Exclusive satellite images accessed by ThePrint show that the Chinese has deployed 2,000 troops near Doklam. We bring perspectives if the Doklam issue has resolved or can flare up again.
With two hostile neighbours in the immediate vicinity and one in the greater region, it is imperative that New Delhi forge alliances that can offer some stability.
Recommendations appear in Niti Aayog’s Tax Policy Working Paper Series–II. It says there is a need to shift away from fear-based enforcement to trust-based governance.
In service with the British military since 2019, it is also known as the Martlet missile. Ukrainians have also deployed these missiles against Russian troops.
Education, reservations, govt jobs are meant to bring equality and dignity. That we are a long way from that is evident in the shoe thrown at the CJI and the suicide of Haryana IPS officer. The film Homebound has a lesson too.
All satellite imageries have the coordinates of the image. the absence of any such data in the imagery posted makes the thrudt of the story irrelevant since the imagery could be anywhere- at a PLA base well inside China, in the area inside the disputed Bhutan-China territory, near the Bhutan boundary but in the Chinese side of the disputed terriroty etc. Inshort in the absence of such hard info on the geographic coordinates of the imagery makes the stroy irrelevant. It could be anywhere- one could as well show an imagery of the Indian troops anywhere in Sikkim and claim that Indian troops are amassing the Doklam area.
Either such coordinates data was available and ThePrint chose not to show it, in which case somke justification for such an omission is in order or The Print does not have any such coordiante information which indicates a lack of professionalism on the part of whoever wrote the story
All satellite imageries have the coordinates of the image. the absence of any such data in the imagery posted makes the thrudt of the story irrelevant since the imagery could be anywhere- at a PLA base well inside China, in the area inside the disputed Bhutan-China territory, near the Bhutan boundary but in the Chinese side of the disputed terriroty etc. Inshort in the absence of such hard info on the geographic coordinates of the imagery makes the stroy irrelevant. It could be anywhere- one could as well show an imagery of the Indian troops anywhere in Sikkim and claim that Indian troops are amassing the Doklam area.
Either such coordinates data was available and ThePrint chose not to show it, in which case somke justification for such an omission is in order or The Print does not have any such coordiante information which indicates a lack of professionalism on the part of whoever wrote the story