With 750 sq km at stake, India gets tough with China
China Replenishes Supplies To Its Troops In DBO
Rajat Pandit & Sanjay Dutta TNN
New Delhi: The “acne” could well turn into a deep scar on India’s face, with the Chinese reinforcing their position across the Line of Actual Control and raising the real prospect of India losing access to 750 sq km in the strategically crucial northern Ladakh.
While China on Tuesday rebuffed India’s plea to withdraw its troops squatting 19 km inside Indian territory at Raki Nala in the Depsang Bulge area, fresh imagery from Indian spy drones has now shown that the People’s Liberation Army has already taken to using trucks to replenish supplies for its over 32 troops stationed there. The pictures, which also show that PLA is trying to convert the track there into a proper road, are transforming what the government had called a “localized problem’’ into a first-rate diplomatic crisis.
The audacious intrusion into the Depsang Bulge, a table-top plateau, threatens to cut off India’s access to some 750 sq km area in northern Ladakh: an area roughly half the size of Delhi. The face-off site is just about 35 km south of the strategic Karakoram Pass, which is at the tri-junction of China-Pakistan-India borders, and overlooks the Siachen Glacier-Saltoro Ridge to the west and the Indian observation post in the Chumar sector to the east. Indian Army and ITBP patrols to Daulat Beg Oldi (DBO) and the Karakoram Pass have to trek across the Saser and Depsang passes – both in excess of 16,000 feet -- on foot from Sasoma, which is over 80 km north of Leh. So, loss of control over the Depsang Bulge would cut off access to the areas north of the passes.
Officers who have done stints there say the Depsang Bulge is the only staging area in the region from where Indian forces can group men and machine to launch any action. This is because the bulge is the only wide open land in the region which is full of high jagged ridges of the Karakoram range in the north and Ladakh range in the south.
The recognition has started toughening India’s response, with Army chief General Bikram Singh on Wednesday briefing the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) on the “counter-measures’’ possible. While a military showdown is not imminent, India may escalate its protest from de-Cloud over Khurshid, Li visit as stand-off on
With no end to the border face-off in sight, India is working the diplomatic channels to impress upon China that upcoming visits, including foreign minister Salman Khurshid’s Beijing trip on May 9 and Chinese PM Li Keqiang’s maiden visit on May 20, may be in danger. While there is no breakthrough in talks at “all levels”, China has not been hostile to diplomatic overtures. P 8
marches into a reappraisal of bilateral ties just ahead of the visit of Chinese Premier Li Keqiang on May 20.
Government sources admitted the developments over the past 48 hours, with the third flag meeting also failing to break the deadlock, have radically transformed the nature of the standoff, and the May 9 visit of foreign minister Salman Khurshid – who had initially described the incident as just an “acne’’ that would not impede the upward trajectory in bilateral ties -- to Beijing could be in jeopardy.
BATTLE OF THE BULGE
2 patrol routes to DBO and Karakoram Pass fence the Depsang bulge
Both routes converge at DBO and lead on to strategically vital Karakoram Pass This is only ‘staging area’ for grouping men and machines in case of any action If control is lost over the area, some 750 sq km will be cut off from Indian accessGen suggests several options
New Delhi: Gen Singh, on his part, gave several options to the CCS, ranging from cutting off supply lines of the Chinese troops at Raki Nala to Indian troops conducting a similar manoevre in some other sector. But the government is sticking to the “no military escalation’’ policy as of now, even as it works the diplomatic channels. But China is insisting on the demolition of India’s observation post at Chumar as a pre-condition for de-escala- tion. As the ties threaten to nosedive, the observation post that can overlook troop movements on the Chinese side has emerged as the main bone of contention. China, which is already miffed with India’s re-activation of advanced landing grounds at Daulat Beg Oldi, Fukche and Nyoma and building of other infrastructure along the LAC over the last four-five years, is uncomfortable with Indian being able to peep at the movement on the highway. TNN
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