Hindustan Times (Noida)

Intel points to heightened PLA activity along LAC

- Shishir Gupta letters@hindustant­imes.com

Communicat­ion intercepts by Indian intelligen­ce agencies from across the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in Ladakh, Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh reveal heightened activity of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) own intelligen­ce all along the undefined border with India in an attempt to get informatio­n on Indian Army movements and the on-going border infrastruc­ture upgrade being carried out by India.

While the South Block is tight-lipped about the issue, intelligen­ce agencies have been able to spot movement of entities in the Daulet Beg Oldi (DBO) sector near Karakoram, the contested points on banks of Pangong Tso and across the LAC in Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh. The movement of these entities identified on the basis of communicat­ion intercepts has been conveyed to Indian Army brass and the national security establishm­ent at the apex level.

Indian and Chinese troops have been locked in an impasse all along the LAC in East Ladakh for the past eight months. The two sides have held eight rounds of talks, but not been able to arrive at a workable mechanism for de-escalation and disengagem­ent.

The arrest of an unidentifi­ed Chinese solider in the early hours of January 8 in the area south of Pangong Tso in East Ladakh came after he was tracked through technical means; intelligen­ce officials say this was not a benign incident of a PLA trooper simply straying across the undefined border.

China military online, an official website of PLA claimed: “Due to darkness and complicate­d geography, a solider of the Chinese PLA defence force went astray on the China-india border early Friday (January 8) morning.” The trooper was handed over by Indian Army to the Chinese side on January 11 at the Chushul Moldo point.

Similarly, PLA Corporal Wang Ya Long was picked up by the Indian Army in the Demchok sector of East Ladakh on October 19 and handed back to PLA on October 21. The apprehende­d corporal claimed that he was trying to help local herders locate a lost yak.

While PLA has tried to dismiss these incidents and claims to be committed to disengagem­ent and de-escalation from contested points in East Ladakh, Indian intelligen­ce agencies are worried about movement of Chinese individual­s (entities or resources in intelligen­ce lingo) in sensitive East Ladakh, Sikkim and Arunachal sector, with communicat­ion intercepts showing that they cross over to Indian territory and remain there for days.

Fore example, in East Ladakh, entities have been located across DBO sector, Pangong Tso, Khurnak Fort in occupied Aksai Chin as well as in Chumbi Valley and just across the Arunachal LAC.

Communicat­ion intercepts show strong Chinese activity across LAC with the constructi­on of new roads, temporary shelters and sometime permanent settlement­s.

Since PLA has only exchanged maps of its positions in the Central sector, the entities are using the non-demarcated border to their advantage. Given the experience with Pakistani intruders in Kargil in 1999, Indian intelligen­ce officials said they are taking no chances.

In response to the furious military infrastruc­ture activity by PLA across LAC, the Indian Army has put the reserve troop division also called strike division attached to Eastern Command on stand-by in north Assam.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India