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Why air power was not used in 1962

The territories which the chinese are occupying are sacred places of Indian nation.

Brahmaputra and Indus rivers are sacred rivers of Indian nation and are part of ancient Indian civilization.

Indian-occupied South Tibet which u all call arunachal pradesh- is part of ancient Chinese civilization.

India will have to return it for peace.

Otherwise, Tibet-based missiles will always be aimed at Delhi


Busted
 
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Indian-occupied South Tibet which u all call arunachal pradesh- is part of ancient Chinese civilization.

India will have to return it for peace.

Otherwise, Tibet-based missiles will always be aimed at Delhi

Busted

Janakpur of Mithila State in Eastern-Madhesh Plain is where princess Sita was born , wife of Lord Rama of Ayodhya

god-ramar-wallpapers.jpg

WT02RamYatra.jpg



In the 6th century BC, Prince Siddhartha Gautama was born into the Sakya royal family of Kapilavastu, near Lumbini, later embarking on a path of meditation and thought that led him to enlightenment as the Buddha. The religion that grew up around him continues to shape the face of Asia.

Around the 2nd century BC, the great Indian Buddhist emperor Ashoka (c 272-236 BC) visited Lumbini and erected a pillar at the birthplace of the Buddha

gautama-buddha-1.jpg

GangesValley%26Plain.jpg


220px-EdictsOfAshoka.jpg
 
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Janakpur of Mithila State in Eastern-Madhesh Plain is where princess Sita was born , wife of Lord Rama of Ayodhya

god-ramar-wallpapers.jpg

WT02RamYatra.jpg



In the 6th century BC, Prince Siddhartha Gautama was born into the Sakya royal family of Kapilavastu, near Lumbini, later embarking on a path of meditation and thought that led him to enlightenment as the Buddha. The religion that grew up around him continues to shape the face of Asia.

Around the 2nd century BC, the great Indian Buddhist emperor Ashoka (c 272-236 BC) visited Lumbini and erected a pillar at the birthplace of the Buddha

gautama-buddha-1.jpg

GangesValley%26Plain.jpg


220px-EdictsOfAshoka.jpg

Indian-occupied South Tibet which u all call arunachal pradesh- is part of ancient Chinese civilization.

India will have to return it for peace.

Otherwise, Tibet-based missiles will always be aimed at Delhi
 
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Indian-occupied South Tibet which u all call arunachal pradesh- is part of ancient Chinese civilization.

India will have to return it for peace.

Otherwise, Tibet-based missiles will always be aimed at Delhi

Missile interceptors are placed and Indian Air Force is guarding the skies round the clock.
 
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These declassified maps show how the CIA saw the world at the height of the Cold War

China-India border region in 1963.
the-china-india-border-region-in-1963.jpg
 
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Idiotic media report? Victory of India on non-alignment? I like Nehru for his vision, especially him building an democratic transition of India and other scientific things. He did botched up on some foreign policy. But credit should be provided where due.

This war is a defeat for India and sugar coating with other words is like the author is deluding himself.
The defeat is a strict lesson to India: don't plot on other's land.
 
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Indian hindus would never learn from their victory over China in 1962.
 
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Same for China. Dont think of grabbing other's land or else China will face an reverse 1962.

Dont rile them up buddy, they just might build a wall :p:

An reverse? By what?

Nehru was naive and didn't have the stomach for War. His life was spent in cigars and bedding english women. He was what you call a "talker"

He is gone for good :)
 
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A loss is a loss. It is shameful that few diplomats treating it as "Diplomatic victory".
 
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http://www.hindustantimes.com/world...hu-la-clash/story-IjZMtQb92D98pFgiCFN3ON.html
The current India-China standoff along the frontier in Sikkim is similar to one in 1967 that led to four days of bloody clashes between the soldiers of the two countries.
Updated: Jun 30, 2017 18:25 IST

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Chinese army officers oversee preparations as they stand on the Chinese side of the frontier at Nathu La along India’s northeastern border in Sikkim.(AP file photo)

http://www.hindustantimes.com/world...hu-la-clash/story-IjZMtQb92D98pFgiCFN3ON.html

The bloody clashes between Indian and Chinese troops nearly 50 years ago at Nathu La in Sikkim, the scene of an ongoing standoff, are a grim reminder of how the unsettled border of the two countries has triggered hostilities.

The fighting that erupted on September 11, 1967 was preceded by months of accusations from both sides about incursions and territorial intrusions.

The language used by China at that time to warn Indian authorities was strikingly similar to the aggressive narrative emanating from Beijing five decades later. It even included references to the 1962 border war, which was fresh in the minds of military commanders on both sides at the time.

“The Chinese Government must tell the Indian Government in all seriousness: You must draw lessons from your past experience, stop provocative activities along the China-Sikkim border and cease all your calumnies against China, otherwise you are bound to eat the bitter fruits of your own making,” said a note handed over by China’s foreign ministry to the Indian embassy in Beijing on April 11, 1967.

On September 10, a day before hostilities broke out, the foreign ministry issued another terse warning , calling Indian leaders “reactionaries” who were “component part of the worldwide anti-Chinese chorus currently struck up by US imperialism and Soviet Revisionism in league with the reactionaries of various countries”.

The message, sent to New Delhi through the Indian embassy, said: “The Chinese Government sternly warns the Indian Government: the Chinese Border Defence Troops are closely watching the development of the situation along the China-Sikkim boundary. Should the Indian troops continue to make provocative intrusions, the Indian Government must be held responsible for all the grave consequences.”

The external affairs ministry countered the Chinese allegations with its own version of events, saying China’s troops had violated agreements.

“The Chinese Government is well aware that the Sikkim-Tibet border is a well-defined international border and has been recognised as such by China. By launching an armed attack the Chinese Government is seeking to build up tension at a point on the border which has never been in dispute,” the external affairs ministry told Beijing in a note.

The initial clashes in 1967 lasted four days. While the 1962 war was a debacle for New Delhi, the Indian Army proved more than a match for the Chinese five years later. According to an account of the clashes written by Maj Gen Sheru Thapliyal, who was posted in Sikkim at the time, the Indian side lost more than 70 soldiers while the Chinese casualties were more than 400.

“We gave them a bloody nose,” a former Indian diplomat told Hindustan Times.

Since then, the border in the Sikkim sector has remained free of violence. In 1967, Sikkim was a protectorate of India and it joined the Indian union as a state in 1975. China recognised the frontier in the Sikkim sector in 2003.

The last bullet fired along the China-India frontier was in the Arunachal Pradesh sector in October 1975 , when border patrols from the two sides accidentally came face-to-face amid dense fog at Tuhung La and an Indian soldier was killed. This is often cited by Indian politicians and diplomats to drive home how calm the boundary with China is, say, compared to that with Pakistan.
 
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HaHaHa, "1967" Indian indigenous bollywood episode is still alive and kicking each and every year, boy, i wonder do you people has the word "dignity" in your dictionary, how can you lie like there's no tomorrow, deep inside yourselves, do you really believed in the BS Indian victory that PLA kept getting killed more and more year after year since 1967? :help:

Hail to mighty India,what a hell of fight on the keyboard. (credits to YuChen)

Not many Indians REMEMBER it at June,2009. because the Casualties and losses of PLA is Unknown:

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=299553120&title=Nathu_La_and_Cho_La_incidents
Not many Indians REMEMBER it at Oct,2011. because the Casualties and losses of PLA is “1 killed
9 wounded” :

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=471611496&title=Nathu_La_and_Cho_La_incidents
Not many Indians REMEMBER it at Feb,2012. because the Casualties and losses of PLA is “10 killed 9 wounded” :
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=477676793&oldid=477674013&title=Chola_incident
….

More and More Indians will REMEMBER this victory because the Casualties and losses of PLA is “340 killed and 450 wounded in Cho La and Nathu La incidents combined” recent years:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nathu_La_and_Cho_La_incidents
Finger cross and waiting for the next update.:rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
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Rifleman Jaswant Singh of 4 Garhwal Rifles held off a massive Chinese attack in the battle of Nauranang before being killed in November 1962.
india Updated: Jul 03, 2017 11:25 IST

Arvind Moudgil and Anupam Trivedi

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Pauri Garhwal /Dehradun
http://www.hindustantimes.com/india...kra-for-him/story-vgNa4ZP6i2mePof1OrCE2H.html

Amid a standoff with Chinese troops on the India-Bhutan-Tibet tri-junction, the family of Rifleman Jaswant Singh, a hero of the 1962 war in Arunachal Pradesh, wants the Paramveer Chakra - India’s highest military decoration - for the legendary soldier.

“We really want Jaswant bhai should get Paramveer Chakra. For this, we wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi last year. His office acknowledged letter but nothing happened so far” Jaswant Singh’s younger brother Vijay Rawat told HT in Dehradun.

The tiny village of Baryun village in Uttarakhand’s Pauri Garhwal district continues to celebrate its bravest son who was posthumously decorated with India’s second highest military award, the Mahaveer Chakra. A weather beaten memorial to the war hero still stands in the village.

Jaswant Singh of 4 Garhwal Rifles who laid down his life to secure an Indian post, held off Chinese forces for nearly 72 hours in the battle of Nauranang. The post is now called Jaswantgarh post in his honour. He also singlehandedly killed hundreds of Chinese soldiers before being martyred.

“Such was the heroic act of bhaiji (elder brother) that Chinese troops beheaded him, took head away and later returned as a mark of respect to the great soldier,” says Vijay who was six years old when Jaswant Singh (21) laid down his life.

The younger brother will be visiting Tawang later in November where a memorial is dedicated to the rifleman. The Indian Army still treats him as an active soldier on duty and disburses his salary, awards him a promotion and even sanctions his leave. Six soldiers take care of chores such as ironing the uniform, polishing his shoes, serving the meals and making the bed at night at his post.

“Last year my children went to Tawang and this year I will be going there. My mother died last year and she always wanted to visit there as well. But we never took her as bhaiji never wanted that while he was alive,” says Vijay who retired from the Survey of India.

Ironically, Jaswant Singh was the only person in his family who served in the army. Vijay was keen that his two sons join the army but they could not.

“But I strongly feel we need heroes like my brother. And I am sure the tradition will continue,” he adds.

Only nine families now live in Jaswant’s village Baryun. His ancestral house, like many other houses of the village, about 180 km from Uttarakhand capital Dehradun, has also been reduced to ruins and the pathway to this house is lost in the overgrown wild shrubs.

Gangotri Devi (75), a relative of Rifleman Jaswant Singh said: “The government should take care of Jaswant’s ancestral house.”

A retired army havaldar, Bheem Singh said the state government should treat Baryun as a special village and erect a memorial for the war hero.
 
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