India, China to hold joint army exercise
Mon, 28 May 2007
NEW DELHI, May 28 In a sign of their improving relations, India and China will conduct their first-ever joint army training exercise.
The decision was announced Monday after a visit to China by an Indian military delegation led by Gen. J.J. Singh, chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee, the Press Trust of India reported.
The training exercise, whose dates and place will be announced later, is designed to build military-to-military confidence, the Indian press organization said.
Before leaving for Beijing, Singh told PTI China's People Liberation Army is interested in conducting anti-terrorism maneuvers in light of the Indian army's success in battling low-intensity insurgencies in the northeast and Kashmir regions.
Although it has never acknowledged any such internal problem, the PTI noted there have been reports of a simmering insurgency in China's Xinjian and Turkestan provinces, which have a large Muslim population.
China and India became bitter enemies after their 1962 war but relations have improved significantly in recent years despite China's closeness to Pakistan.
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/67023.html
Mon, 28 May 2007
NEW DELHI, May 28 In a sign of their improving relations, India and China will conduct their first-ever joint army training exercise.
The decision was announced Monday after a visit to China by an Indian military delegation led by Gen. J.J. Singh, chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee, the Press Trust of India reported.
The training exercise, whose dates and place will be announced later, is designed to build military-to-military confidence, the Indian press organization said.
Before leaving for Beijing, Singh told PTI China's People Liberation Army is interested in conducting anti-terrorism maneuvers in light of the Indian army's success in battling low-intensity insurgencies in the northeast and Kashmir regions.
Although it has never acknowledged any such internal problem, the PTI noted there have been reports of a simmering insurgency in China's Xinjian and Turkestan provinces, which have a large Muslim population.
China and India became bitter enemies after their 1962 war but relations have improved significantly in recent years despite China's closeness to Pakistan.
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/67023.html