Indian Army gets nod to respond aptly to any provocation along LAC with China
LiveMint
June 21, 2020
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Defence minister Rajnath Singh on Sunday gave his
go-ahead to the new tactical approach to be adopted
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The new tactical approach to be taken up by the
Indian Army may include staggered movement of patrols in key areas of the LAC
India on Sunday hit the reset button on the
rules of engagement with Chinese troops along the entire stretch of the
3,488-kilometre long border, with the Indian Army given the green signal to
respond appropriately to any provocation.
The Indian Army has also been given the
freedom to deal suitably with any aggression by China along the LAC, the person
cited above said. It is not clear whether this means Indian troops will no
longer be bound by the long-held practice of not using firearms in faceoffs. According
to the terms of an agreement signed in 1996, it was agreed that “Neither side
shall open fire or hunt with guns or explosives within two kilometers from the
line of actual control." During the 15 June “violent faceoff" in
Galwan region of Ladakh, Chinese troops attacked an Indian army group with
stones besides sticks wrapped with barb wire. There were also sticks embedded
with nails that were used against the Indian troops.
The accounts of the attack drew questions
from various quarters as to why the Indian soldiers were “unarmed." Indian
foriegn minister S Jaishankar last week in a Twitter post said: “Let us get the
facts straight. All troops on border duty always carry arms, especially when
leaving post. Those at Galwan on 15 June did so. Long-standing practice (as per
1996 & 2005 agreements) not to use firearms during face-offs.
“India has already put all troops along the
LAC on high alert as well as Indian Air Force stations close to the borders
with China. Reinforcements have also been sent to areas seen as sensitive with
orders to be “extra vigilant." The Indian Air Force has also moved a
sizeable number of its frontline Sukhoi 30 MKI, Jaguar, Mirage 2000 aircraft
and Apache attack helicopters to several key air bases including Leh and
Srinagar in the last five days, a PTI report said. India is to hold ground and
not cede territory to the Chinese, a second person familiar with the matter
said adding New Delhi had no doubts about whether the LAC lay.
In his remarks during an all-party meeting on
Friday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said that the Indian army had been
given the freedom to take necessary steps along the border and that India had
informed China of this decision through diplomatic means.
A statement from the Chinese foreign ministry
on Friday had sought another meeting at the senior commanders to defuse
tensions that have been simmering since early May when troops of the two
countries clashed on the banks of the Pangong Tso lake in Ladakh.
The Pangong Tso incident was followed by another in
Sikkim on 9 May. It is unclear whether India will accede to the demand given
that India says that China has not kept to the understanding reached at the
first meeting of senior commanders on 6 June. But the two countries could hold
a meeting of the Working Mechanism for Consultation and Coordination on
India-China Border Affairs (WMCC) – led by senior diplomats – maybe as early as
this week to cool tensions between the two countries. Indian foreign minister S
Jaishankar is to attend a trilateral meeting with the foreign ministers of Russia
and China this week with the Indian foreign ministry saying that bilateral
issues are not on the agenda of the Russia-India-China meeting.
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