Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

India begins drone surveillan­ce, deploys mountain forces, ITBP

High-altitude specialise­d forces deployed along LAC besides ITBP battalions

- Shishir Gupta letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: In a stand-off with a belligeren­t Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) at four points in East Ladakh , India has increased technical drone surveillan­ce of the area even as the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) has inducted more battalions into the sector to support army along the 3,488 km Line of Actual Control (LAC), government and military officials familiar with the matter said.

The decision to induct ITBP battalions in support of the army was taken on June 20 after DGMO, India, Lt General Paramjit Singh and DG (ITBP and BSF) S S Deswal visited Leh to be briefed about the ground situation. The top security officials of Indian Government were briefed by the XIV Corps Commander Lt General Harinder Singh on the stand off with PLA.

NEWDELHI: In a stand-off with a belligeren­t Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) at four points in East Ladakh , India has increased technical drone surveillan­ce of the area even as the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) has inducted more battalions into the sector to support army along the 3,488 km Line of Actual Control (LAC), government and military officials familiar with the matter said.

The decision to induct ITBP battalions in support of the army was taken on June 20 after Director General Military Operations, India, Lt General Paramjit Singh and Director General (ITBP and BSF) S S Deswal visted Leh to be briefed about the ground situation. The top security officials of Indian Government were briefed by the XIV Corps Commander Lt General Harinder Singh on the the stand off with PLA.

India has also deployed its specialise­d high-altitude forces along LAC to repel any transgress­ion in the western, middle or eastern sectors, the officials added.

With the Narendra Modi government giving a clear mandate to the Indian Army to repel any PLA transgress­ion along the LAC, the military and the National Technical Research Organizati­on (NTRO) have been asked to deploy more surveillan­ce drones in the area so that the battle theatre becomes more transparen­t. While the army has been given clearance at the highest levels to acquire more drones, the Israeli Heron medium altitude long endurance drone curto rently being used by NTRO is providing technical surveillan­ce of the area.

The Chinese PLA has the unproven armed drone Wing Loong in its inventory; India is also looking to acquire armed drones from either Israel or the US.

According to government officials familiar with the matter, the ITBP force accretion is being done to ensure that all 65 (some say 62) patrolling points along the 1547 km LAC in East Ladakh are fully patrolled , thereby not allowing PLA to expand the scope of its dispute with India by engaging in more areas. The ITBP operates under the Indian Army in the event of hostilitie­s, and also undertakes joint patrols with the military in peacetime; it already has at least 7,000 men on ground. The joint briefing of DGMO, who has served as Corps Commander of Nagrota in J &K, and DG (BSF and ITBP) was done to ensure that the Indian forces are on the same page in case the red flag goes up.

Along with the ITBP, specialise­d forces, trained over the past decades to fight on the northern front, have now been pushed up to the frontier. Unlike the PLA, which moves in infantry combat vehicles that use paved metalled roads, the Indian mountain troops are trained in guerrilla warfare and in high-altitude combat, as demonstrat­ed during the 1999 Kargil War.

“The art of mountain fighting is the toughest, as the cost of human casualties is 10 to each troop of the adversary sitting on a height. The troops from Uttarakhan­d, Ladakh, Gorkha, Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim have adapted to the rarefied heights over centuries and hence their capability of fighting is closequart­er combats is without match. The artillery and the missiles have to have pin-pointed accuracy or else they miss the mountain target by miles,” said a former Indian Army chief.

The Tibetan plateau is flat on the Chinese side while the Indian side starts from K2 peak in Karakoram, to Nanda Devi in Uttarakhan­d, to Kanchenjun­ga in Sikkim, and Namche Barwa across Arunachal Pradesh border. “In mountains, it is not only difficult to capture territory but more difficult to hold it,” a China expert at South Block said.

The officials cited in the first instance said that India is willing play the long game. “Our battalions lined up with armoured personnel carriers and artillery. India will not instigate or precipitat­e any skirmish but will reply to any transgress­ion. The days of LAC nibbling are over. This is a battle of nerves and India is prepared to wait, come snow come sunshine,” said a senior minister who asked not to be named.

The officials added that the Modi government is unhappy that Chinese President Xi Jinping did not rein in PLA western theatre commander General Zhao Zongqi, who, according to China watchers, is keen on imposing the 1960 Eastern Ladakh map based on claims on Indian territory.

This map, in which China claims territory up to Kongka La, was unveiled by former Chinese premier Chou En Lai, who led the country during the 1962 conflict. Indian officials said that it was in an attempt to set aside historical baggage that Prime Minister Narendra Modi initiated the Wuhan and Mamallapur­am summits so that the two leaders could promote the bilateral relations after the 73-day Doklam face-off in 2017.

While both India and China are diplomatic­ally engaged to de-escalate the situation, the instructio­ns to the ground forces are to not to allow any transgress­ion by the PLA at any cost. “PLA soldiers use vehicles to reach their posts; our troops are trained to climb and then fight . Thanks to adversarie­s on western and northern borders, Indian infantry has learnt the art of fighting at the highest heights be it Siachen, Karakoram, Lipulekh or Thag la,” said a senior military commander who asked not to be named.

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