Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

INDIA PULLS OUT OF DRILL IN RUSSIA

KAVKAZ-2020 Decision not to participat­e in the drill in Russia due to Covid-19, say officials

- Rahul Singh and Rezaul H Laskar letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: India has withdrawn from a multi-nation army exercise being hosted by Russia in which around 20 countries including China are expected to take part next month.

NEW DELHI: India has withdrawn from a multi-nation army exercise being hosted by Russia in which around 20 countries including China are expected to take part next month at a time when talks with China to reduce border tensions in eastern Ladakh are stuck in a stalemate, people familiar with the developmen­ts said on Saturday.

Exercise Kavkaz-2020 will be held in southern Russia’s Astrakhan region from September 15 to 27. The Pakistan army is also likely to take part in the joint drills that are part of a fouryear exercise cycle of the Russian army.

The decision not to go ahead with participat­ing in the Kavkaz2020 multilater­al exercise was made following consultati­ons between the defence ministry and the external affairs ministry that took into considerat­ion several factors, the officials cited above said on the condition of anonymity.

‘NEED TO ENSURE SAFETY OF TROOPS’

“There is a decision not to take part in contact exercises in view of the Covid-19 pandemic in order to ensure the safety of our troops,” the officials said. The expected presence in the exercise of troops from South Ossetia and Abkhazia, both states that aren’t recognised by India, in Kavkaz2020 was also a factor in the decision, said one of the officials.

A defence ministry spokespers­on said, “Russia and India are close and privileged strategic partners. At Russia’s invitation India has been participat­ing in many internatio­nal events. However, in view of the pandemic and consequent difficulti­es in exercise, including arrangemen­ts of logistics, India has decided not to send contingent this year to Kavkaz-2020. The same has been informed to the Russian side.”

Most UN member states see Abkhazia and South Ossetia as part of Georgia, though both are recognised by Russia. India doesn’t recognise both as independen­t states as they are not UN members. India’s presence at such as an exercise could have given rise to delicate diplomatic issues, a second official said.

Criticism of India’s possible presence at Kavkaz-2020 alongside Chinese and Pakistani troops has been growing ever since reports first emerged that New Delhi was extended an invitation to send a tri-services contingent to the exercise.

INDIA HAD EARLIER PLANS TO SEND 180 INFANTRY TROOPS

India was earlier planning to send around 180 troops from an infantry battalion along with elements of the air force and observers from the Indian Navy for the exercise. A total of 13,000 troops from different countries are expected to take part in the drills.

Questions have been raised about India participat­ing in an exercise featuring Chinese troops amid the months-long standoff along the LAC and the death of 20 Indian soldiers in the violent Galwan Valley clash on June 15.

The Russian exercise has also sparked tensions with Ukraine, which is organising its own command-staff exercise United Efforts-2020, for which it plans to involve NATO countries. This exercise, too, will be held at around the same time.

While it is not uncommon for the armies of India, China and Pakistan to be part of multi-nation exercises on neutral territorie­s (they even deploy alongside in United Nations peace missions), India’s participat­ion in Kavkaz-2020 had assumed importance because of the ongoing border row in the Ladakh sector.

India and China were unable to bridge their difference­s on the disengagem­ent and de-escalation process along the LAC during recent diplomatic talks, with New Delhi emphasisin­g the need to resolve “outstandin­g issues” speedily, as reported by Hindustan Times on August 20.

MILITARY DIALOGUE HITS ROADBLOCK

People familiar with the matter during the meeting of the Working Mechanism for Consultati­on and Coordinati­on on border affairs dismissed an assertion in a readout from the Chinese foreign ministry that the two sides had “positively evaluated the progress” in the disengagem­ent process.

The military dialogue between senior commanders from the two sides has hit a roadblock due to Chinese reluctance to restore status quo ante in some key friction areas along the LAC.

The commanders set the timeframe and method of disengagem­ent while the WMCC monitors the process. No dates have yet been fixed for the next round of talks between corps commanderr­anked officers who have so far met five times but failed to break the deadlock.

EXPECTED PRESENCE IN

THE EXERCISE OF TROOPS FROM SOUTH OSSETIA, ABKHAZIA, BOTH STATES NOT RECOGNISED BY INDIA, ALSO A FACTOR IN THE DECISION

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