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New strike corps for China border

Vibs

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In 2009, New Delhi acted decisively in sanctioning two new army divisions, about 35,000 troops, to strengthen Indian defences in Arunachal, which China claims as a part of Tibet. It can now be revealed that New Delhi has also sanctioned a new mountain strike corps, of an additional 40,000 soldiers, to be permanently located in bases in northeast India. The new corps is to retaliate against any major Chinese ingress into India by launching an offensive into Tibet.

For decades after India’s humiliation at the hands of China in 1962, New Delhi shrank from a robust defence posture on the Sino-Indian Line of Actual Control (LAC), fearing it might provoke China. In the aftermath of 1962, through the 1960s and 1970s, the Indian Army stayed away from the border, remaining behind a self-imposed ‘Limit of Patrolling (LoP)’. In the 1980s, the army returned to the LAC, but remained entirely defensive in outlook. The sanctioning of a strike corps, therefore, signals a dramatic new assertiveness in New Delhi.

Business Standard has been aware of this development since 2009, but has refrained from reporting on it after requests from top Ministry of Defence (MoD) officials. Now, with the outlines of this development emerging in the media, Business Standard no longer feels bound by confidentiality.
The new mountain strike corps will control two divisions, trained and equipped for an attack into Tibet. If China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) captures any Indian territory, by quickly concentrating an attacking force over Tibet’s impressive road network, the Indian Army would not be forced into bloody, Kargil-style counterattacks to recapture that territory.

Instead, the new strike corps would launch its own riposte, advancing into Tibet and capturing a vulnerable chunk of Chinese territory, e.g. the Chumbi Valley that projects into Sikkim and Bhutan. Several such objectives would be identified in advance and detailed preparations made for the offensives. The new strike corps will have its own mountain artillery, combat engineers, anti-aircraft guns and radio equipment. It would also be supported by Indian Air Force (IAF) fighters, operating from newly renovated bases in northeastern India. On July 26, the then IAF chief confirmed that Sukhoi-30 fighters had already been posted to air bases at Tezpur and Chhabua.

On June 25, he told NDTV that Jorhat, Guwahati, Mohanbari, Bagdogra and Hashimara were also being developed as air bases. The IAF is also modernising eight ALGs (Advanced Landing Grounds), essential for quickly building up and resupplying a strike corps. These bases would also be crucial for airborne operations, especially heli-lifting forces to key objectives behind the enemy frontlines.

The proposal to raise two additional divisions for the defence of Arunachal Pradesh, as well as a strike corps, dates back to 2007. It began as a decision of the China Study Group, a secretive government body that considers all strategic issues relating to China. Thereafter, the army’s Directorate General of Military Operations (DGMO) prepared a cabinet note. The decision to raise the additional divisions was taken by the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) on May 14, 2009.

This was the last major decision taken by the UPA government before the elections of 2009. It was rushed through because top UPA leaders felt if the UPA were not re-elected, the new government would begin the decision-making process afresh, losing another two years. To manage the expenses, it was decided the two defensive mountain divisions would first be raised during the 11th army plan (2007-2012). Next, the strike corps, including its two mountain divisions, would be raised during the 12th Defence Plan (2012-2017). The cost of raising a new Indian Army mountain division is estimated to be Rs 700 crore.

The 4,057-km LAC consists of three sectors. In the western sector in Ladakh, which India’s 14 Corps defends, the PLA already controls most of the area that China claims. The central sector, at the UP-Tibet border, which India’s 6 Mountain Division defends, is relatively insignificant. The most contentious is the eastern sector, which includes Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh, where China claims 90,000 sq km of territory that India occupies. It is here, driven by fear of Chinese aggression, that India is strengthening its capabilities by raising new formations.

A mountain strike corps will provide India with strategic capabilities that were badly missed when Mao Zedong marched the PLA into Tibet in 1950. While considering its responses, the Indian government asked the army chief of that time, General (later Field Marshal) K M Cariappa, what resources he had to intervene on behalf of Tibet. Cariappa could spare just one battalion (800 soldiers). And, so, New Delhi watched as Tibet was subjugated and the China border advanced all the way to the Himalayas.
New strike corps for China border
 
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LOL i think i hit your weak nerve.WE DONT USE COFFINS instead we can give you sticks to burn the dead lol
 
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Make coffins for the strike force in advance as you got no chance of survival in case of war with china

Why are trolling and flaming this thread....I think you should be reported.

lets see who know the plateau more and narrow mountain lanes.... you forgot 1962 indian army marched well inside and then withdrew.....they can so the same again and not withdraw this time.... because Nehru is no more.
 
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I wonder how fast they will surrender after being set blaze by tactical nuclear weapons at 0100 hours after the start of PLA attack.

and i wonder what the reaction would be after the nuclear weapons fail to even launch jus like all other made in china copycats :rofl:

---------- Post added at 11:07 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:04 PM ----------

LOL i think i hit your weak nerve.WE DONT USE COFFINS instead we can give you sticks to burn the dead lol
yh and i bet u need none?y would would u when u blow up urselves :rofl:
 
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well war will hurt both china and India and profit goes to usa ,uk

so china has to think what they want growth or loss, peace or war

china and india are two growing power and that fact
 
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I wonder how fast they will surrender after being set blaze by tactical nuclear weapons at 0100 hours after the start of PLA attack.

i guess just as fast as PLA when the counter nukes arrive...kids these days I swear
 
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Let the puppets rant for master.

Its manmohan singh and antony waiting for another 1962 till they fast track induction, still they are waiting for next 5 year plan to raise strike corp.:hitwall:

We need to raise at least 3 more defensive divisions + 2 more strike corps

---------- Post added at 10:51 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:49 PM ----------

I wonder how fast they will surrender after being set blaze by tactical nuclear weapons at 0100 hours after the start of PLA attack.

Are you talking about the surrender of cpc bosses in front of chinese people and international community to be executed?????
 
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Make coffins for the strike force in advance as you got no chance of survival in case of war with china

Don't warn them buddy, the idea is to let them underestimate us. :azn:

Like this:

and i wonder what the reaction would be after the nuclear weapons fail to even launch jus like all other made in china copycats :rofl:

The more they underestimate us, the more surprised they will be, when they are: "advancing into Tibet and capturing a vulnerable chunk of Chinese territory." (As it says in the OP).
 
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is it an inferiority complex or jus a cliche

Do the Indian Armed Forces have an inferiority complex? :lol:

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.

India can't match China's military force: Navy Chief - India News - IBNLive
 
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