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US also has conscription aka draft.
Does it mean its army is useless?
What kind of reasoning is being pushed by right wingers here to look good somehow?
to be honest, i can't wait.
india have no reason to accuse China for the attack, we have warned them 2 weeks before the attack!
So do not wait, order Chines forces to attack. We have been waiting. Trust me chines forces will learn lesson soon.
The outcome of this battle is irrelevant at this time. Irrespective of whether China wins or loses this battle, it has lost the war.
If China wins:
1) Make permanent enemy out of India and Push India fully into Western embrace and may lead to creation of Asian NATO
2) No more fist fights on LAC with India which means that it needs to divert resources from South/Eastern China and increase military spending
3) Lose lucrative Indian market and trade surplus forever
If China loses:
1) It loses credibility among its allies and potential allies
2) Embolden others to confront China like India did
China is not a conscript army. China has that law, but it has never used it in its existence, if anything China just reduced troop levels by 300 thousand.
NCO system has been around since China's formation and even before that. A formal version of it has been adopted since 78. After that it has steadily evolved, to where it is currently and it will continue to evolve as China continue to require higher education for its men and women.
All of these can be easily confirmed, why would you even make a post like this. And you got likes, if this was reddit, I wouldn't even blink, but this is a military forum. This is just. Wow...
Also by saying Chinese can't handle casualties and India can, you are essentially saying Indian lives are worthless, or at least worth less than Chinese lives. All lives are equal.
Full of inferior complex.The outcome of this battle is irrelevant at this time. Irrespective of whether China wins or loses this battle, it has lost the war.
If China wins:
1) Make permanent enemy out of India and Push India fully into Western embrace and may lead to creation of Asian NATO
2) No more fist fights on LAC with India which means that it needs to divert resources from South/Eastern China and increase military spending
3) Lose lucrative Indian market and trade surplus forever
If China loses:
1) It loses credibility among its allies and potential allies
2) Embolden others to confront China like India did
Full of inferior complex.
Don't lie,your own army knows the conscript system is outdated and has been trying reforms to little success.More than 60% of the army is conscripts on the 2 year service regulation.The only volunteers are those conscripts whom after 2 years of service stay on in officer or junior officer capacity .Your own generals are afraid the pampered 'little emperor' generation of one child conscript recruits are unfit for soldiering.Like i said they will go into battle knowing with their death,their whole bloodline is wiped off the face of history.They and anything related to them are ending with them.No one to survive them or carry on the family.THE END.
Its NCO system is weak because Political commissars or party branch decide everything in final decisionmaking.Officers therefore have no initiative.
https://jamestown.org/program/refor...noncommissioned-officer-corps-and-conscripts/
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/china/plan-personel-enlistedforces-conscripts.htm
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/china/pla-training.htm
https://qz.com/174402/chinas-military-worries-that-its-one-child-recruits-are-wimps/
https://www.sott.net/article/258025...icy-creates-wimpy-military-recruits-deserters
1) if india is so weak that it would actually consider joining an alliance as a junior partner then what does it matter what you do (don't kid yourself, anyone is a junior cpmpared to the us.) Which is why no matter what Modi or any Indian politician won't join the Western order.The outcome of this battle is irrelevant at this time. Irrespective of whether China wins or loses this battle, it has lost the war.
If China wins:
1) Make permanent enemy out of India and Push India fully into Western embrace and may lead to creation of Asian NATO
2) No more fist fights on LAC with India which means that it needs to divert resources from South/Eastern China and increase military spending
3) Lose lucrative Indian market and trade surplus forever
If China loses:
1) It loses credibility among its allies and potential allies
2) Embolden others to confront China like India did
The outcome of this battle is irrelevant at this time. Irrespective of whether China wins or loses this battle, it has lost the war.
If China wins:
1) Make permanent enemy out of India and Push India fully into Western embrace and may lead to creation of Asian NATO
2) No more fist fights on LAC with India which means that it needs to divert resources from South/Eastern China and increase military spending
3) Lose lucrative Indian market and trade surplus forever
If China loses:
1) It loses credibility among its allies and potential allies
2) Embolden others to confront China like India did
you're not being a straight shooter.....are you?
this is what will actually happen
If China wins:
1.) India loses its credibility as the South Asian regional power
2.) India loses its influence on Bhutan
3.) India loses all their disputed territories, maybe plus more
4.) Major domestic disturbance as angry Indian mobs demands blood, but the Indian government knows its too weak. So now its Indian people vs. Indian government
5.) New Indo-China border will be drawn, by Chinese
6.) Indian superpower dream grandiose is shattered
7.) Indian military proven and shown to be a weak paper elephant
8.) and much more
If China loses:
1.) it's not going to
that is epic comical answer to India's Compromising Stand Against China.
Our media already openly make fun of that modi guy's IQ for not comprehend our message, what do you expect from the rest indians, in this respect, US is much smarter.
In korea war, we warned US never to cross the divided line, they ignored and took the consequences. In vietnam war, we gave the same warning and US took the cue, they never sent a single soldier to fight across that divided line, which by the way was the main reason US counldnot win the vietnam war.
Now the same story happened on those low IQ indians. In 1962, we warned them without positive response then humiliated them. This time is the same warning, but it will end up in slaughtering millions of those slum creatures and breaking it up, after all, its existence itself is against the law of human evolution.
First time I have seen the Diplomat actually give a fair appraisal of India, interesting that once India starts asserting itself it actually begins garnering respect.India’s National Security Adviser Ajit Doval is back from Beijing after attending the BRICS national security advisers’ conclave and meeting his Chinese counterpart, Yang Jiechi, but there is no sign yet of the standoff between Indian and Chinese troops at the Dolam (Doklam) plateau ending, almost two months after it began. Both sides have chosen not to comment on outcomes, if any, from the talks that Doval held in Beijing, indicating perhaps that a mutually satisfactory solution still eludes them. Or maybe, Beijing and New Delhi want to consult Bhutan, the third party in this unusual spat, before proceeding further.
Whatever the reason for the silence, the world is surprised at the turn of events since late-May when the border spat began at a point where the boundaries of India-China and Bhutan meet. For one, the vehemence displayed by Chinese commentators was out of the ordinary and so was the aggressive tone of official statements made by government spokespersons in Beijing, accusing India of trespassing into Chinese territory. More unusually however, the calm assurance and panache with which New Delhi has handled the crisis so far points to a far more confident India, a point that would be noticed and studied across important world capitals.
What then is the secret behind New Delhi’s polite yet firm stand?
Several factors ranging from India’s better military posture along the contested border to improved economic heft can be cited for the new approach. However, the biggest reason for India to stand up to China ironically is the blatant attempt by President Xi Jinping to force a China-centric order in Asia, a proposition that no government in New Delhi can agree to under any circumstances. Under Narendra Modi, politically the strongest Prime Minister in India for three decades, accepting China’s hegemony was out of the question, given his muscular national security policies. Very early in his tenure Modi had decided to depart from convention on dealing with China. He broke a long standing taboo of not inviting representatives of the Tibetan government-in-exile and that of Taiwan to official functions, lest Beijing feel offended. The Prime Minister of the Tibetan Government-in-exile and Taiwan’s trade representative were among the select invitees to Modi’s oath taking ceremony in the summer of 2014, setting the tone for a more robust policy towards China.
A border standoff in Ladakh in September 2014—coinciding with President Xi Jinping’s maiden visit to India—witnessed a rare display of India’s new approach of not succumbing to Chinese bullying. After 1,000 Chinese troops intruded into Chumar, a remote border outpost in South-east Ladakh, New Delhi rapidly built up a 9,000-strong force in two days, forcing the PLA to back off. Another similar face-off at Yangtse in Arunachal Pradesh in 2015 with the same result further demonstrated India’s resolve.
That resolve is being backed up with an improved military posture. Building on the modest beginning made under the previous government to improve infrastructure all along the northern frontier, the current government is quietly building capabilities to counter China militarily. Consider this:
Moreover, Ladakh, the scene of two prominent standoffs in 2013 and 2014, now has an additional infantry brigade stationed permanently in the area while more elements of Northern Command’s reserve division—39—now exercise regularly in the high altitude desert. From the initial induction of a regiment of T-72 tanks done in 2013, India now plans to augment its armor strength to a full-fledged tank brigade in Ladakh.
- India’s indigenously developed missiles—Agni, Akash, and Brahmos—are either ready for induction or already inducted into the armed forces, providing potent weapons for use against China.
- The development of a family of K-Series of submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBM)—although mostly shrouded in secrecy—is in a fairly advanced stage, keeping India on track to complete its nuclear triad.
- After initial reservation against the proposed Mountain Strike Corps (sanctioned by the previous government), the Modi government has revived its support for the project. Two Mountain Divisions meant for the Strike Corps are about to complete their raising in Northern and Eastern Commands. More air assets are planned for Strike Corps. The eventual aim is to build flexibility in its deployment and allow swift switching of forces from one theatre to another.
- The formation of a Special Forces Division and a cyber and space agency, as prelude to formation of separate tri-services Special Forces, Cyber and Space Commands, has commenced in recent months.
In the East, the 56 and 71 Mountain Divisions, raised from 2009 onwards, are now firmly placed and deployed on the ground, making more troops available to defense planners.
The Air Force has also staged forward its assets both in the North and the East by deploying the Sukhoi-30 planes at bases close to the Chinese border. Completion of the project to revamp eight Advanced Landing Grounds (ALGs) in Arunachal Pradesh will mean improved connectivity and increased capacity to insert troops in the high altitude areas. The reported deployment of Brahmos Missile regiments along the northern frontiers in the past couple of years means India now has additional offensive capability.
Strategically important roads high in the Himalayas, planned almost a decade ago, are now getting a more focussed attention with more tunnels at high altitude passes being built to allow all-weather traffic.
The Indian Navy, the smallest of the three armed forces, is in the midst of an unprecedented expansion, although the strength of its conventional submarine fleet remains a matter of concern.
There are of course many weaknesses in India’s higher defense management, its procurement systems, and pace of military modernization. Military leaders have spoken about a high degree of obsolescence across the three forces as a result of years of neglect and apathy in military modernization. The Modi government will have to redouble its efforts to overcome the shortages and restructure the management system of the military expeditiously to meet mounting challenges from China and Pakistan.
Overall, however, India’s military strength is right now adequate to hold off any Chinese adventurism across the Himalayas, but not strong enough for an offensive posture. Military analysts however argue that a stronger China will think twice before initiating any conflict with India since Indian soldiers are better trained and battle hardened compared to the PLA troops. That said, neither side will gain anything substantial in a possible armed conflict. That perhaps is the only saving grace in the troubled relationship between India and China at the moment.
http://thediplomat.com/2017/07/indi...n-the-himalayas-is-backed-up-with-hard-power/