What's new

Now, Chinese choppers enter several hundred kilometres inside India

According to a source from an Indian newspaper the PLA moved deeper in.
 
India comes back down to earth. All the talk of India pulling its investments out of the US, Russia, EU, China would make those countries collapse. :coffee:
 
According to a source those 50 Chinese troops are terrified as they don't know when their life would come a end.
 
According to a source those 50 Chinese troops are terrified as they don't know when their life would come a end.

Not really.

The way things stand, the PLA has conducted an operation inside India and India is just blowing hot air too scared to shoot at the PLA in fear to poking the dragon in the eye and triggering a full scale invasion of India and getting yet another hiding at the hands of the PLA ala 1962.
 
Atleast most chinese trust the Indian newspaper.. and that too Times of India.

They admit that the chinese govt is simply a liar.

India is so irrelevant to us that none of our media even give more than a couple of paragraphs in the papers and 30 seconds on the tv. India simply don't even register on the radar.
 
India is so irrelevant to us that none of our media even give more than a couple of paragraphs in the papers and 30 seconds on the tv. India simply don't even register on the radar.

Well, its not a case of silence.

The chinese spokesperson said whatever India media reported is false.

Now, both chinese spokesperson and the Indian media can't be true... only one is.
 
Atleast most chinese trust the Indian newspaper.. and that too Times of India.

They admit that the chinese govt is simply a liar.

Nice attempt at trolling but no,

Already reported in the Chinese news sources, latest news came an Indian from an newspaper, tabloids like TOI don't have good rep.
 
i am just waiting when u guys will capture all of india and make it one of ur province:) and the first thing u shud do is that trace the ips of all the indians on this forum and teach them a v good lession:cheesy:

Well, you attempted the same thing in 1999 by putting up some "tents" in Kargil.

You could have taught us a lesson, yourself.. no?

Did you gain some wisdom from that experience, which you could share with your chinese friends?
 
What do you think of this opinion piece posted on TOI.

India and China: softly, softly
KANTI BAJPAI | Apr 27, 2013, 12.00 AM IST

Indian and Chinese troops are said to be in a standoff in Ladakh, in the Daulat Beg Oldi area. A Chinese military unit has apparently set up a camp fairly deep into what New Delhi considers is its side of the Line of Actual Control (LAC), and it has not withdrawn even after meetings between the local commanders and after the newly-formed border mechanism has been activated. The word standoff probably exaggerates the state of affairs. But the Indian media has portrayed it in these terms, and it is beginning to affect the nature of the debate within the country.

Predictably, domestic politics in India is starting to take its toll on government thinking. The role of domestic politics in Indian foreign policy could be a positive one. Instead, it is increasingly negative, tying the hands of the central government which is responsible for the conduct of external relations and clouding judgment and rational decision-making. We have seen in the past year that state governments and coalition politics are affecting New Delhi's stances. First Mamata foiled the Manmohan Singh government's efforts to reach an agreement with Bangladesh on the Teesta river. Then the Kerala government complicated the Ministry of External Affairs' handling of the Italian marines' case. Most recently, we have seen the DMK lecturing the Indian government on its policy on Sri Lanka.

There are of course times when domestic politics is positive. The Punjab government in India has worked assiduously to develop relations with its counterpart in Pakistan. The West Bengal government under the CPM was generally supportive of a rational, moderate policy towards Bangladesh. Indian public opinion over the past five years, in spite of the Mumbai outrage of 2008, has seen the good sense of a constructive approach to relations with Pakistan. Manmohan Singh was helped by coalition politics when he took the India-US nuclear deal to Parliament.

There is a danger that domestic politics will unhinge a cautious, prudent policy toward China in the present standoff. The opposition parties and the government of Kashmir under Omar Abdullah are calling for sterner Indian action. The BJP which had a fairly rational policy towards China when it was in power is now pounding its chest. The fact of the matter is that we just do not know enough about what happened in Daulat Beg Oldi.

Since we do not know, we must, as the government has argued, be patient. The meeting between commanders and the border mechanism has not been terribly successful in resolving differences. But there are other modes of communication and conflict mitigation. These must be given time. In any case, those who are jumping up and down calling for tougher action - by which they mean military action - should explain what action New Delhi can take when its overall weakness in relation to China is so massive.

The fact is that China's economy is four times India's size. This is a measure of the difference between the two countries. It suggests that China has a much greater capacity to prosecute any conflict anywhere with India. Militarily, it has more nuclear weapons by a factor of three, at the very least. In terms of conventional weapons, there is glaring mismatch as well. China has about two times as many active military personnel as India. Its army has the advantage of the heights and infrastructure along our northern border, has better equipment, makes so much more of its arms, and can therefore fight a longer and wider war.

So let us be careful about what we would wish for. A fight with China would be disastrous - in every way. India would stand exposed militarily and diplomatically. In 1962, it was Parliament and public opinion that pushed Jawaharlal Nehru into taking positions that were unwise. Let's not repeat 1962. Our political parties and Chief Ministers should stifle themselves for a while, as the government tries to figure out whether the incursion is part of a larger strategy or if regional and local PLA commanders got too ambitious and need some time to retrench.

We are reeling economically and politically from an assortment of crises. This is no time for our nostrils to flare.

India and China: softly, softly - The Times of India


This guy, KANTI BAJPAI seems sensible.
 
Nice attempt at trolling but no,

Already reported in the Chinese news sources, latest news came an Indian from an newspaper, tabloids like TOI don't have good rep.

It's no trolling..

Simply, you cannot claim that Indian newspapers report the truth, as well as the chinese govt.... both can't be true.. because both are diametrically opposite.

C'mon.. you need to make up your mind and then come back.
 
It's no trolling..

Simply, you cannot claim that Indian newspapers report the truth, as well as the chinese govt.... both can't be true.. because both are diametrically opposite.

C'mon.. you need to make up your mind and then come back.


It is, second each side has it's own view as all things do, and each will claim it's true. Now we see what are our opinions and our disagreement are, that is the conclusion that has come and that will be mine. I agreed to disagree with what you say.
 
Back
Top Bottom