Hindustan Times (Patiala)

New Doklam road set to alter military dynamics

- Sudhi Ranjan Sen letters@hindustant­imes.com

India’s Border Roads Organisati­on (BRO) has built an alternativ­e road through which its troops can enter the Doklam valley — the site of a 73-day military standoff between India and China in 2017 — where the Chumbi valley of China, Bhutan and India converge, a developmen­t that has the potential to alter the military dynamics in the region.

In 2017, the Indian Army was forced to move to the trijunctio­n through a single road in the absence of an alternativ­e, delaying the deployment of troops in Doklam. The alternativ­e road will enable access to the area through two points, easing the logistic difficulti­es, reducing time and making the process of deployment smoother.

“The alternate road will help inter-valley troops transfer and reinforcem­ent,” a senior military officer said on condition of anonymity.

The standoff at the India-Bhutan-Tibet trijunctio­n began on June 16, 2017, when the People’s Liberation Army entered Doklam in a bid to alter the status quo in violation of Beijing’s existing understand­ing with both India and Bhutan. The issue was eventually resolved with the disengagem­ent of border personnel on August 28, 2017.

Importantl­y, of the 61 strategic roads spanning 3,346 km being built by BRO along the India-China border, 3,298 km are now connected. Over 2,400 km, or nearly 72%, of these roads are already blacktoppe­d, making them all-weather roads.

This year, BRO will complete blacktoppi­ng another 11 IndiaChina strategic roads. Blacktoppi­ng of another nine roads will be completed next year. “Constructi­on of just six roads — three in the east and three in the west — of the India-China strategic roads with a total length of just 58 km remain,” Lieutenant General Harpal Singh, director general of BRO, said. The rapid constructi­on along the India-China border over the last few years has changed the military dynamics in the region. This includes allweather alternativ­e access into Ladakh, passing through the Rohtang -Koksar- Kelong route into the Zanskar valley and further up into Nimu. This access will reduce travel time for the military by several hours. Three more tunnels — Baralach La, Lachung La, and Tanglang La — are now being constructe­d. The Rohtang tunnel will be thrown open this December.

In Arunachal Pradesh, the 180 km-long road parallel to the India-China border connecting Passighat to Brahmakund is also complete. Significan­tly, Taksin and Tama Chung Chung are linked by the road connecting the Eastern and Western RALP (Rest of Arunachal Pradesh, a military term), saving thousands of kilometres of journey.

Tama Chung Chung was being “air -maintained” till recently. “And, to move from western Arunachal Pradesh to eastern Arunachal Pradesh, one moved south into Assam and climbed back north,” a second senior military officer who did not want to be named said.

 ?? AFP FILE ?? ■ The Nathu La border between India and China, in Sikkim.
AFP FILE ■ The Nathu La border between India and China, in Sikkim.

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