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Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses soldiers during a visit to Ladakh on July 3. Photo: AP

India moving 35,000 more troops to disputed China border in Himalayas amid heightened tensions

  • Both countries have rushed thousands of soldiers, artillery guns and tanks to the region since deadly clashes last month
  • ‘Additional troops rushed by either side will not move back, unless there is a rapprochement at the highest political level,’ analyst said
India is positioning an additional 35,000 troops along its disputed Himalayan border with China as the possibility of an early resolution to the deadly tensions between the two neighbours fades.

The move would change the status quo along the contested 3,488km Line of Actual Control and stretch the nation’s already tight military budget, senior Indian officials said, asking not to be identified citing rules on speaking to the media.

Twenty Indian soldiers and unknown number of Chinese troops were killed in an ugly skirmish on June 15 and since then, both sides have rushed thousands of soldiers, artillery guns and tanks to the region. With India-China border agreements not holding, the situation required additional troops, the officials said.

“The nature of the Line of Control, at least in Ladakh, has changed forever,” the director of Delhi-based think-tank The United Service Institution of India and retired major general, B K Sharma said. “Additional troops rushed by either side will not move back, unless there is a rapprochement at the highest political level.”

For now, the skirmishes have stopped. And after several rounds of high level military talks, Beijing said troops were disengaging in most locations.

“Currently the two sides are actively preparing for the fifth round of commander-level talks to resolve outstanding issues on the ground,” China Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Wang Wenbin said at a regular briefing in Beijing on Tuesday. “We hope the Indian side will work towards the same goal with China, implement the two sides’ consensus and jointly uphold peace and tranquillity along the border.”

The Indian Army did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The Indian Army is already heavily committed – from protecting the 742km disputed border with Pakistan, to counter insurgency operations in Jammu and Kashmir and north eastern states, and monitoring every ingress point along its border with China.

Positioning additional troops where temperatures drop to minus 30 degrees Celsius in the winters will severely test the Indian Army’s logistics capabilities.

An Indian Army convoy moves along a highway leading to Ladakh. Photo: Reuters

Extreme cold limits the construction of shelters for troops and equipment in the Himalayas to the summer months. Fuel, food, medicines and equipment are moved in advance to the area through two roads which close by December, increasing the difficulty further.

Strengthening border defences comes at huge cost and places new pressure on the nation’s military modernisation programme. While New Delhi is the world’s third-biggest military spender, its air force, navy and the army are still equipped with weapons that are largely obsolete.

India’s new Rafale fighter jets arrive amid heightened China tensions

About 60 per cent of defence spending goes to paying salaries for India’s 1.3 million soldiers – one of the world’s largest standing armies. What’s left is spent on past purchases, leaving the forces with obsolete equipment and not enough ammunition.

“The additional commitment in Ladakh would put further pressure on serviceability, research and development and capital expenditure as revenue cost rise,” Laxman Kumar Behera, a senior research fellow at the Delhi based think-tank Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses said. “It will be painful if the defence budget isn’t increased.”

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