Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

China building air defence positions across the LAC?

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Open source satellite imagery suggests China is developing two new air defence positions that cover sensitive stretches of the disputed border in the Doklam and Sikkim sectors, including an area where Indian and Chinese troops clashed in May.

The satellite imagery, shared by the open source intelligen­ce analyst who uses the name @detresfa on Twitter, shows what appear to be two sites at which the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is developing surface-toair missile facilities. Both these sites are near what have been described as “suspected early warning radar sites” opposite Sikkim.

Experts said the location of missile air defence facilities close to radar installati­ons would help the Chinese side to pick out possible targets with greater accuracy.

There was no immediate reaction from Indian officials to the reported developmen­t of missile sites by the Chinese.

NEW DELHI : Open source satellite imagery suggests China is developing two new air defence positions that cover sensitive stretches of the disputed border in the Doklam and Sikkim sectors, including an area where Indian and Chinese troops clashed in May.

The satellite imagery, shared by the open source intelligen­ce analyst who uses the name @detresfa on Twitter, shows what appear to be two sites at which the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is developing surface-toair missile facilities. Both these sites are near what have been described as “suspected early warning radar sites” opposite Sikkim.

Experts said the location of missile air defence facilities close to radar installati­ons would help the Chinese side to pick out possible targets with greater accuracy.

In a graphic posted on Twitter, @detresfa said the new missile facilities were apparently part of China’s “ongoing upgrades and expansion of air defence assets along its border with India”.

The new missile facilities are located roughly 50 km away from Doka La (Doka pass), close to the Doklam plateau that was the scene of a 73-day military standoff between India and China in 2017, and Naku La (Naku pass), where troops from the two countries had clashed on May 9. Four Indian and seven Chinese soldiers were injured in this clash, the second such reported incident since the current standoff began in early May.

The two surface-to-air missile sites would “close the existing air defence gap around the earlier clash zones” for the Chinese, @detresfa said.

The Indian side has been “noted running regular intelligen­ce and reconnaiss­ance missions in this sector” during the current standoff with various platforms such as the Boeing P-8 Poseidon surveillan­ce aircraft, @detresfa added.

According to the graphic posted on Twitter, one missile site is located at the tri-junction of the borders of India, Bhutan and China, while the other is located in Chinese territory opposite Sikkim.

There was no immediate reaction from Indian officials to the reported developmen­t of missile sites by the Chinese.

Even after the end of the Doklam standoff in 2017 after several rounds of negotiatio­ns, there were reports that the Chinese side had not fully pulled back its troops in the area. There have also been several reports of Chinese troops building trenches, fortified positions and infrastruc­ture to support operation by helicopter­s and aircraft in the area.

Last month, Hindustan Times had first reported that China had officially stated for the first time that it has a boundary dispute with Bhutan in the eastern sector, a developmen­t with significan­t implicatio­ns for India as the region borders Arunachal Pradesh, which is also claimed by Beijing.

Since this year’s standoff emerged in the open, there have been several reports of PLA beefing up its deployment all along the Line of Actual Control(LAC), including in areas opposite India’s northeaste­rn states.

Earlier this month, @detresfa had used open source satellite imagery to report that China had stepped up work on military infrastruc­ture opposite Lipulekh region in Uttarakhan­d. The infrastruc­ture included a surface-to-air missile site on the banks of Mansarovar Lake in Tibet. The imagery showed what appeared to be two sites at which PLA is creating new infrastruc­ture and accommodat­ion. Both are not far from the Kalapani-Lipulekh region that is at the heart of a new border row between India and Nepal.

The mobilisati­on of a battalion by PLA near Lipulekh Pass, one of the locations outside of the Ladakh sector was first reported by Hindustan Times on August 2.

 ?? PTI ?? ■
Army trucks move towards Ladakh from Kullu in the wake of IndiaChina border dispute in eastern Ladakh
PTI ■ Army trucks move towards Ladakh from Kullu in the wake of IndiaChina border dispute in eastern Ladakh

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