LOC, LAC & IB skirmishs

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NeXoft007

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Oh, btw, that porki soldier belongs to same Regiment, 642 Mujahid, who captured our soldier Chandu Chavan... Karma?
 

Bornubus

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China is DROWNING India..Chinese water behind Assam, Bihar floods


New Delhi: China may be responsible for floods in the eastern and north eastern states of India. The suspicion gained ground with India saying on Friday that China has not shared water release data this year. In the backdrop of doklam standoff, China may be releasing extra Brahmaputra water deliberately creating flood havoc in Assam. Bihar too is severely hit.



When asked whether China had shared hydrological data with India as floods have severely hit Assam and Bihar, MEA spokesperson Raveesh Kumar said no such data was received from Beijing on Brahmaputra this year.

India and China have an existing mechanism under which both countries share hydrological data.

However, Kumar said non sharing of hydrological data by China cannot be linked to the current standoff as there can be technical reasons for it.

Meanwhile, India has said it will continue to engage with China to find a mutually acceptable solution to the Dokalam standoff, asserting that peace and tranquility on the border is an important pre-requisite for smooth bilateral relationship.

"We will continue to engage with China to find a mutually acceptable solution," MEA spokesperson said replying to a volley of questions on the issue.

He said said peace and tranquility in the border areas is an important pre-requisite for smooth development of bilateral relationship.

Asked about incident between Chinese troops and Indian border guards in Ladakh on August 15, the MEA spokesperson said, "Such incidents are not in the interest of either side."

He said two border personnel meetings (BPMs) had taken place between Indian border guards and Chinese troops recently.

He said one BPM had taken place at Chushul on August 16 and another one at Nathu La a week before.

PTI/News24Bureau

http://news24online.com/china-is-drowning-indiachinese-water-behind-assam-bihar-floods-12/
 

NeXoft007

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Remember the crashed unidentified drone of PAF whose official statement is still not released by Pakistan Military?
.
Pakistan's so-called indigenous MALE UAV program will be nothing but repainted Wing Loong/ Pterodactyl UAV with 200kg payload. And I fear this will be used for precision targeting of our bunkers coz of its cruising altitude advantage, while targeting our bunkers easily from 5-8 km inside Pakistan airspace. The drone will be quite stealthy with no weapons payload. Also, Its silent & won't be visible from naked eye too coz of its cruising altitude & its small size. Biggest concern is I heard is its in 'advanced stage of development' which means Pakistan already bought it from China & now setting up dedicated infrastructure for these drones.
ClYYChuUoAE9cOO.jpg

airforceprojlead.jpg
 

Screambowl

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China is DROWNING India..Chinese water behind Assam, Bihar floods


New Delhi: China may be responsible for floods in the eastern and north eastern states of India. The suspicion gained ground with India saying on Friday that China has not shared water release data this year. In the backdrop of doklam standoff, China may be releasing extra Brahmaputra water deliberately creating flood havoc in Assam. Bihar too is severely hit.



When asked whether China had shared hydrological data with India as floods have severely hit Assam and Bihar, MEA spokesperson Raveesh Kumar said no such data was received from Beijing on Brahmaputra this year.

India and China have an existing mechanism under which both countries share hydrological data.

However, Kumar said non sharing of hydrological data by China cannot be linked to the current standoff as there can be technical reasons for it.

Meanwhile, India has said it will continue to engage with China to find a mutually acceptable solution to the Dokalam standoff, asserting that peace and tranquility on the border is an important pre-requisite for smooth bilateral relationship.

"We will continue to engage with China to find a mutually acceptable solution," MEA spokesperson said replying to a volley of questions on the issue.

He said said peace and tranquility in the border areas is an important pre-requisite for smooth development of bilateral relationship.

Asked about incident between Chinese troops and Indian border guards in Ladakh on August 15, the MEA spokesperson said, "Such incidents are not in the interest of either side."

He said two border personnel meetings (BPMs) had taken place between Indian border guards and Chinese troops recently.

He said one BPM had taken place at Chushul on August 16 and another one at Nathu La a week before.

PTI/News24Bureau

http://news24online.com/china-is-drowning-indiachinese-water-behind-assam-bihar-floods-12/

I knew it, I knew it.. may be and chances are high that harami Chinese are behind this
this is why I made a post few days ago about cloud seeding and climate war. etc..

this requires investigation.

By the way, even Nepal is affected. Chinese may have not caused the flood by regulating water but by some cloud seeding.


while targeting our bunkers easily from 5-8 km inside Pakistan airspace.
Akash SAMs are needed on the peaks. Just target and launch even if they are inside their own and trying to strike on Indian side.
 

Joker

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One serious question to nimo-cn
What happens when Xi Jinping (Winnie) loses the presidency?
Can we expect a new purge in China?
Coz usually when the Chinese communist bosses lose, entire team, top to bottom is placed in labor camps. What will happen to you, nimo
 

square

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Squeezed by an India-China Standoff, Bhutan Holds Its Breath
https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/08/....64.mobile-gws-serp..0.4.1432...0.LzJeEELP2gg

By STEVEN LEE MYERS
AUGUST 15, 2017
HAA, Bhutan — India’s main garrison in the Kingdom of Bhutan sits only 13 miles from a disputed border with China. There is a training academy, a military hospital, a golf course — all testament to India’s enduring role defending this tiny Himalayan nation.

Earlier this summer, China began extending an unpaved road in the disputed territory, and India sent troops and equipment to block the work. The incursion has resulted in a tense standoff that has lasted more than 50 days, with Indian soldiers facing Chinese troops who have dug in just a few hundred yards away.

At a time when North Korea and the United States are trading threats of war, China and India — the world’s two most populous nations — have engaged in increasingly bellicose exchanges over this remote border dispute, evoking memories of their bloody conflict in 1962 as the world’s attention was focused on the Cuban missile crisis.

There are fears that ambition and nationalism could lead them to war again, but now with more firepower at their disposal.

Caught between these two nuclear rivals seeking regional dominance is Bhutan, a mountain nation of 800,000 with a mystical reputation and a former king who popularized the concept of “gross national happiness” as a measure of a country’s well-being.

India says it is acting on Bhutan’s behalf in the standoff. But its intervention has not resulted in much gratitude here. On the contrary, many in Bhutan feel that India’s protective embrace has become suffocating.

“In the case of war between India and China, we would be the meat in the sandwich,” said Pema Gyamtsho, a leader of the opposition party in Bhutan’s National Assembly. “It shouldn’t have to be a choice,” he added, referring to his nation’s ties with India and China, “but it is at the moment.”

For decades, Bhutan has chosen India. More than a half century ago, Bhutan watched warily as China’s Communists took power and eventually occupied neighboring Tibet, with which it has close ethnic, cultural and religious ties. India offered to defend the kingdom, and Bhutan accepted.


But the latest standoff has inflamed festering resentments over India’s influence in the country. In particular, many suspect that India has sought to block Bhutan’s efforts to establish diplomatic relations and expand trade with Beijing, fearing that a rapprochement could remove the strategic buffer that Bhutan provides.

“Bhutan has every right to its sovereignty; that’s the crux of the thing,” said Wangcha Sangey, a former publisher and head of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry, who has been one of the most outspoken critics of India’s interference. “We have the right to live the way we want to live and to have the foreign relations we want to have.”

On the surface, the dispute turns on 34 square miles of land claimed by both Bhutan and China. India has accused China of extending the road to expand its control of the territory, with some comparing the move to Beijing’s efforts to cement its claims in the South China Sea by transforming reefs into islands.

The disputed area is strategically significant because it slopes into a narrow Indian valley that connects central India to its landlocked northeastern states. India calls it the Chicken’s Neck and has long feared that China could seize it in a war, splitting its territory.

But when India ordered its troops across the border on June 16, it seemed to do so without a request from Bhutan. While Bhutan has condemned the Chinese road work, it has studiously avoided saying whether it asked India to intervene. The Indian government has also avoided the question.

China has been talking tough, with near-daily warnings against India. Commodore Liu Tang, a deputy commander of the South China Sea Fleet, warned last week in The People’s Liberation Army Daily that China’s restraint thus far was “not without a bottom line.” The headline declared, “China’s territory is large, but not an inch of land is redundant.”

India has put more troops on alert in recent days, suggesting that it, too, is not prepared to back down.

In Haa, a small village an arduous day’s hike from where the troops are squaring off, the dispute is like distant thunder, a warning of storms that may come but are not yet anything to worry about.

The standoff does not, so far, involve Bhutanese forces, and state television and even the independent news media have followed the government’s lead and said virtually nothing about the conflict.

One resident of Haa said that a relative had happened on Chinese soldiers digging trenches while he herded his yak along the border. But the authorities have since closed the foot trails to the disputed area.

That has shut down an informal shuttle trade with Tibetan towns on the Chinese side of the border. For years traders have traveled back and forth on foot or horseback, selling cordyceps — known as Himalayan Viagra — and other medicinal herbs from Bhutan. They return with electronic goods, carpets, silks and clothing.

In a country where per capita economic output — not the happiness index — reached a high of $2,751 last year, the trade has become a livelihood along the border.

Nima Dorji, a shopkeeper in Haa, said he had not received any shipments since the border routes were closed, and worried that he might have to look elsewhere to restock. “We do not talk much about it,” he said. “It is very sensitive.”
why only bhutan ?
isn't china holding its breath ,?
your 15 days deadline is over today !!!
 

nimo_cn

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One serious question to nimo-cn
What happens when Xi Jinping (Winnie) loses the presidency?
Can we expect a new purge in China?
Coz usually when the Chinese communist bosses lose, entire team, top to bottom is placed in labor camps. What will happen to you, nimo
Chinese president usually serves two terms, after that he steps down and another guy takes office.

Xi steps down because the rule says so, not because he loses.

when I came to dfi the first time, Hu was the leader, now it's Xi, nothing happened to me.
 

Yggdrasil

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Chinese president usually serves two terms, after that he steps down and another guy takes office.

Xi steps down because the rule says so, not because he loses.

when I came to dfi the first time, Hu was the leader, now it's Xi, nothing happened to me.
Don't you think on account of inflation, you should demand for at least 60 cents now?

Anyway, it's no point talking to mainland Chinese. They're so brainwashed by their government lies that they cannot see the facts for what they are.

Bhutan has repeatedly mentioned that the territory is disputed - China unilaterally claims it's theirs.

Tibet was brutally invaded, its monks killed, culture destroyed, buildings torn down, while Sikkim agreed to merge with India with everything intact and zero violence - China claims India wants to "take over" Bhutan.

Mao claimed Nepal, Sikkim, Arunachal, etc all as part of China, India never has - yet these brainwashed 50 centers think India poses a threat to Nepal and Bhutan.

No point - if you keep lying and denying, there's nothing anyone else can do about it. The racism from Xinhua is just the cheap icing on the cheap, toxic cake.
 

Mikesingh

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Bhutanese officials have maintained a pointed silence, preferring ambiguity to the risk of offending either India or China. The Foreign Ministry did not respond to requests for comment; nor did the prime minister, Tshering Tobgay. The foreign minister, Damcho Dorji, said on Friday that he hoped the situation would be resolved “peacefully and amicably.”

Many interviewed in Bhutan expressed more concern about India’s actions than China’s. Some note that one effect of India’s move — intended or not — has been to undermine border negotiations with China that could have cleared the way for closer economic ties.

There are four border areas in dispute: two in the north and two in the west, including the place where the standoff has unfolded. In 1998, China proposed ceding the northern areas to Bhutan in exchange for the western ones. And while Bhutan agreed in principle, a final agreement has not been reached.

After the latest round of talks in Beijing last year, the two sides seemed to be nearing a consensus, though prospects for a new round now seem uncertain.

Since signing a friendship treaty with India in 1949, Bhutan has relied almost exclusively on India for its defense. To this day India trains and pays the salaries of the Royal Bhutan Army, while its engineering corps builds and maintains Bhutan’s hairpin mountain roads. The exact number is not public, but India usually keeps 300 to 400 troops in Bhutan.

The relationship has evolved along with the country itself, and as fears that Bhutan could be subsumed by China have faded.

In 2006, Bhutan’s revered fourth king, Jigme Singye Wangchuck, abdicated after overseeing a democratic transition that culminated in elections for a national assembly in 2008 and 2013. The advent of parliamentary politics has generated increased debate about further opening a country that did not allow television until 1999.

And after decades of tilting almost exclusively south, Bhutan has begun looking north to China.

In 2012, the prime minister at the time met with his Chinese counterpart at a Group of 20 summit meeting in Rio de Janeiro. Not long afterward, India cut subsidies to Bhutan for cooking oil and kerosene. The move was widely seen as retaliation, and the ruling party in Bhutan lost the next election.

Part of the lure of better relations with China is money. In addition to the shuttle trade, there is tourism, one of Bhutan’s biggest industries. Indians do not need visas to travel to Bhutan, but Chinese must pay $250 a day in advance for vacation packages. Still, for the first time last year, more visitors came from China than from any other country besides India.

Chinese fascination with Bhutan bloomed after one of Hong Kong’s biggest movie stars, Tony Leung, married the actress Carina Lau here in 2008. The wedding three years later of the current king, Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, also stoked interest after footage of it went viral in China.

Pema Tashi, who manages Happiness Kingdom Travel and advertises “a sojourn in paradise,” caters to Chinese clients with eight guides who speak Mandarin. He complained that there were no direct flights between Bhutan and China, and expressed suspicion that India had worked to prevent a normalization of relations that would open up such routes.

“We try to protect the interest of our big brother,” he said, referring to India, “but they feel that if we get closer to the north, we might not be as dependent on them.”
Stop quoting one sided shit written by a paid journo to peddle Chinese lies. The fact is that Bhutan asked India to throw the frikkin Chinese out of their land.

It's laughable that the Chicoms keep alluding to ancient maps drawn even before Christ was born! What a bunch of clowns!

Check out what you Chicoms have done in Tibet in the video below - buggered it up and made it into a police state with zero human rights. Are you fellows aiming to do the same to Bhutan too?

Undercover In Tibet (Full Documentary) - Real Stories

 
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Screambowl

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The guys on the right had a hard time.
And I suspect that guys on the left are Chinese.
Hope I am wrong.
you are correct , unfortunately.....

Now this will really anger a lot of people in India..
....................................
 

Kazah

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Video description says right side was of PLA , so was that badly injured jawan from PLA????
 

Screambowl

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Now is was stones
Next time the chinese will come with bows and arrows.
Then catapults
Then matchlock muskets, and so on.

They are going to slowly travel through time into modern warfare LOL.

They just came to bash beat Indian soldiers.... :mad2:

Video description says right side was of PLA , so was that badly injured jawan from PLA????
Nope the description is wrong,
left was PLA, can clearly see it. Their dress and the Chinese red flag on the left
 
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