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Antony sees Chinese shipping bypassing Indian blockade

PEACEMAKER2010

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One morning in 1999, the tiny Canadian village of Tuktoyaktuk on the Arctic Ocean awoke to a surprise. Parked off the coast was a Chinese icebreaker ship, the Xue Long, mocking Ottawa’s pretensions of control over its northern waters. China is not even amongst the eight Arctic countries — Russia, Finland, Sweden, Norway, the US (Alaska), Iceland, Denmark (Greenland) and Canada itself — that claim the Arctic’s fabled hydrocarbon reserves, and the rapidly opening Arctic shipping lanes. But Beijing knows that global warming is melting the Arctic ice cap; and it is readying to exploit this, both commercially and militarily.

This growing capability threatens Indian strategy in a war with China. Defence analysts point to India's two-fold strategy: defending the land border in the north with the army and the air force; while using the Indian Navy to block China’s commercial and military shipping in the Indian Ocean. India’s coastal airfields, especially in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and its proximity to the choke points of Malacca and Sunda in southeast Asia and the Straits of Hormuz and Aden in West Asia will allow the Indian Navy to impose a strangling economic blockade on China.

But this is not possible if Chinese shipping transits through the Arctic routes, which bypass the Indian Ocean. On Monday, at an international maritime seminar in New Delhi, Defence Minister A K Antony expressed concern, saying: “The possible melting of the polar ice caps will have tectonic consequences for our understanding of what maritime domains constitute ‘navigable’ oceans of the world. Specific to Asia and the Indian Ocean Region, there may be a need to reassess concepts like chokepoints and critical sea lines of communication (SLOCs).”

Global warming has created the new SLOCs that Antony refers to. Arctic winter temperatures have risen by more than seven degrees over the last six decades. The resulting thinner ice melts easily during summer. In the unusually warm summer of 2007 the Arctic ice cap shrunk by a million square miles. Advanced scientific models presented at the American Geophysical Union in 2007 anticipated an ice-free Arctic summer by 2013.

The melting ice is opening two Arctic sea routes: the Northwest Passage connects the Northern Atlantic, through Canada’s northern islands, with the Northern Pacific Ocean. In September, 2008, the MV Camilla Desgagnes became the first commercial ship to traverse the Northwest Passage, with the crew reporting that it “did not see one cube of ice.” More relevant to China is the Northern Sea Route, which connects the North Atlantic, passing north of Russia, to the North Pacific and then to the South China Sea. This not just bypasses any Indian ambushes in the Indian Ocean but also reduces the distance from northern Europe to Japan by over 40 per cent, from 21,000 kilometres to just 12,000 kilometres.

In a Financial Times article in January 2008, Professor Robert Wade of the London School of Economics revealed that China “has lately displayed special interest in relations with Iceland, the tiny island in the north Atlantic, which with its strategic location is believed to get a key role in future shipping in the region. China wants to start shipping containers in the north, and sees the deep-sea ports of Iceland as potential port bases.”

China is harnessing a global maritime trend. Just as trans-polar routes revolutionised air travel, the melting of Arctic ice caps is revolutionising commercial shipping. Shipping companies worldwide have already built close to 500 ice-class ships and more are on order.

But China also recognises the strategic and military advantage of an alternative route for its commercial shipping. Beijing has set up the Chinese Arctic and Antarctic Administration, to oversee polar research and expeditions. This maintains an outpost, the Yellow River Station, in Norway’s Spitsbergen Archipelago. It bought the Xue Long, just as it bought its first aircraft carrier, the Varyag, from Ukraine and then spent 31 million Yuan ($5 million) to make it polar-capable. The Xue Long has made four major research trips into the Arctic, the most recent one last year.

With competing claims and counter-claims over waters, the Arctic is seeing a growing military presence. Scott Borgerson revealed in Foreign Affairs magazine that, after the UN rejected Russia’s claim to almost half a million square miles of Arctic waters, “the Kremlin dispatched a nuclear-powered ice-breaker and two submarines to plant its flag on the North Pole’s sea floor. Days later the Russians provocatively ordered strategic bomber flights over the Arctic Ocean for the first time since the Cold War.”

Antony sees Chinese shipping bypassing Indian blockade
 
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^ LMAO at indians and their imaginary blockade of China to satisfy their inferiority complex.

Please stop blockading us, I'm really feeling the effects already. :lol:
 
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Good advance plannings for China. Besides short the distance by a good amount, her ships can avoid Malacca Strait and Suez Canal, two choke points that have dangerous potentials.

The government start to get my respects.
 
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^ LMAO at indians and their imaginary blockade of China to satisfy their inferiority complex.

Please stop blockading us, I'm really feeling the effects already. :lol:

We can't stop what we haven't started. If you had the brainpower to actually read the article, you may have realised that it was discussing the possibility of a blockade in case of a future war - not that there is any blockade existing now. Your inability to read and digest is staggering.
 
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Yes Antony boy dream of block Chinese merchant ships and we chinese're dreaming of diver water away from let India to get a single drop...it's a faire exchange..+400 millions Indians life for few chinese merchant ship...let stroke a deal.:cheers:
 
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Good advance plannings for China. Besides short the distance by a good amount, her ships can avoid Malacca Strait and Suez Canal, two choke points that have dangerous potentials.

The government start to get my respects.

But the northern Arctic passage will be controlled by Russia and Scandinavian countries. How is it more safe & secure than the Indian ocean route from South China sea to Europe?
 
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LOL, they can't even blockade the front route. :lol:

The vast majority of merchant ships in the world use "flags of convenience", not their actual flags.

Flag of convenience - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

If you attack a ship with the flag of another country, you are declaring war on that country. Any ships remaining that still have the Chinese flag, can simply take the long route around. If not, any shortfalls can easily be made up by increasing the oil/gas supply from our Central Asian pipelines, from Malaysia/Brunei, or from Canada across the Pacific.

Plus, we have the largest industrial base in the world. In the worst case scenario, we can produce unlimited numbers of anti-ship missiles, more than enough to blanket the Indian Navy until there is nothing left.
 
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But the northern Arctic passage will be controlled by Russia and Scandinavian countries. How is it more safe & secure than the Indian ocean route from South China sea to Europe?


Both countries are not known for their piracy. But if you meant their government blockade of the route, you have too much imaginations. Any country blocks an international commercial sea route is against the international laws. There will be repercussions against such country.
 
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Why would a Chinese icebreaker in the Arctic become a threat to India?

Did the Indian guy Antony cook his brain for dinner?
 
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LOL, they can't even blockade the front route. :lol:

The vast majority of merchant ships in the world use "flags of convenience", not their actual flags.

Flag of convenience - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

If you attack a ship with the flag of another country, you are declaring war on that country. Any ships remaining that still have the Chinese flag, can simply take the long route around. If not, any shortfalls can easily be made up by increasing the oil/gas supply from our Central Asian pipelines, from Malaysia/Brunei, or from Canada across the Pacific.

Plus, we have the largest industrial base in the world. In the worst case scenario, we can produce unlimited numbers of anti-ship missiles, more than enough to blanket the Indian Navy until there is nothing left.

if u enter bay of bengal or indian ocean , ur navy will be covered with so many brahmos missiles that Chinese navy will forget counting and will whine like a rabid dog...so before making threats may be u should check ur capabilities coz of now u dont have the capability to operate in India's neighborhood..go bark somewhere else kid

---------- Post added at 08:55 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:54 AM ----------

Both countries are not known for their piracy. But if you meant their government blockade of the route, you have too much imaginations. Any country blocks an international commercial sea route is against the international laws. There will be repercussions against such country.
so why are the Chinese whining when indian commercial ships pass through 'South China' sea ??
 
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Both countries are not known for their piracy. But if you meant their government blockade of the route, you have too much imaginations. Any country blocks an international commercial sea route is against the international laws. There will be repercussions against such country.

Looks like you have a problem with English language comprehension. I didn't say Russia or the Scandinavian countries are pirates. Yes, These countries can block the northern Arctic passage, because the entire passage falls within their maritime territory and exclusive economic zones. Also, the Arctic passage is not yet an international commercial sea route.

BTW... Scandinavia is not just one coutry, but a bunch of countries in Northern Europe.
 
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if u enter bay of bengal or indian ocean , ur navy will be covered with so many brahmos missiles that Chinese navy will forget counting and will whine like a rabid dog...so before making threats may be u should check ur capabilities coz of now u dont have the capability to operate in India's neighborhood..go bark somewhere else kid

Too bad your own Indian Armed forces have already admitted that they have no hope of beating China. :rofl:

'India can't match China's military force': Indian Naval Chief - IBN Live

New Delhi: Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Sureesh Mehta has set off a storm by saying India cannot match China military force. Is it a warning from India's military that the government needs to hear?

"In military terms, both conventional and non-conventional, we neither have the capability nor the intention to match China force for force," said Admiral Sureesh Mehta.

For a nuclear-armed military representing the interests of a billion-plus people, the lack of confidence is quite striking. India's military leadership has made a stunning confession that New Delhi doesn't have the stomach for a fight, if push came to shove on the disputed Sino-Indian boundary.

"Whether in terms of GDP, defence spend or any other parameter, the gap between the two is too wide to bridge and is getting wider by the day," he said.

You couldn't even beat us in 1962, when your economy was bigger than ours.

Today, China's economy is FOUR times larger than India's, with commensurate military spending. We have never been in a better position vis-a-vis India than we are today, not since the founding of the PRC.

The "chicken's neck corridor" was meant to be cut off, and after that you will see Partition v2.0. :lol:
 
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that arctic circle sea route won't be a cake walk either...

dGnsz.gif


Diverting the good through Bering strait will be akin to handing over their reigns to US/Russia both. We all know what will happen when the big daddys get pissed ;)
 
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