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Chinese Warning ministry warns India of Kashmir's intrusion on Pakistan's behalf

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https://arynews.tv/en/china-can-enter-kashmir-on-pakistan-invitation/

BIJING: After China’s blunt proclamation of safeguarding its security interests at any cost as its sovereignty was “indomitable”, amid a standoff with India in the Sikkim sector, Chinese state-run daily has warned India that China can enter India-occupied Kashmir on Pakistan’s invitation.

An editorial titled “Time for a second lesson for forgetful India” in the
Global Times :sarcastic: accused India of transgressing China’s borders and trying Chinese people’s patience in the ongoing standoff.

The editorial warns India that China too can enter India-held Kashmir on Pakistan’s behalf. It referred that extraordinary Chinese move could be taken in view of Indian stance when its troops also entered into Doklam from the China-Sikkim border.






China Raises 'Major Problems' As Ajit Doval Meets His Counterpart

China says that last month, Indian troops crossed the border at Sikkim to stop the Chinese army from constructing a road on a remote Himalayan plateau it calls Donglang. Bhutan says the region is Doklam, and is part of its tiny kingdom.
All India | Edited by Abhinav Bhatt | Updated: July 27, 2017 20:24 IST


NEW DELHI:
HIGHLIGHTS
  1. National Security Adviser Ajit Doval is visiting Beijing
  2. Holds bilateral talks with his counterpart
  3. Talks after more than month-long confrontation at Sikkim border

Amid heightened tensions over the border standoff at Sikkim, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval met with his counterpart Yang Jiechi in Beijing on Thursday.

The bilateral or one-on-one talks were held on the sidelines of a summit of top security officials from BRICS - Brazil, Russia, China, India and South Africa.

The Indian government has so far not commented on whether the dispute at Sikkim was discussed.

China's State Councillor Yang separately met senior security representatives from South Africa, Brazil and India and "set forth China's position on bilateral issues and major problems", said news agency Xinhua.

China says that last month, Indian troops crossed the border at Sikkim to stop the Chinese army from constructing a road on a remote Himalayan plateau it calls Donglang. Bhutan says the region is Doklam, and is part of its tiny kingdom.


The row has festered for more than a month as India and China refuse to back down in the distant but strategically key territory.

India, a close ally of Bhutan, deployed troops to stop the road construction project, prompting Beijing to accuse India of trespassing on Chinese soil. Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj last week said both sides should pull back soldiers to allow talks on the conflict.


But China in response warned that it would step up its deployment, and insists that India must withdraw its troops before any proper negotiation takes place.

"The solution to this issue is simple, which is that the Indian troops back out honestly," Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said this week.

Sarath Chand, the vice army chief, said on Tuesday: "China is expanding its influence across the Himalayas into our neighbourhood despite being an economy five times the size (of India), with such a large standing army... it is bound to be a threat for us in the years ahead."


The standoff is a very public sign of India's willingness to push back.

"As this face-off continues, the one who's actually losing ground are the Chinese because they have styled themselves so far as a major power whom no one can challenge," said Jayadeva Ranade, head of the Delhi-based Centre for China Analysis and Strategy. "So the fact that India has stood up to them is a message to all other countries in the region."

"India views China's road-building as a threat because (the Chinese) have gone against the status quo of behaviour in a disputed territory," Shen Dingli, vice dean of Fudan University's Institute of International Studies, told news agency AFP.

The road was being built close to the "Chicken's Neck," a narrow, essential strip of land connecting India to its northeastern states.

But Beijing maintains that "Doklam has been part of China since ancient times," countering that Indian troops triggered the standoff by crossing a boundary established in an 1890 agreement with Britain.

Neither Chinese President Xi Jinping nor Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi can back down without facing a "nationalist backlash" back home, said Huang Jing, a Sino-Indian relations expert at the National University of Singapore.

Xi in particular must exude strength as he consolidates power before a crucial Communist Party congress later this year.

"This situation is very dangerous. I don't think China has much choice if the Indian troops stay where they are -- Xi will have to demonstrate to Chinese people whether he means what he says," Huang told news agency AFP.

India has also voiced concern about another Chinese project: The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, which will give Beijing access to the Arabian Sea but passes through Azad Kashmir. The project is part of a massive Chinese global trade infrastructure programme dubbed One Belt, One Road, which India has snubbed.

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/...brics-nsa-doklam-jammu-kashmir/1/1012964.html
 
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https://arynews.tv/en/china-can-enter-kashmir-on-pakistan-invitation/

BIJING: After China’s blunt proclamation of safeguarding its security interests at any cost as its sovereignty was “indomitable”, amid a standoff with India in the Sikkim sector, Chinese state-run daily has warned India that China can enter India-occupied Kashmir on Pakistan’s invitation.

An editorial titled “Time for a second lesson for forgetful India” in the
Global Times :sarcastic: accused India of transgressing China’s borders and trying Chinese people’s patience in the ongoing standoff.

The editorial warns India that China too can enter India-held Kashmir on Pakistan’s behalf. It referred that extraordinary Chinese move could be taken in view of Indian stance when its troops also entered into Doklam from the China-Sikkim border.






China Raises 'Major Problems' As Ajit Doval Meets His Counterpart

China says that last month, Indian troops crossed the border at Sikkim to stop the Chinese army from constructing a road on a remote Himalayan plateau it calls Donglang. Bhutan says the region is Doklam, and is part of its tiny kingdom.
All India | Edited by Abhinav Bhatt | Updated: July 27, 2017 20:24 IST


NEW DELHI:
HIGHLIGHTS
  1. National Security Adviser Ajit Doval is visiting Beijing
  2. Holds bilateral talks with his counterpart
  3. Talks after more than month-long confrontation at Sikkim border

Amid heightened tensions over the border standoff at Sikkim, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval met with his counterpart Yang Jiechi in Beijing on Thursday.

The bilateral or one-on-one talks were held on the sidelines of a summit of top security officials from BRICS - Brazil, Russia, China, India and South Africa.

The Indian government has so far not commented on whether the dispute at Sikkim was discussed.

China's State Councillor Yang separately met senior security representatives from South Africa, Brazil and India and "set forth China's position on bilateral issues and major problems", said news agency Xinhua.

China says that last month, Indian troops crossed the border at Sikkim to stop the Chinese army from constructing a road on a remote Himalayan plateau it calls Donglang. Bhutan says the region is Doklam, and is part of its tiny kingdom.


The row has festered for more than a month as India and China refuse to back down in the distant but strategically key territory.

India, a close ally of Bhutan, deployed troops to stop the road construction project, prompting Beijing to accuse India of trespassing on Chinese soil. Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj last week said both sides should pull back soldiers to allow talks on the conflict.


But China in response warned that it would step up its deployment, and insists that India must withdraw its troops before any proper negotiation takes place.

"The solution to this issue is simple, which is that the Indian troops back out honestly," Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said this week.

Sarath Chand, the vice army chief, said on Tuesday: "China is expanding its influence across the Himalayas into our neighbourhood despite being an economy five times the size (of India), with such a large standing army... it is bound to be a threat for us in the years ahead."


The standoff is a very public sign of India's willingness to push back.

"As this face-off continues, the one who's actually losing ground are the Chinese because they have styled themselves so far as a major power whom no one can challenge," said Jayadeva Ranade, head of the Delhi-based Centre for China Analysis and Strategy. "So the fact that India has stood up to them is a message to all other countries in the region."

"India views China's road-building as a threat because (the Chinese) have gone against the status quo of behaviour in a disputed territory," Shen Dingli, vice dean of Fudan University's Institute of International Studies, told news agency AFP.

The road was being built close to the "Chicken's Neck," a narrow, essential strip of land connecting India to its northeastern states.

But Beijing maintains that "Doklam has been part of China since ancient times," countering that Indian troops triggered the standoff by crossing a boundary established in an 1890 agreement with Britain.

Neither Chinese President Xi Jinping nor Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi can back down without facing a "nationalist backlash" back home, said Huang Jing, a Sino-Indian relations expert at the National University of Singapore.

Xi in particular must exude strength as he consolidates power before a crucial Communist Party congress later this year.

"This situation is very dangerous. I don't think China has much choice if the Indian troops stay where they are -- Xi will have to demonstrate to Chinese people whether he means what he says," Huang told news agency AFP.

India has also voiced concern about another Chinese project: The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, which will give Beijing access to the Arabian Sea but passes through Azad Kashmir. The project is part of a massive Chinese global trade infrastructure programme dubbed One Belt, One Road, which India has snubbed.

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/...brics-nsa-doklam-jammu-kashmir/1/1012964.html
India most wanted two Countries war become reality soon. Thank you Modi ji
 
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Modi miscalculated Chinese reaction, he thought it was just another border kabaddi, this is different, they are interfering on behalf of another country, a dangerous precedent.
 
. . . . . . .
now i am tired of chines warnings like indians.
pls do somehting or you are proving your self spineless.
india and other countries in scs will get the courage to do more harm to china.
 
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Pakistan is already in mess, can't handle a war with India on the behalf of your master.

And do you have any idea , how many fronts India can open against Pakistan in a war??

you clearly have no idea what you are talking about.
pakistan now has a credible and professional airforce with numbers to complement and weapons to fight in any scenario.
its army is well equipped and battle hardened with years of experience of fighting insurgents. this means even its supplky chain is well groomed.
its navy is better equipped now than ever before.
add force multipliers then you have a military that will not only defends its borders but can take the fight to the enemy.
its like cricket......you know you can beat us but then boooooooom you lose by 180+ runs
 
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Looks like the Chinese loves the story "The boy who cried wolf"!!!!!! But, only in the reverse fashion!!!!! They're issuing so many warnings that the Indian folks would be just ignoring them. So, when the real action comes Indians will be caught off-guard!!!!

This is not 1962. We have satellites that monitor troop movements on the other side.
 
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Looks like the Chinese loves the story "The boy who cried wolf"!!!!!! But, only in the reverse fashion!!!!! They're issuing so many warnings that the Indian folks would be just ignoring them. So, when the real action comes Indians will be caught off-guard!!!!
salam , this time it will really be reverse fashion , Bharat will beat the $hit out of PLA and china will feel humiliated at the end . so kindly wait for things to conclude . by the wish of all mighty Allah, we have Narender Modi ji in power . the world will come to know that china is hollow from inside actually .
 
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you clearly have no idea what you are talking about.
pakistan now has a credible and professional airforce with numbers to complement and weapons to fight in any scenario.
its army is well equipped and battle hardened with years of experience of fighting insurgents. this means even its supplky chain is well groomed.
its navy is better equipped now than ever before.
add force multipliers then you have a military that will not only defends its borders but can take the fight to the enemy.
its like cricket......you know you can beat us but then boooooooom you lose by 180+ runs
You are overating yourself.
Mark my words, Pakistan will not fire even a bullet in case of India -china war , not even on LOC.
Bcz there will be a lot pressure from our allies countries.
And this will be wise decision for Pakistan.
 
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