A video shared by Chinese state media reporters showed PLA soldiers hoisting China's flag in the Galwan area on their side of the LAC. | Twitter/Screengrab


Alarm bells rang in New Delhi as reports of China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) building a bridge over the Pangong Lake in Ladakh began circulating this morning. Add to this that the PLA flew the Chinese flag in Galwan, the place where Indian and Chinese troops fought with bare hands, stones and pickaxes on the slopes of the mountain on June 15, 2020, leading to the death of 20 Indian soldiers and an undisclosed number of PLA troopers.
Indians are emotional about the Galwan deaths. The news that on Sunday, the first day of the new year, a Chinese flag flew atop these heights sent the rumour mills into high gear. Chinese social media users commented on the picture of the flag flying in Galwan with enthusiasm on Weibo, the Chinese micro-blogging site.

One user wrote, "China’s national flag rise over Galwan Valley on the New Year Day of 2022. This national flag is very special since it once flew over Tiananmen Square in Beijing.”
For the rest of the world, Tiananmen Square brings back memories of the brutal crushing of protestors by the Chinese Communist Party in 1989, one of the darkest days of China’s modern history. While the veracity of the reports could not be immediately confirmed, the rumours sent many in India into a tizzy.

Here's what really happened:
Both the incidents are true. However, all this happened on the Chinese side of the Line of Actual Control (LAC) and not in Indian territory. China has every right to do what it pleases on its side of the Pangong lake or across the LAC in Galwan. So far neither the MEA nor the Defence ministry has reacted officially to this development.

Indian army sources assume that the prefabricated bridge is being built to ensure that India does not get access to the dominating heights it had captured in August 2020. The Indian army had taken the PLA by surprise by taking on the dominant positions. But during the disengagement process where both armies had to withdraw from the new positions, they occupied, Indian troops had to vacate the area. The Chinese also moved back to their side of the LAC in Galwan. Critics say that Galwan withdrawals were done without much fuss because India was occupying a better position in Pangong Lake.

The withdrawal from all points have not yet taken place and the last meeting between the field commanders of both sides achieved little, with both sides releasing separate statements on the talks. The silver lining is that the two army commanders said that another round of talks would take place at a mutually convenient date. That has not happened yet.

The peace has held so far but the situation remains tense with thousands of soldiers on either side gathered in positions where they can quickly move forward in case the situation takes a nasty turn.

While India cannot complain about what China does on its side of the LAC, these acts further vitiate the atmosphere between Asia’s two largest powers.
 
Fake news. There is no way Chinese soldiers building a bridge in the winter because Indian news media said Chinese soldiers can't handle the cold weather.
 
'Why Is China Ramping Up Infra Near Ladakh?' Pangong Lake Bridge Raises Concerns In Chushul
The recent reports of a bridge being constructed by China over the Pangong Lake have left many including the Chushul Councillor Konchok Stazin concerned about its motives.

'Why Is China Ramping Up Infra Near Ladakh?' Pangong Lake Bridge Raises Concerns In Chushul
Satellite image of the bridge being built by China on Pangong Lake on their side of LAC | PTI/Twitter


"Why are they creating too much infrastructure here? That’s the question. We have to act accordingly,” he says. Reacting to the recent reports about a bridge being built on the China side across Pangong Lake, Stazin said, "I don’t have any information about the bridge across Pangong. But in case it is built, it will shorten the distance between Moldo and Sarjaband fingers area. A major chunk of the Chinese army's infrastructure is around Spangur Lake so they have an easy exit from any areas". Stazin added that a bridge on Pongang lake was therefore automatically a threat to the region.

“The only route for reaching Sarjab or the fingers area is through Rudok. Now they are connecting the areas from many ends, on theirside” he added.


According to the Chushul representative, China has been creating huge infrastructure in their areas, but they always put objection when such infrastructure is created from the Indian side.

Stazin has remained an advocate of infrastructure development for many years. On Defence Minister Rajnath Singh visit to Chushul in November last year, the councillor through a letter called for strong border infrastructure, modern amenities, mobile connectivity, universal internet coverage of all border villages including sanctioning of 4G mobile services. He had asked for the connection of Durbuk and other areas with Changthang and the northern grid for an uninterrupted, reliable supply of electricity. He had also called for the laying of optical fibre cables in the border area.

“The Chinese have given unfettered freedom to their nomads to move freely. They (Chinese), very often, use their nomadic community to transgress on our land in a step by step approach. Sadly, the movement of the nomads belonging to this side of the border is restricted by the Indian army from grazing their livestock on the traditional pastureland from hot spring, fingers to army named Kailash range (Nyanlung Yokma/Gongma). The nomads of the Indian side are soldiers without uniforms. The Indian army must trust them by not restricting their movement relating to grazing and collecting firewood," the Chusul councillor said.
 
Where is India's intelligence and why all the movements are by China? Are the Indians struggling to survive in the cold winter or something?
 
Satellite images indicate that the bridge could be complete in a few months, giving China an edge in the area
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A new Chinese bridge being constructed across the Pangong Lake is now more than 400 metres long and once completed, will give Beijing a significant military edge in an area which has been a key flash-point between India and China in Eastern Ladakh.

The bridge, which is 8 metres wide, lies just south of a Chinese army field base on the North Bank of Pangong where Chinese field hospitals and troop accommodations were seen during the standoff between Indian and Chinese troops in 2020.

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China's illegal bridge across a frozen Pangong Lake is seen being constructed with a heavy crane in satellite images. High-res here
Satellite images from January 16 indicate that Chinese construction workers are using a heavy crane to help link the bridge's pillars with concrete slabs upon which the tarmac will be laid. Given the extent of the construction, the bridge could be completed in a few months, though road access to Rutog - the main Chinese military hub in the region - will take longer to complete.

The construction of the bridge across the Pangong, first identified by The Print earlier this month, and shown here for the first time in high-resolution satellite imagery, gives Chinese forces the ability to quickly mobilise soldiers to either bank of the Lake.

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China's illegal bridge across Pangong Lake is seen to be a response to Indian Army moves dominating the Kailash heights during the 2020 face-off. High-res here.
Troops from the North Bank will no longer need to drive nearly 200 kilometres around the Pangong Lake to reach their base at Rutog. That journey will now be cut by approximately 150 km.

''Heavy machinery (crane) has also been set up to support the construction process that is continuing through inclement weather and snow,'' says Damien Symon, a GEOINT researcher at The Intel Lab. ''A fresh track is observed fusing the bridge to a road network near the Khurnak Fort (North Bank of Pangong), which further links it to a well-formed motorable network through the region northwards.''

While the new bridge has been constructed in an area held by China since 1958, it remains clear that India considers the construction of this bridge to be entirely illegal. It is located almost exactly along India's perception of the International Boundary in the sector. To this end, it is a ''potential stepping stone towards further infrastructure encroachment into the disputed territory or as an instrument of Chinese military logistics, it presents a more controversial picture,'' says Sim Tack, Chief Military Analyst at Force Analysis.

The External Affairs Ministry, which has been monitoring the Chinese construction activity, says, ''This bridge is being constructed in areas that have been under illegal occupation by China for around 60 years now. As you are well aware India has never accepted such illegal occupation.''

While New Delhi has ''increased significantly the budget for development of border infrastructure and completed more roads and bridges than ever before,'' as per the foreign ministry, it is clear that the new Chinese bridge across Pangong is a direct response to the Indian Army's aggressive move to occupy the Kailash heights in the South bank of the Pangong Lake in September 2020. At the time, Chinese military deployments in the area were significantly threatened by the Indian Army which ''forced them to redeploy troops from other locations through the strenuous time-consuming terrain around the lake,'' says Mr. Symon. Worried about Indian deployments on the ridges from where they could be targeted, ''Chinese forces initiated road construction projects snaking around the topography. These roads have now slowly branched towards the bridge, but have yet to be connected.''
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While Indian and Chinese forces backed off from their hair-trigger alert and de-escalated tensions on both banks of Pangong Lake in February 2021, the construction of the new bridge is a clear reminder of how China continues to build up access in areas which it may consider as potential flash-points.

Indian and Chinese military leaders held a 14th round of military talks last week at Chushul-Moldo in Eastern Ladakh, in the same broad area described in this report, an area which saw some of the worst tensions in 2020. Though the talks failed to achieve any breakthrough, both India and China agreed to keep talking, a refrain heard time and again over the last two years with real progress being rarely reported.

 
Meanwhile Indian army generals aren't taking any proactive measures and are busy attending "Chai-Biskut" meetings with the Chinese failing to realize their stalling tactics.
 
Chinese are planning, executing and preparing for any contingency.
 

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