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Should India reinforce military around Ladakh standoff? Your vote.

Only Indians vote please.


  • Total voters
    48
PLA won't have to do anything. As soon as the ill equipped impoverished IA troops will see PLA infantry eating chow mein and relaxing , they will freeze to death out of sheer fear. PLA may then have to treat these vast no. of POWs with food and medi-care. Rather PLA needs to prepare for a post conflict scenario on how to treat the huge no. of Indian POWs they will be burdened with. :coffee:

No surprise why you country is where it is today :coffee:
 
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By the same logic the super duper PLA must be pissing in their pants while while India is invading the self proclaimed Chinese land.

Hint : India has already setup 8 tents there.

Nope, they are making a move to regain the lands like brave warriors.

I am asking this once again, why are Indians wanting the massacre of IA? :lol:
 
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hmm this move will most probably see the resignation of thousands of IA troops :hang2:
Thank god you said India Army will massacre by China. I would not be surprised if you say Bangladesh will do same.:omghaha:
Mighty Bangladeshi best in liking @ss of their master Chinese.
Come out from dream. In reality you and your Chinese master will P!ss in their pant after seeing Indian army. 5.3 Inch Bangladeshi and Chinese can not stop Indian army.
 
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If you were to purchase from the popular public discourse about developments along India's unresolved frontiers with China, you would end up gnashing your teeth at the brazenness with which our northern neighbour is nibbling away at disputed territory while an effete political class in New Delhi doesn't retaliate even to gross provocations.

In this narrative, China is a strategic genius that keeps securing gains through bold tactical moves ranging from littering the Himalayas with cigarette cartons to sending platoon strength detachments of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) on excursions into India. India, as you might recall, lacks a strategic culture, so we just match the PLA's aggressive moves by firing long-range ballistic outrage nightly from launching pads located in television studios.

There are, no doubt, shades of truth in the dominant public perception about what is going on at the India-China boundary. Beijing assumed a hard-line posture on the boundary dispute a few years ago. New Delhi's response has been more restrained than it ought to have been. This, combined with the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government's abysmal communication skills and total abandonment of the use of rhetoric to manage public opinion, has scored a self-goal in the psychological domain.

The net result, as far as the boundary situation is concerned, is to hand the PLA an inexpensive tool to counter the Indian Army's tactical moves. All that the PLA needs to do to get its Indian counterpart to pipe down a bit is to do something that the Indian media will find brazen and outrageous. Since there are fairly robust bilateral mechanisms to prevent a shooting war, the New Delhi establishment will choose to localise the matter and say, as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh did on Saturday, that "we do not want to accentuate the situation". Behind the scenes, India's political leadership will probably tell the military commanders to cool it a bit.

While there is some merit in exercising caution to prevent tactical manoeuvres from escalating into a war, we must counter China's ability to use media dynamics and public psychology so easily against us.

In doing so, we must not forget that the boundary dispute is just one facet of a multidimensional and increasingly global contest. India is in a position to be a swing power between the United States and China. For this to work, India must first enjoy better relations with each of them than they have with each other. Second, India must show that it has the ability to benefit and hurt their interests.

So how should India respond?

The PLA's tactic of creating outrage to check the Indian Army works because the Chinese side expects the Indian political leadership to act rationally. If, instead, New Delhi were to allow the situation "to accentuate", to use the prime minister's phrase, then it would be for Beijing to choose whether it wants to escalate matters, especially at this time when China finds itself poised on the verge of conflict with almost all of its neighbours.

This is, of course, a risky thing to do. However, this is also a good time to take a calculated risk. After this month's incursion, PLA commanders have proposed that the Indian Army back away from its positions in return for the PLA vacating its campsite in the Depsang valley in Ladakh. New Delhi should reject such a compromise; instead, it should visibly reinforce the Indian military presence around the vicinity. New Delhi should signal to Beijing - and, lest we forget, to our television studios - that this would be our default response to anything that we consider an incursion.

While New Delhi has sought to respond to China's use of roads, railways and demographic change along the frontier with its own effort to improve infrastructure, these measures suffer from a combination of political blinkers, bureaucratic ineffectiveness and rampant corruption. As P Stobdan wrote in The Indian Express last week, we must "build infrastructure, populate the area, reactivate nomadic herding, and provide them [the frontier population] with the wherewithal to fight the vagaries of nature".

Beyond the Himalayan boundary theatre, New Delhi should calibrate its attention to the numerous maritime disputes involving China and its East Asian neighbours to the temperature of the overall India-China relationship. China cannot expect New Delhi to be insensitive to Japan, South Korea, Vietnam, the Philippines and other Southeast Asian states if Beijing is insensitive to India's interests.

With a new leadership assuming office in China and a flurry of bilateral diplomatic exchanges in the offing, it is timely for the pragmatic men in Beijing to consider the merits of an approach that antagonises a giant civilisational neighbour to their south. Do they really want the PLA to score tactical points at the cost of strengthening the relationship between the US and India?


The lessons of 1962 are routinely invoked in India to warn us of being underprepared for a conflict with an expansionist neighbour. While that war was a military and political victory for the Chinese, it has, so far, antagonised three generations of Indians. Do China's leaders think that antagonising more generations of Indians makes strategic sense at all?

Being unreasonable with China | Business Standard
India has already moved in fighter jets and guerilla units,if china doesn't stop there will be a war/skirmish.
Let's see what Chinas next move is.

Nope, they are making a move to regain the lands like brave warriors.

I am asking this once again, why are Indians wanting the massacre of IA? :lol:
A cheerleader with a wagging tail :lol:
Did you know India owns your country?:cheesy:
 
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You are lucky that you don't play cricket otherwise you would have got fitting response by now
 
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It's true that Indian tents with within what China regards as its side of the LAC, but India so far has put them up to the West of the Chinese tent. If India moves to the East of the Chinese tent to surround it.... then the firework party begins.

That is so brave of the PLA.

So if using the same logic , Chinese tents are up to the east of the Indian tents. If China moves to the west of the Indian tents to surround it.... then the firework party begins.
 
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It's true that Indian tents with within what China regards as its side of the LAC, but India so far has put them up to the West of the Chinese tent. If India moves to the East of the Chinese tent to surround it.... then the firework party begins.
So that they have a route to make a honorable exit when this all blows overs. Same goes for the Indian side also. Nobody is going to surround anybody and risk escalation of already tense situation. Both the parties can't afford it.
 
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think india should, and more importantly prevent resupply of the unit.

No need to fire the first shot, just force them to retreat or starve, or force them to escalate and give a clear moral cassus belli..
 
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