Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Lightning takeover gave India heft in LAC talks

- Rahul Singh rahul.singh@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Indian Army’s lightning takeover of strategic heights on the southern side of Pangong Tso a year ago stunned the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA), gave it (the Indian Army) heft in subsequent military negotiatio­ns, and eventually paved the way for the first and crucial round of disengagem­ent of rival soldiers and weaponry from the Pangong Tso sector in eastern Ladakh, officials and experts tracking the developmen­ts said on Thursday.

The bold moves on the Kailash range and other heights on the southern bank at midnight on August 29 were “a game changer and tilted the balance in favour of the Indian Army” for the first time almost four months after the border row erupted in early May 2020, a senior army officer -- one of the people cited above -- said on condition of anonymity.

The PLA wasn’t expecting the Indian Army to take control of the southern heights when the entire focus was on developmen­ts on the northern bank where the Chinese had intruded into Indian territory and grabbed positions on Finger 4 overlookin­g Indian deployment­s, said a second official, who asked not to be named.

“The five rounds of talks held before the August 29 action last year were focused on the Finger Area and other friction points where the PLA had unilateral­ly changed status quo. And then suddenly, the heights on the southern side of Pangong Tso

were also on the negotiatin­g table. It boosted our bargaining power,” this person added.

The Indian Army occupied a series of strategic heights to prevent the PLA from grabbing Indian territory on the southern bank of Pangong Tso in a stealthy midnight move on August 29, 2020. In swift follow-up action that threw the PLA off balance, the Indian Army rushed its front-line tanks and infantry combat vehicles (ICVs) to the new heights held by its soldiers.

The aggressive move sent a clear message to China that India had the military capability and resolve to change the status quo on the contested Line of Actual Control (LAC) in its favour, said former director general of military operations Lieutenant General Vinod Bhatia (retd).

“In the ensuing military talks, the Indian Army was negotiatin­g the restoratio­n of status quo ante (of April 2020) on the LAC from a position of relative strength.”

The Indian Army ‘s control of ridgeline positions on the southern bank allowed it to completely dominate the sector and keep an eye on Chinese military activity, with the previously-held Indian positions scattered across Rezang La, Reqin pass, Gurung Hill and Magar heights.

The Indian Army put further pressure on the PLA in early September 2020 with its soldiers taking control of key heights overlookin­g the PLA’s deployment­s on the Finger 4 ridgeline on the northern bank. Rival soldiers were then holding ground barely a few hundred metres from each other on the Finger 4 heights.

Disengagem­ent of rival troops and weaponry from the Pangong Tso sector took place more than five months later after the ninth round of military talks. “The developmen­ts on the southern bank last August hastened the disengagem­ent process. Things were stuck before that,” said a third official.

 ?? AP ?? Tanks pull back from the banks of Pangong Tso lake region, in Ladakh along the India-China border
AP Tanks pull back from the banks of Pangong Tso lake region, in Ladakh along the India-China border

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