@ArmchairPseph @Kishkinda2
— Amit (@sindhi_eng_OO7) June 30, 2020
Interesting commentary in Japanese newspaperhttps://t.co/D8JJUJauoT
@ArmchairPseph @Kishkinda2
— Amit (@sindhi_eng_OO7) June 30, 2020
Interesting commentary in Japanese newspaperhttps://t.co/D8JJUJauoT
@Falcon had predicted it about two weeks back.
I don't think anything's going to happen at this time except mobilisation of forces and talks.
GoI's main weapon is to create as much economic impact as possible, and also by including other countries in that retaliation. Even ASEAN may follow in our lead, and the West definitely has to. So the first shot should be fired towards economic isolation of China. And a collective effort should be made to bring down China's Great Firewall and follow that up with opening up the Chinese tech business to foreign investment. Coercive diplomacy is our forte, not China's.
As for China's occupation of buffer territories, we need to see if they dig in for the winter or not. So this is going to take a long time to resolve.
In that sense there's no narrative within the Indian public as well, it's only whatever opinions people give about the situation that's prevalent.
The talks are how to give India a face saver. Because GoI simply can't lie (Gokhale tried with his pink tents humara hai) in this time of Sat images so the Chinese indeed need to move somewhat back before Modi can capitulate and declare a strike on Chinese ability to hit us as hard as they could.As long as we don't back down, it is fine.
What I don't understand is what is the talks all about? Is it not fully obvious yet that talks are not going to help India in any way? Ofcourse, yes, if the talks are means to stall the situation so that we can strengthen our side even more, then it makes sense.
Secondly, the narrative on our side is created both by the media as well as the various twitter sources. The media is pitching in and reporting it as a major developing story. I don't think the same can be said about Chinese media as it is state controlled. That's what I meant by the lack of narrative in the Chinese side.
And also training and bases to Taliban to kill Americans with the weapons bought from Americans with the money given by Americans.But they did provide their air space and Air bases for Americans to pound Afgan!
He stated that Chinese will cool off from Ladakh but will raise the heat in AP.What was predicted? Whether china will intrude or Ajay shukla bluff?
He stated that Chinese will cool off from Ladakh but will raise the heat in AP.
It can no longer be business-as-usual | Analysishttps://t.co/xwOE8IPfBv Former Ambassador Gautam Bambawale is very right. The impact of what China has tried will be long lasting. China cannot expect it will be business as usual. India’s policy realignments would be inevitable.
— Vikram Sood (@Vikram_Sood) July 1, 2020
Yep, the Chinese know what Gar Gunsa is worth and Hotan is what they are depending on. Here's a snapshot from earlier this year (GoogleEarthPro) of a whole bunch of PLAAF fighters parked out in the open at Hotan which is around 370 km from Pangong Tso. https://t.co/P3GRXFYrnn pic.twitter.com/1vqT6qD1sk
— Saurav Jha (@SJha1618) June 30, 2020
HOTAN is also their primary LRTR site for the North . #Hotan airbase functions as the airspace gatehouse of #EastTurkistan . pic.twitter.com/DFUtpmAUW1
— Ninjamonkey 🇮🇳 (@Aryan_warlord) July 1, 2020
I don't like what I am seeing. The PLAGF has clearly moved to block some of the possible retaliation/riposte axes in Eastern Ladakh. How long before they build up some more for a move into Depsang ? They are clearly acting in phases.
— Saurav Jha (@SJha1618) July 1, 2020
I can explain about air battles and sea battles but my knowledge about land battles is not even pedastrian. @Falcon is better suited to explain it if he decides to.Can you explain the terrain of AP sector like you did in Ladakh.
I thought India would - as usual - be sucked into saber-rattling and Himalayan disputes. Instead, it went straight to the core of the issue: markets, technology, digital infrastructure. What I hear from Beijing is worry pic.twitter.com/Q9OEMgGIyN
— Bruno Maçães (@MacaesBruno) July 1, 2020
UPDATE: Army sources on the 12 hour Corps Commander talks yesterday at Chushul. “Business-like manner”. pic.twitter.com/lzdfiU7QSn
— Shiv Aroor (@ShivAroor) July 1, 2020
Quick reality check on the irony of ‘expeditious de-escalation’. In the 8 days between yesterday’s talks and the previous round on June 22, China has mobilised 20k+ more troops & weapons to the Ladakh border, India 30k+ more troops & weapons. https://t.co/uVXUfao2Ev https://t.co/LtR1RGtoeY
— Shiv Aroor (@ShivAroor) July 1, 2020
Breaking:
— Manu Pubby (@manupubby) July 1, 2020
Defence Minister Rajnath Singh likely to visit Ladakh on Friday morning.
Will take stock of the situation as border standoff continues.
First top level meeting to Ladakh after border tensions.
To meet senior military leadership, soldiers.
Some random thoughts on the use of air power during any #LACFlareUp
— Vijainder K Thakur (@vkthakur) July 1, 2020
First & foremost - PLAAF S-400 systems, deployed at around 4,500m elevation on the Tibetan plateau, will not be able to detect or engage @IAF_MCC fighters at long ranges. 1/n
Nothing new here. he seems to have read what I posted here and used different words for it. I had stated pretty much the same things.Some random thoughts on the use of air power during any #LACFlareUp
— Vijainder K Thakur (@vkthakur) July 1, 2020
First & foremost - PLAAF S-400 systems, deployed at around 4,500m elevation on the Tibetan plateau, will not be able to detect or engage @IAF_MCC fighters at long ranges. 1/n
THREAD!!
Interesting facets discussed. @vstol Jockey ; @Falcon ; @randomradio
Pak-China nexus emerging:
— Manu Pubby (@manupubby) July 1, 2020
Additional soldiers moved to Gilgit-Baltistan, LoC by Pakistan as China remains dug in.
Intel inputs on Chinese officials trying to revive the Al Badr terror organisation for Kashmir ops.
Two and a half fronts scenario.
https://t.co/tIM5ox5ZJv
hmmm
— The Other Side Of Horizon (@mystiquememoir) July 1, 2020
If i say that's our tank..
how many OSINTs media guys believe? pic.twitter.com/7IWWIEPbvH
1/3
— theZULU🇮🇳 (@RaveenKr) June 24, 2020
Dirty Secrets
The year: 2011
The Dream: A Shot at Nobel Peace Prize.
Who: Nominated Puppet PM
The Stake: Siachen Glacier.
The Aim: Part with it quietly to Pakistan.
Why: Linkup Pak-China in spirit of MOU between two pol parties.
Guess who pops up in delegation? @ajaishukla pic.twitter.com/jwlG4PyqQJ
Further to my earlier tweet. Plz read the article below.
— Col Hunny Bakshi, VSM (@colhunnybakshi) June 30, 2020
The leader of the Indian delegation was retd ACM SP Tyagi who was accosted by @KatochPrakash who pointed out entire exercise was funded by ISI. Read his stunning answers published in IDR. https://t.co/npJdwKhVMy
The stakes are extremely high & today 20 of our brave men are dead, murdered not only by the Chinese but also by some selfstyled strategic experts who should have known better as to what the implications would be. @PMOIndia must act. Evidence is all there. Who, when, where & why.
— Col Hunny Bakshi, VSM (@colhunnybakshi) June 30, 2020
"In the end, the real test for India would be whether it seizes this strategic moment to learn the right lessons about China and sheds any presumptions of striking a grand bargain with Beijing."
— John Pollock (@John_Pollock22) July 1, 2020
A great read by @avasudeva_87 for @9DashLine via @SAVoices https://t.co/x2yKG09xWI
I thought India would - as usual - be sucked into saber-rattling and Himalayan disputes. Instead, it went straight to the core of the issue: markets, technology, digital infrastructure. What I hear from Beijing is worry pic.twitter.com/Q9OEMgGIyN
— Bruno Maçães (@MacaesBruno) July 1, 2020