USSR was nobody's ally. They helped Vietnam during the American war to give a bloody nose to USA. USSR won't risk fighting a war with China over Vietnam. The USSR and China had their own conflicts but that is another story.
The treaty between USSR and Vietnam was signed in 11/3/1978. Please check the fact.
[QUOTE="Vietnam's economy was already devastated following the destructive American invasion. More bombs fell on Vietnam than in entire duration of World War Two[/QUOTE].
Chinese delayed their due rebuilding for another ten years.
[QUOTE="The claim of "Greater Vietnam" will have to be verified but it is no denying that today entire SEA is apprehensive of China. Unwittingly China pushed Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Philippines, South Korea, into an unofficial group who are all bound by their mutual worry of China. Bad diplomacy I must say.[/QUOTE]
Wrong. Divided ASEAN countries are to a threat to China, united "Greater Vietnam: could have been. South Korean is not a ASEAN country. Laos and Cambodia can't be more friendly to China. Check the facts.
[QUOTE="With all respect, that is a stretch. The Chinese suffered just as much as Vietnam.[/QUOTE]
There is no point to guess who suffer more, because it is all subjective.
[QUOTE="Again with respect, your points are the Chinese side and likewise a Vietnamese too can claim similar objectives achieved. From what I know the Vietnamese stopped the Chinese invasion cold and that counts as a Vietnamese victory.[/QUOTE]
As I said, they can claim anything they want, I just show you my reasoning. You are running a circular logic.
[QUOTE="The same was true for India. In fact it was even worse for India. Some mandarins in Delhi, even today, believe that under-developing infrastructure in (Chinese) border areas is a smart move because it will slow down a potential Chinese aggression. If ammunition and supplies reached Chinese front in days it would have taken Indian side weeks.[/QUOTE]
Assam is a plain with rail road, and China would have to fight over Himalaya.
[QUOTE="That's a new one. If I am not wrong then Mao wanted to show the third world that China is the natural leader. Arunachal or lower Tibet as you call it is not some random land lying around. It is claimed by Chinese, even today, as their historical land. Remember that
China does not call it "land grabbing". For China the McMohan line simply does not exist.[/QUOTE]
It would be in other's eye, especially India was the leader of NAM, and enjoy the support from both USA and USSR.
[QUOTE="And China did grab land during 1962. Aksai Chin is the most prominent example. There were border outposts which were forever lost to India post 1962.[/QUOTE]
In India's eye, not from China's point of view. So we are running into circular logic again.
[QUOTE="Well that's ironic because present politics suggest otherwise.[/QUOTE]
From India point of view, China maybe enemy, but not the other way around. China withdrew with a good intention to India.
[QUOTE="China had Arunachal, in fact entire NE India, under its thumb and India did not have the will to fight and take it back. China has territorial ambitions because their claims on Arunachal and Sikkim are decades old.[/QUOTE]
That just proves my point. China had it and let go.
[QUOTE="I agree that China shocked he US alliance during Korean war. But a lot had evolved in military tech since then. I won't say US would have sent troops but they could well have sent military supplies. Indians in 1962 were fighting with vintage WW2 era weapons.[/QUOTE]
WE all know India's reasoning for the defeat, and no need repeating. It is you ask me about China point of view about 1962.
[QUOTE="I will give you a very small example. When the Chinese were marching into Tezpur here was practically no Indian army battalions in the entire North-Eastern region.[/QUOTE]
That proved my point again. China did not have territorial ambitions.
[QUOTE="Will read the book. Thanks.[/QUOTE]
Good book to read, may answer your questions.
[QUOTE="I don't know about Forward Policy but one time when India indeed tested Chinese resolve was during Operation Brasstacks which happened in the eighties if I am not wrong. And if my memory serves me right then under Project Falcon India had undertaken a massive infrastructure upgrade program along its Chinese borders.[/QUOTE]
1987 when India turned NEFA into AP.
[QUOTE="I don't want to question you here but maybe you can explain the supposed Han supremacy thing going in China.[/QUOTE]
Personally, I do not know anything about Han Supremacy, honestly. Some people may think Hans have higher IQ as some test suggested, but nothing more than that. Comparing to Supremacy of India Brahmins, it is nothing worth mentioning. In contrary, many Han Chinese claimed discriminated by the government as they can not have the benefits designed for minorities.
[QUOTE="Ethnic ground may be correct but linguistic background similarity is flawed.[/QUOTE]
Many of NE tribal have their relative in China, like Monba, Lhoba people, and they share similar Sino-Tibetan languages.
[QUOTE="Tibet would strongly disagree.[/QUOTE]
Again, subjective statement.
Sorry, messed the quotes. My friend, I think we have discussed issues, and let's just leave it. I feel we are going circles and the discussion is going nowhere. If you have a chance, please read Maxwell's book and CIA reports, better yet, if you can get hold on Henderson report. Maybe you will have new thoughts. Nice discussing with you. Thanks.
Next time, let's talk about "beef".