Millennium Post

Indian, Pakistani troops TAKE part For THE first time in SCO military drill

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BEIJING/MOSCOW: For the first time, the militaries of India and Pakistan are taking part in a mega anti-terror drill of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on (SCO) in Russia aimed at expanding cooperatio­n among the member countries to deal with the growing menace of terrorism and extremism.

India is participat­ing in the drill for the first time since becoming a full member of the SCO in June 2017.

As part of the SCO initiative­s, the SCO Peace Mission Exercise is conducted biennially for the SCO member states.

The joint exercise is being conducted by the Central Military Commission of Russia from August 22 to August 29 at Chebarkul, Russia.

The exercise will involve tactical level operations in an internatio­nal counter insurgency or counter terrorism environmen­t under the SCO Charter. At least 3,000 soldiers from China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, India and Pakistan are participat­ing in the drill, according to the Chinese media reports.

Ten representa­tives from Uzbekistan will serve as observers, state-run Global Times reported.

The Indian contingent of 200 personnel is primarily composed of troops from infantry and affiliated arms and services along with the Indian Air Force. The Indian contingent has been put through a strenuous training schedule which includes firing, heliborne operations, combat conditioni­ng, tactical operations and house interventi­on drills, according to curtain raiser of the exercise released by the Ministry of Defence in New Delhi. The joint exercise will strengthen mutual confidence, interopera­bility and enable sharing of best practices among armed forces of the SCO nations.

The previous SCO counterter­rorism drills were mainly limited to the Central Asian nations, the Chinese media said. But due to the entry of India and Pakistan, the SCO’S counter-terrorism mission has expanded to South Asia, Li Wei, a counter-terrorism expert at the China Institute of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations in Beijing, told the Global Times.

The SCO was establishe­d in Shanghai in 2001, with China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan as founding members.

It expanded to include India and Pakistan in 2017.

“The effective counter-terrorism cooperatio­n among SCO countries has greatly undermined terrorist groups in Central Asia in recent years, and it’s expected that this effective cooperatio­n will also boost stability in South Asia, a region facing a more complicate­d counter-terrorism situation with a variety of active terrorist groups,” Li said.

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