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Sunday, May 24, 2020

Galwan Valley Standoff & Future Trends In PLA Transgressions


There were 1,025 transgressions by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) between 2016 and 2018. There were 273 transgressions in 2016, 426 in 2017 and 326 in 2018. The first four months of 2020 witnessed 170 Chinese transgressions across the LAC, including 130 in Ladakh. There were only 110 such transgressions in Ladakh during the same period in 2019. Nearly one-third of PLA-BDR transgressions in the western sector of the LAC happen in the Panggong Tso Lake. According to official data, Panggong Tso, the 135km-long lake, one-third of which is controlled by India, recorded 25% of the total number of PLA-BDR transgressions in the last five years across the LAC. Trig Heights recorded 22% while Burtse/Depsang Bulge accounted for 19% of all transgressions. Incidentally, the site at Galwan River saw only six PLA-BDR transgressions during the same period. While there was no transgression in 2019, four were recorded in 2017, and one each in 2018 and 2016. At Panggong Tso, transgressions by the PLA-BDR almost doubled from a five-year low of 72 in 2018 to 142 in 2019. These transgressions occurred both in the waters of the lake, and along its northern banks. There were 112 transgressions in 2017, the year the two countries were locked in a tense 73-day faceoff at Doklam on the Sikkim-Bhutan border. It was 164 and 77 in 2015 and 2016, respectively.
Although India and China share a boundary that stretches 3,488km from Ladakh to Arunachal Pradesh, official data shows that 80% of the transgressions by China across the LAC since 2015 have taken place in four locations—three of them in eastern Ladakh in the western sector. Along with Panggong Tso, Trig Heights and Burtse have witnessed two-thirds of the total transgressions across the LAC. New areas of PLA-BDR forays into India-controlled territory came up in 2019—the Doletango area opposite Dumchele suddenly saw 54 PLA-BDR transgressions in 2019, after having recorded only three transgressions in the past four years. In the eastern sector, the highest number of transgressions by the PLA-BDR—14.5% of the total–was recorded in Dichu Area/Madan Ridge area. Transgressions recorded in other areas in the eastern sector were very low, including Naku La in Sikkim, which saw two PLA-BDR transgressions each in 2018 and 2019.
In early May 2020 Indian Army (along with Indo-Tibetan Border Police) and PLA-BDR troops exchanged blows on two occasions, once near Panggong Tso Lake in eastern Ladakh and in the Naku La sector in Sikkim. In both incidents, personnel from both sides suffered injuries. There was also movement of PLA-BDR troops to eastern Ladakh after India began constructing a road in the Galwan River area. There was no transgression by PLA-BDR patrols in this area in the past two years. The site of the ongoing road construction is near the confluence of Shyok and Galwan rivers, some 200km north of Panggong Tso Lake. The PLA-BDR is objecting to the construction of a new road that branches off the Darbuk-Shyok-Daulat Beg Oldie (DSDBO) road along the river-bank towards the LAC. The DSDBO road connecting Daulat Beg Oldie, at the base of the Karakoram Pass, with Shyok and Darbuk, was completed a year ago and provides India greatly improved connectivity. The 255km-long road, which had to be realigned after the initial alignment was found unsuitable, runs along the Shyok and Tangtse rivers.
At Panggong Tso, the PLA-BDR has deployed additional rapid interception craft (RIC) on the lake and stopped the movement of IA and ITBP soldiers beyond Finger 2 on the northern bank of the lake. The mountains there jut forward in major spurs, which the IA calls Fingers. India claims that the LAC is co-terminus with Finger 8, while China claims that the LAC passes through Finger 2. The area between the two differing perceptions is the territory which both opposing patrols try to dominate through regular patrolling. The IA and ITBP physically control the area up to Finger 4. The number of PLA-BDR RICs has gone up three times—it had earlier been using only three boats. The IA also has a similar number of RICs to dominate the 45km-long western portion of the lake, which is under Indian control.
Since the IA and ITBP physically control the area up to Finger 4, this was regarded as a “provocative move” by the PLA-BDR following the “disengagement” after a physical altercation between troops of both sides near Finger 5 on the night of May 5-6, 2020. The PLA-BDR has been objecting to construction of a vehicle track by India in the same area. While PLA-BDR soldiers patrol the area in light vehicles on a motorable road built in 1999, when India was busy with OP Vijay in northern J & K, IA and ITBP soldiers patrol on foot till their perception of the LAC. The China-built road in that area is rather narrow and has very few turning points. So, when Indian patrols challenge the PLA-BDR patrols and ask them to go back from our area, the latter physically cannot turn their vehicles and it leads to more acrimony.
In addition to the above, there is a situation on the LAC in the Hot Springs sector, which is an ITBP sector. An IA Company had moved closer to PP-14 and PP-15 in 2015 after a minor incident, but this has always been a settled area between India and China. Thus, it is worth considering if China’s posture there is linked to the incidents at Panggong Tso, just as the Depsang standoff of April 2013 in northeastern Ladakh was linked to a consequent standoff at Chumar in southern Ladakh in September 2014. However, some IA officers maintain that the incidents in Panggong Tso are “typical LAC activity witnessed during summer months” when “some new units have been inducted” and “operational familiarisation and occupation of winter-vacated posts” take place. Consequently, incidents  are “localised” in nature due to “different perception of the LAC by the two sides”.
The only location (in the central sector of the LAC) to record significant PLA-BDR transgressions is Barahoti in Uttarkhand, which recorded 21 transgressions in 2019 and 30 in 2018. Such transgressions will increase on both land and in the air in the years to come, not just in Uttarkhand, but also in Himachal Pradesh, in order to minutely monitor the IA’s and Indian Air Force’s (IAF) growing presence in these two Indian states as they gear up for undertaking offensive joint high-altitude plateau warfare operations. The PLA Air Force (PLAAF) has since 2011 been using one of its four SAR-equipped Tu-154M platforms to monitor developments in the demilitarised area in Barahoti pastures in Chamoli district of Uttarkhand, while the PLAGF, regularly uses Z-9EC helicopters equipped with a gimballed optronic sensors for transgressing into India-controlled airspace in the same area. Such actions will now also take place in Tashigang inside Himachal Pradesh.
Ongoing Standoff At Galwan Valley Showing PLA-BDR Dispositions
Ongoing Standoff At Galwan Valley Showing IA-ITBP Dispositions
Areas Where PLA-BDR Patrols Transgress Into Ladakh
Trig Heights near Chip Chap River: 35 22 22.14 N, 78 2 15.74 E & Burtse in Depsang Bulge: 35 18 9.89 N, 78° 0 44.17 E
Galwan Valley: 34 46 10.37 N, 78 12 44.45 E
Gogra Hot Springs: 34 18 29.96 N, 78 58 53.01 E
Panggong Tso Lake: 33 43 14.99 N, 78 45 49.33 E
Spanggur Gap: 33 33 51.12 N, 78 46 53.13 E
Demchok: 32 41 51.43 N, 79 27 28.74 E
Chumur: 32 37 55.60 N, 78 36 4.56 E
Roundabout Near Kongka la/Hot Springs/Gogra Post: 34 20 11.97 N, 79 1 59.79 E
Opposing Road Connectivity Networks Along LAC

211 comments:

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Buddha said...

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=QQzI7US2e1g
The Big Picture - Nepal's Internal Politics
India seems loosing all friendly neighborhood...

just_curious said...

Prasun,

1-http://idrw.org/uk-labour-partys-stance-on-kashmir-remains-unchanged-as-top-politicians-attend-pak-backed-anti-india-webinar/... looks like the labour party is simply refusing to learn or have they decided that their anti india stance is more beneficial?
2- roiting in US .. an attempt by the leftist parties to get back @trump in an election year.. while the incident is deplorable and unfortunate and also that if the police officer is found guilty he needs to be punishes appropriately. it feels that the democrats & the leftists in the US have fanned the riots.. taking a page out of similar acts here

Raghu said...

Dear Prasun,

In the link given below, Christina Fair asserts that no F-16 was shot down by the IAF. Would you care to comment on this?

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=QiAxUfX3_vk&feature=youtu.be

Senthil Kumar said...

Dear Prasun,

Current India-China LAC Issues

After watching and hearing many documentaries and Experts views following are my opinion.

China is in the Illusion that Aksai Chin is closed chapter. Chinese thinks that Indians will settle with existing Kashmir with LOC as boundary. That's why they heavily invested in CPEC in POK.

Suddenly BJP Govt, abolished 370 and made JK & Ladak as UT. And India is claiming Aksai Chin as Ladak territory. This is the biggest Surprise and shock to China.

Next Indian Army generals are keep claiming that they are waiting for Indian government approval to go and occupy POK.

If Indian Army occupies POK, China knows that world will not support Pakistan.

To Preserve CPEC in POK, they came near LAC with heavy troops, so Indian Army will loose focus on POK and concentrate in the eastern sector.

Final Solution for thi stand-off is, China is expecting written Assurance from India that they will not occupy POK and India should accept POK as Pakistan territory.

Please comment.

Thanks & Regards
Senthil Kumar

Prasun K. Sengupta said...

IA Manpower Reforms https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TgWBQydalyw

China's Rising Security Presence in Central Asia https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J6cOHKmcelw

Dr Ajay Kumar, Defence Secretary, MoD https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DcTjyLR3YDc

P Stobdan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OxQCYCzNjvQ

J Ranade: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=apmZwIiRxOU

joydeep ghosh said...

Ptrasun da

your views on this

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/blogs/voices/beyond-lac-logjam-its-time-to-start-india-pakistan-china-dialogue/

my calculation is no govt can sell this to public

http://ajaishukla.blogspot.com/2020/06/ladakh-border-standoff-chinese-refuse.html

i say lets finish off LoC ka sar dard in next couple of yrs and start pushing the envelope on LAC doing something like reverse kargil and force China to give up as much of Aksai China and forcefully take back trans karakoram tract as that allows india access to central asia


thanks

Joydeep Ghosh

hoods007 said...

Hi Prasun

the I-MAST by Hanwha Systems has a S band MFR and a X band MFR both. what is the logic behind having 2 different band radars which are essentially used for fire control( i.e firing and guiding missiles). would it not make sense to have a UHF or L band and S band radars in the mast.

joydeep ghosh said...

Prasun da

breakup of China

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RnxciJxbIkg

an this be reality

today is D day, today will decide if LAC will heat up or not, if it does then India must finish off LoC forever and do a reverse kargil on LAC simply bcoz no country can fight a 2 front war

thanks

Joydeep Ghosh

Prasun K. Sengupta said...

To SUMANTA NAG: Those exercises are in the Tangullashan mountain area close to Qinghai & do not represent the plateau-like terrain prevalent in Aksai Chin. The PLA is indeed most worried because: 1) it does not have any warfighting experience since 1979. 2) It does not have the kind of high-altitude plateau warfare experience that is expected from its conscripts. 3) It lacks the kind of specialised military hardware required for waging high-altitude plateau warfare, meaning its habitat-specific deficiencies are substantial, especially for high-altitude plateau areas. And that’s precisely the reason why the PLAGF has yet to deploy MBTs in an area above Demchok.

To SRINIVASA NANDURI & SATYAKI: Regretably that has been the case since the 1950s. But this time there will be no more give-ins & it will be like 1967 when, if push comes to shove, then the PLAGF will be the first one to ask for a ceasefire, just as was the case in 1967, kindly rest assured. The following thread goes into the genesis of the boundary dispute, which many will have either forgotten by now or will be unaware of.

To SUMANTA NAG: This is the best time to fully privatise OFB & sack all the existing staff & start he-hiring them again on new terms & conditions under a brand-new management.

To BUDDHA: It is already happening, because as I had stated before, a large-scale deployment also requires enough time for withdrawal. Hence, both the PLAGF & the IA will be under equal pressure from Mother Nature to strike an amicable settlement so that by September the withdrawals are complete.

To JUST_CURIOUS & RAGHU: LoLz! Not only is it FAKE, but it is also IDIOTIC. How can the ADA accord approval to itself for initiating any new project. Logically, the authorisation/approval must come from a higher authority.

To PARTHSSARATHI: It is the ‘desi’ TEDBF—a figment of one’s imagination.

To ASD: How can India be at a disadvantage? Can’t the IA use its 155mm howitzers to dislodge the PLAGF from the occupied hilltops? If it could be done in 1999 under OP Vijay, it surely can be done now. Have you forgotten about the 1967 Nathu La fire-assaults when the IA took on the PLAGF despite China being a declared nuclear weapons state then?

To SUJOY MAJUMDAR & KAPIL: Any large-scale deployment also requires enough time for withdrawal. Hence, both the PLAGF & the IA will be under equal pressure from Mother Nature to strike an amicable settlement so that by September the withdrawals are complete.

To RAGHU: It was all explained in a thread at the time that video had appeared last year.

To JOYDEEP GHOSH: The writer is proposing exactly what both China & Pakistan want. Here is another one:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QfhG-vtLfUs

As Jaydev Ranade had explained yesterday (and what I had been saying), the existing KKH is not an all-wethat road & has to stay closed for five months every year. The only all-weather road that is an alternative is one that originates in Aksai China & passes thorugh Ladakh & enters Gilgit-Baltistan.

And more & more ‘desi’ TV channels seem to be getting inspired from explanations in this blog. Like the break-up of China, plus this:

https://theprint.in/diplomacy/india-discussed-china-border-tensions-also-with-russia-the-same-day-modi-and-trump-spoke/436500/

To HOODS007: All integrated masts must have S-band, L-band & X-band APARs for different functions.

AD said...

Dada,

Hope you are doing well. I could not follow your blog for last 20-25 days. Hence I couldn't kept myself abreast with Chinese Aggression in Ladakh. I recently noticed RM Rajnath Singh admitted Chinese Army invaded and moved inside eastern part of Ladakh. And read another article in print by Lt. General H.S.Panang where he claimed Chinese Army occupied 40-60 Sq. KM area in Galwan valley, Hotspring and Pangong Tso Lake finger areas. In this regard, can you kindly anwer following question of mine? I am pretty sure you have already explained these questions before somewhere in this blog.

1. Is it true that Chinese Army occupied 40-60 Sq. KM area in Galwan valley, Hotspring and Pangong Tso Lake finger areas inside Indian side of LAC?

2. If it comes true, how will India recover lost territory?

3. If true, when will India recover lost territory?

4. After 1962 war, has China ever occupied any Indian territory? If yes,has India recovered those areas yet?


2. If true, how India



Raman Gupta said...

awesome article

Thank you so much

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