Hindustan Times (East UP)

India will not accept any shifting of LAC, says Rawat

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

Chief of defence staff (CDS) General Bipin Rawat on Friday said that India will not accept shifting of the Line of Actual Control (LAC), in the midst of border tensions with China in the Ladakh sector. His comments come on a day the two armies are holding talks to reduce military friction along the contested LAC.

“In the overall security calculus, border confrontat­ion, transgress­ions and unprovoked tactical military actions spiralling into a larger conflict cannot be discounted,” Rawat said at an event organised to mark the diamond jubilee celebratio­ns of the National Defence College.

The CDS said the situation in the Ladakh theatre was tense and the Chinese People’s Liberation Army was facing unanticipa­ted consequenc­es of its misadventu­re in the sector.

Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) General Bipin Rawat on Friday said that India will not accept shifting of the Line of Actual Control (LAC), in the midst of border tensions with China in the Ladakh sector. His comments come on a day the two armies are holding talks to reduce military friction along the contested LAC.

“In the overall security calculus, border confrontat­ion, transgress­ions and unprovoked tactical military actions spiralling into a larger conflict cannot be discounted,” Rawat said at an event organised to mark the diamond jubilee celebratio­ns of the

National Defence College.

The CDS said the situation in the Ladakh theatre was tense and the Chinese People’s Liberation Army was facing unanticipa­ted consequenc­es of its misadventu­re in the sector because of the Indian military’s “firm and strong” response.

Rawat warned of a collusive threat from China and Pakistan. He said there was constant friction with the two nucleararm­ed neighbours with whom India has fought wars and their acting in collusion posed an “omnipresen­t danger of regional strategic instabilit­y with the potential for escalation.”

Defence minister Rajnath Singh on Thursday said that

India was determined to protect its sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity in the face of unilateral­ism and aggression, no matter what the sacrifice.

The minister said peace could only be ensured through the ability to deter war. “Perhaps the most fundamenta­l lesson that the roller coaster of the rise and fall of nations taught us was that peace cannot necessaril­y be achieved by a desire for peace but by the ability to deter war. Unfortunat­ely, the mere desire to seek peace, if not reciprocat­ed by others, does not necessaril­y succeed in building a harmonious environmen­t in a world beset by conflictin­g ideas of security, sovereignt­y and national interests,” Singh said.

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