Nobody wants war but if India didn't leave it will be the biggest strategic mistake. I am saying this neutrally, Modi miscalculated Chinese reactions, he was thinking this was another kabaddi game.
at Doklam yes
Kargil was a war
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Nobody wants war but if India didn't leave it will be the biggest strategic mistake. I am saying this neutrally, Modi miscalculated Chinese reactions, he was thinking this was another kabaddi game.
Well, I think I don't want to argue anymore. I have presented official facts, it's up to you to analyze it. Nothing to hide.at Doklam yes
Kargil was a war
It is Dokhlam not Dhela...Do you have another conflict with China in Dhela? BTW where is it located?Because China couldn't move a dhela since June there.
Actually it's in English and it's not only for domestic consumption, it was announced officially to the world. You can also read your ambiguous muted MEA response as comparison and make your own conclusions.Was that a joke? If I had to believe your communist party, they were not to talk to India at all throughout the doklam stand off.They are just embarrassed to tell that to your people. Lolz
Statements from all the three parties were vague and I guess that was the reason for this resolution.... and there is a personal relationship between modi mood and xi .. .1) India withdrew unilaterally. Statement was vague using the word 'disengagement'.
China was in doklam even before and they continue to remain there.... The reason for the stand off was not the patrolling... but road construction.. ..Everyone knows why India jumped in to this... Not only because of the agreement with Bhutan but the strategic importance of this area.... Militarization is going to happen for sure...and it will not be one sided.... Eventually we have added one more prob to each others basket...2) China is still in Doklam and will continue to patrol and be stationed in Doklam. You essentially gave
I do not know about this.... If China think that this is indeed an action which is needed then they might.... But not sure what would the scenario then.... and what will be Indian response.... This is an hypothetical scenario today.... But I agree road can be made... Risk no one knows....3) Road construction will continue. My bet is it will start after winter since Modi is going to Beijing, we need to give him face
Well temporary Chinese posts are there in doklam plateau since 1980s as far as I know. While India also maintains a post there and Bhutanese army maintains 2 posts so far....Its not new. This is precisely what we call status quo there....all parties have been involved in patrolling and stuff but no permanent structure would be allowed to change status quo. I am also happy that India will now maintain more troops according to Chinese count there.Kay Kay, just ne impartial, read your MEA statements and MOFA statements. I see no point being too blind due to nationalism. If China was the losing party, I would have accepted it, let them learn the lesson. But clearly, this was the biggest strategic blunder. You just gave China excuse to militarize Doklam, instead of the occasional patrol, China is now stationed in Doklam.
Chinese propaganda communist party is too embarrassed to accept their defeat....lolz
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...dia-military-standoff/?utm_term=.357e5b245557
There is no direct proof or credible source about resuming road work which initiated the issue in first place. A peaceful solution is definitely better but each party should clearly explain their gains in settlement. If by any means China backed off from their road construction then its definitely a win for India.Well, nobody wants war, had Indian chose to remain in Doklam, you can be sure war will be the next outcome. I believe the current solution is alright, they withdrew unilaterally and unconditionally as instructed. This incident just gave China excuse to militarize Doklam, troops are now being stationed there instead of just patrolling.
I am not a war fan... or a war monger.... And I try to look things impartially... but as a patriot some time my posts will have certain amount of bias...I did not make this up. I hope you are impartial and analyze this
What do you mean vague from both parties. China said it directly:Statements from all the three parties were vague and I guess that was the reason for this resolution.... and there is a personal relationship between modi mood and xi .. .
China was in doklam even before and they continue to remain there.... The reason for the stand off was not the patrolling... but road construction.. ..Everyone knows why India jumped in to this... Not only because of the agreement with Bhutan but the strategic importance of this area.... Militarization is going to happen for sure...and it will not be one sided.... Eventually we have added one more prob to each others basket...
I do not know about this.... If China think that this is indeed an action which is needed then they might.... But not sure what would the scenario then.... and what will be Indian response.... This is an hypothetical scenario today.... But I agree road can be made... Risk no one knows....
If there is an engagement
I hope you are viewing this neutrally. If you take away all the Indian media noise and read both official responses, these are the facts:
1) India withdrew unilaterally. Statement was vague using the word 'disengagement'.
2) China is still in Doklam and will continue to patrol and be stationed in Doklam. You essentially gave China excuse to militarize Doklam.
3) Road construction will continue. My bet is it will start after winter since Modi is going to Beijing, we need to give him face.
I did not make this up. I hope you are impartial and analyze this.
They are just publishing whatever view from around the world, be it Indian or Chinese, tomorrow they will publish a different opinion. This is a open news network, any 'expert' can give their opinion. Facts are from official statements. That's why I only use MEA or MOFA statements. Remember previously Indian media claimed China reduced their troops to 40 soldiers, the truth was India was the one reducing troops.
Well, nobody wants war, had Indian chose to remain in Doklam, you can be sure war will be the next outcome. I believe the current solution is alright, they withdrew unilaterally and unconditionally as instructed. This incident just gave China excuse to militarize Doklam, troops are now being stationed there instead of just patrolling.
Hmm.. I am trying not too but some Indian members here like BALA is making this difficult. I am happy this is over.I am not a war fan... or a war monger.... And I try to look things impartially... but as a patriot some time my posts will have certain amount of bias...
There is no direct proof or credible source about resuming road work which initiated the issue in first place. A peaceful solution is definitely better but each party should clearly explain their gains in settlement. If by any means China backed off from their road construction then its definitely a win for India.
Another day and another stupid piece from SCMP.Lessons learned in tense China-India border row but it will cast a long shadow, analysts say
With the BRICS summit next week and growing economic cooperation at stake, both sides had good reason to end the stand-off
Shi Jiangtao / Kristin Huang
UPDATED : Wednesday, 30 Aug 2017, 1:33PM
“China understands the importance of creating a favourable atmosphere for the success of the summit and the all-important party congress,” said Wang Dehua, head of South Asia studies at the Shanghai Institute for International Studies.
China has pulled out all the stops with meticulous preparations for the summit and Beijing did not want it overshadowed by the border row, according to Chinese experts.
“The event – where Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi are supposed to meet – has offered a way out of this unexpectedly tense stand-off, although there are different interpretations as to which side actually compromised more,” said Yue Gang, a retired colonel in the PLA’s General Staff Department.
Harsh Pant, a professor of international relations at King’s College London, also said the pull-out of Indian troops was “absolutely” in response to the upcoming BRICS summit.
“China needed this to be resolved [ahead of BRICS],” he said by phone from New Delhi. “If any country was under pressure, it was China, not India. There was no reason for India to do anything else apart from holding on and digging in at the border, as India was doing.”
But Wang noted that embattled Indian leader Modi was also keen to make the summit a success because it was a key international platform for India’s growing economic cooperation with China.
Although the Chinese foreign ministry sounded triumphant announcing that the Indian troops had withdrawn, experts say it was Beijing who had compromised by seemingly accepting New Delhi’s demand that it stop road construction in the disputed area where China, India and Bhutan meet.
“Despite Beijing’s deliberate ambiguity, China has apparently made substantial concessions in order to end the dispute,” Yue said.
Since the stand-off began in mid-June, India had urged China to put a stop to road building near its Bhutan border. Beijing had meanwhile insisted that India must withdraw its troops from the area before negotiations to peacefully resolve the crisis could begin.
China said on Tuesday that the weather was a factor affecting its construction of roads and other infrastructure along the Himalayan border with India, and it would maintain patrols in the contested area. But most analysts say China appears to have quietly halted the project after weeks of intense diplomatic negotiations.
"India has got exactly what it has wanted. It was a humiliating defeat for China to cave in to pressure from India despite all the tough talk,” Yue said.
Pant also said the Indian side may have agreed to withdraw because it got what it wanted on the Doklam plateau – restoration of the status quo before China began construction along the unmarked border.
http://m.scmp.com/news/china/diplom...-learned-tense-china-india-border-row-it-will
It is Dokhlam not Dhela...Do you have another conflict with China in Dhela? BTW where is it located?