Chinese PLA tries to alter the status quo along the LAC: Ex-army chief Naravane

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Former Army Chief General MM Naravane said in an interview on Wednesday that China has been trying to alter the status quo along the LAC for many years. They have been doing this in very small incremental steps but over a period of time, they have gained a lot, he said.

The ex-Army Chief said that this is the tactic China has adopted and is continuing to do so.

“Their (Chinese PLA) long-term strategy has been the same – keep inching forward, keep probing us (India) for any possible weakness and if there is any, come sit there and say this is how it always was. So, every small probing action has to be contested,” Naravane said.

Naravane served as army chief from December 2019 to April 2022. His comments come just days after Chinese forces tried to change the status quo in the Tawang sector of Arunachal Pradesh.

The Chinese had also done the same in 2020 when they amassed a huge number of troops along the LAC in Eastern Ladakh. The Chinese PLA also entered the areas claimed by India, resulting in a deadly clash that took place in the Galwan Valley, where India lost 20 soldiers.

SPOTLIGHT

The former army chief said that China has violated the 1993 border agreement time and again. He said during the clash in Galwan, the Indian army was not taken by surprise.

However, he said, the army did not expect the Chinese to violate the agreement, which specifically states that there will be no unilateral change of status quo and no side will come with weapons and arms. “But if you are now coming with clubs with barbed wire, what does that mean? You violated the agreement,” he said.

Naravane said that transgressions by Chinese troops are not localised to only Eastern Ladakh. He said both countries have areas of different perceptions right from eastern Ladakh to Arunachal, and these transgressions are happening from time to time in various places, in eastern Ladakh, in Central sector Barahoti, in Sikkim, in Arunachal.

The former army chief also refuted the reports that Indian troops were not armed during the clash in Galwan.

 

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