Yeah i also though the 8 km was nonsense till i confirmed it from a source. First figure was 3 km and then it came to be 8 km. Can u reply what IA plans to do about it?? or you think that that PLA has not entered at all so nothing needs to be done.
If you have done so much to verify the facts, mind telling me where?
- Near Daulat Beg Oldie
- In Galwan Valley
- In the Pangong Tso fingers
I have looked up these three and examined in detail all that has appeared in print on the locations, and I would like to know what your source has told you about the location.
so by communist, u mean that Nepalese inside nepal and overseas dont support their Government ? also the Gurkha regiments, what ratio of gurkhas are in there ? what about Nepali origin soldiers in IA?
About the government, they are Khas Nepalis, who depend on their support upon the tribal sections, against their own kith and kin. Other Khas Nepalis were very pro-monarchy, and these people, Brahmins and Chhetris to a man, broke away politically and aroused the tribes.
You need to look up the people called Madhesis. They form a significant part of the electorate, and they tend to incline towards India, being of Indian descent, from the people of the Terai region.
For your information, there is not a single Khas Nepali (Bamans and Chhetris or Khas Thapas) in the Gorkha Rifles. There are only the three Buddhist tribes of central Nepal, Gurung, Magar and Tamang, and the Kiratis of eastern Nepal, the Limbus and the Rais. The only Thapas in the Indian Army are officers; the British did not encourage recruiting them, because they were the officer class of the Nepali Army who stopped the British dead in their tracks, and the British wanted to form close relationships with their Gorkhas without any other centre of influence in the regiments.
The Gorkha Rifles are 100% Gorkha, not a single non-Gorkha among them.The officers are all NDA+IMA graduates and there are Nepali (=Gorkha) among them; the Indian Army did not/does not systematically keep them from command. Some of our greatest war heroes have been commissioned officers of the Indian Army who happen to be Gorkha.
Most Gorkhas are from Nepal; there are very significant percentages from the Darjeeling, Sikkim, and Assam Plains. Limbus and Rais, in fact, come from either eastern Nepal or Darjeeling. The British thought they were not as soldierly as their favourites, the Gurungs, Magars and Tamangs (Pun is a sub-tribe of the Magars; the kid, Dipprasad Pun, who killed 30 Taliban fighters, and beat in the head of the last one with his machine-gun tripod, was a Pun), but they have won their fair share of VCs, and of PVCs, MVCs and VrCs, thank you very much. The Limbus and Rais were the ones who gave the British officers the greatest shock (all of them gave their British officers a shock, these were the ones who stunned them) by refusing to go with the rest of the 7th to Britain, so the Indian Army had to revive an old, discontinued regiment, 11 Gorkhas, just for them.
There are also Gorkhas in the Assam Regiment, and, of course, in the para-military Assam Rifles.
Hope that helps.
best experienced mountain army but no mountains left to climb in laddakh it seems!
IA is sad!
Look up the average height of Ladakh, O Genghis.