What's new

India Surrenderd to China AGAIN: India withdraws troops from disputed Himalayan region

Shahzaz ud din

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jun 12, 2017
Messages
7,877
Reaction score
14
Country
Pakistan
Location
Canada
India withdraws troops from disputed Himalayan region, defusing tension with China.

AFP_QZ2CG-4802.jpg

In this July 2006 photo, a Chinese and Indian soldier place a barbed wire fence following a meeting of military representatives at the Nathu La border crossing between India and China in India's northeastern Sikkim state. (Desha-Kalyan Chowdhury/AFP/Getty Images)
By Simon Denyer and Annie Gowen August 28 at 4:31 AM


BEIJING — India has begun withdrawing troops from a disputed Himalayan region on the border with China, foreign ministries from the two countries announced Monday, defusing a tense stand-off that had threatened to provoke armed conflict between thenuclear-armedAsian rivals.

For the past two months, Indian and Chinese troops had faced off on a plateau in the Doklam area in Himalayas, after Indian troops moved in to prevent the Chinese military building a road into territory claimed by India’s close ally, Bhutan.

China had repeatedly and furiously denounced the Indian move as a direct infringement of its sovereignty, demanded an immediate and unconditional withdrawal, and warned that conflict was a real possibility if that didn’t happen.

On Monday, the two sides announced they had reached an agreement. But it was unclear if Beijing offered any concessions in return, such as agreeing to halt the construction of the road.

China said only that it would redeploy its forces according to the changing situation, but would continue to patrol and garrison the area.
In a short statement, India’s Ministry of External Affairs said the two countries had maintained diplomatic communication over the dispute in recent weeks.
“During these communications, we were able to express our views and convey our concerns and interests,” it said. “On this basis, expeditious disengagement of border personnel at the face-off site at Doklam has been agreed to and is on-going.”

China’s Foreign Ministry said it was happy to confirm that all Indian “individuals and facilities” have withdrawn to the India side of the border.
Without saying so directly, Beijing implied it would not need to keep so many troops stationed in the area, having moved a number there in response to the Indian deployment.

“The Chinese frontier defense force will continue to patrol and garrison in the Doklam area,” spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a regular news conference. “The situation at the spot has changed, and China will adjust and deploy according to current situation.”

Hua said China will “exercise its sovereign rights according to the historical treaty and guard its territorial sovereignty.”

China maintains the area in question was listed as on its side of the border under the 1890 “Convention Between Great Britain and China Concerning Sikkim and Tibet.”

“The Chinese government values the development of a harmonious neighborly relationship with India,” Hua said. “China hopes India will join it in maintaining border peace and stability on the basis of mutual respect, and keep the relationship developing in a healthy way.”

Earlier on Monday, the state-owned China Daily newspaper had warned India stood “to face retribution” over the incident, arguing that New Delhi was complacent if it thought China was not prepared for military conflict if necessary.

The announcement clears the air ahead of a meeting of the “BRICS” countries in China this weekend, a bloc comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.
“It’s hugely good news,” said Wang Dehua, an Indian studies expert at the Shanghai Institute for International Studies.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, he said, had “made a sound decision at a crucial moment that will benefit both Chinese and Indian people and the generations to come.”

“We have avoided falling into the situation where two major countries with ancient civilizations become hostile enemies,” Wang said, while cautioning against declaring the incident a big win or a diplomatic victory for China.

He said China would try to address India’s security concerns when Modi visits for the summit, but would continue building roads in border areas. “We should show them that building roads will be beneficial for all and there’s nothing to worry about,” he said.

In India, some experts interpreted the statements — and New Delhi’s comments about having raised its security concerns — to mean that China had quietly agreed to stop building the road in question, but would not say so publicly. Others said this was not clear.

“As the Chinese have stated publicly that Indian troops have withdrawn, India should also state clearly that China won't make that road,” Sushant Singh, associate editor of the Indian Express tweeted. “That will clear all the confusion about the terms on which the disengagement happened.”

Noting that China said it would continue to fulfill its territorial rights, opposition member of parliament Shashi Tharoor asked if this would include road-building.
“Did we blink?,” he tweeted.

The tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan was inadvertently swept up into the dispute when Indian soldiers moved from a nearby garrison into territory Bhutan contests with China, to block a crew from China's People’s Liberation Army that was preparing to build a “motorable” road in the area.

A few hundred troops from India and China were eventually deployed in a standoff that has produced harsh rhetoric — mostly from the Chinese side — and sparked a period of tension between the neighbors not seen for decades, analysts have said.


Although India and China have often sparred over the disputed areas along their estimated 2,100 mile border — and fought a brief war over it in 1962 — this clash was unusual because it involved a third country and came at a time when relations between India and China were at a low ebb.

Whether India — long a great patron of Bhutan — moved after coordinating with Bhutanese forces, as the Indians have said, or moved in on their own, as China claims, is the subject of much debate.

The Bhutan government was careful not to make comments and inflame tensions, and, aside from one brief statement from their Foreign Ministry, maintained a calculated silence throughout the dispute.

Today's WorldView
What's most important from where the world meets Washington


Gowen reported from New Delhi. Shirley Feng and Luna Lin in Beijing contributed to this report.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world...=.8453b01209eb

cartoon_650_052113093323.jpg
 
Proves that Indians have no balls ... China can build the road anytime it wants now ... meanwhile all India can do is sit and cry :fie::shout::help:

If China can,
So can India come back and kick the Chinese out.

Bottom line, where is THE ROAD chinaman?
Where is THE ROAD?

The whole world is asking the Chinese, where is THE ROAD?
:rofl::rofl::rofl::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::omghaha::omghaha::omghaha::no::no::no:
 
If China can,
So can India come back and kick the Chinese out.

Bottom line, where is THE ROAD chinaman?
Where is THE ROAD?

The whole world is asking the Chinese, where is THE ROAD?
:rofl::rofl::rofl::sarcastic::sarcastic::sarcastic::omghaha::omghaha::omghaha::no::no::no:
Racial insults I see? What a coward ... you guys know that your real warriors cannot fight the Chinese so India resorts to their keyboard warriors ... unconventional tactics I see :taz:. IMHO, the Indian keyboard army is a much more formidable foe than the actual Indian army ...
 
Racial insults I see? What a coward ... you guys know that your real warriors cannot fight the Chinese so India resorts to their keyboard warriors ... unconventional tactics I see :taz:. IMHO, the Indian keyboard army is a much more formidable foe than the actual Indian army ...

Insult is an insult whether racial or otherwise dumboChan.
Again, where is THE ROAD?
Have you built THE ROAD?
:rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
Insult is an insult whether racial or otherwise dumboChan.
Again, where is THE ROAD?
Have you built THE ROAD?
:rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:
Indians never had the BALLS to confront the Chinese. You guys just suffered a worse defeat than 1962? Why? Because the Chinese defeated you guys without firing a single shot! In 62', the Chinese had to slaughter thousands of Indians in order to push them back; this time there were no casualties. As for the road, we will see construction commence in a few weeks ... as for Modi, good luck trying to explain their humiliation
 
Insult is an insult whether racial or otherwise dumboChan.
Again, where is THE ROAD?
Have you built THE ROAD?
:rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:

Apparently they haven't withdrawn their troops, so they might resume after Modi attends the international summit in China.

My view from the beginning is that the Chinese are playing a long game, and wont do anything at least until Trumps state visit there around November.
 
Apparently they haven't withdrawn their troops, so they might resume after Modi attends the international summit in China.

My view from the beginning is that the Chinese are playing a long game, and wont do anything at least until Trumps state visit there around November.

And what makes you think it won't be the Indian's that will be moving in after the BRICS meet?
Or may be even during it?
:cheesy::cheesy:

Hey, if we can kick them out once, we can repeat the same numerous times.
 
Lets make sure we all understand following,

0. When any such conflicts arise in future, chinese will talk much, India will not talk, but do. press conference, photos of the troops and newspaper articles do not win the war, tough diplomacy and posture does, chini must understand this.
1. My country is not from 1962 India, we have changed. So is china, they are stronger than ever, but needs a calm approach towards the border disputes with neighbors.
2. We finallly called the chinese bluff, and exposed chinese three prong war strategy or media war, legal war and psychological war.
3. India - china border remains a border without bullet being fired, India is successful in taming the dragon with the water from Indian ocean.
4. clear message to all --> Any future bravado will be met by an equally strong Indian response, our neighbors must make sure they packed enough supplies for winter.
5. India can go to its neighbors with credibility that it can give security shield to them again china. Vietnam first, many to follow.
6. pakistan was watching this and wanted to escalate it to war so it can open another theater of war on our western front, making the two front war a reality. India was prepared for it, but also sure that it will never happen.
7. India's close ally came to its help, be it US, Israel or Japan. No one shown backing up china. Thus showing the world that who has friends and how has chamacha's.
8. No matter what chinese posters say on pdf, we must learn to ignore them. They are not part of the chinese leadership.
 
And what makes you think it won't be the Indian's that will be moving in after the BRICS meet?
Or may be even during it?
:cheesy::cheesy:

Hey, if we can kick them out once, we can repeat the same numerous times.

Are you suggesting India would completely withdraw its troops and then redeploy them a week later?
 
The only place where chinese can built road illegally is Pakistan :lol:

Are you suggesting India would completely withdraw its troops and then redeploy them a week later?

If you are suggesting that chinese will restart building the road then yes.
 

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom