Chinese troops have not yet moved from the Galvan Valley. Chinese construction is still in place on both sides of the Line of Actual Control (LAC). This has been claimed in the news published on Monday showing some satellite images. However, neither the foreign ministry nor the military has responded to the allegations of high-resolution satellite imagery.
A satellite image from Monday, June 22 shows China building a full-length concrete culvert over the Galvan River near Patrol Point 14, the site of the June 15 collision. The river Galwan flows through its bottom. Scattered around are Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) tents and other construction, vehicles and military equipment. The house of the Chinese army is also built on the hill. The Chinese military base is just six kilometers from the Leh-Darbuk-Daulat Beg Oldi road. Coincidentally, the two countries' corps commanders met on the same day to reduce tensions along the Line of Actual Control (LAC) in eastern Ladakh. At the 11-hour meeting on the Chusul-Moldo border in Ladakh, both sides agreed to withdraw troops from the LAC to reduce tensions. However, no government has said whether the work has started yet.
In an all-party meeting last Friday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said without naming Chin and Galwan, "No one has crossed our border." No one has even entered our area. ”But with the news published on Wednesday, a“ high resolution satellite image ”of May 21 has come to the fore. It revealed the existence of a Chinese army tent at Patrolling Point-14 near the Galwan River. And the picture of June 22 shows the Chinese culvert built there. The presence of a large number of Chinese troops, including compactor heavy military equipment suitable for road construction in mountainous areas, is also evident.
Retired Major General of the Indian Army and former Additional Surveyor General Ramesh Padhi commented after looking at the satellite images, "Clearly, there has been an invasion of Indian territory by crossing the LAC near Patrolling Point-14." China has entered our area and formed a defensive formation, "said Padhir, a map expert." Looking at the pictures, it is clear that China has entered there with heavy vehicles. Many military experts see the six-kilometer-long Indian road as their "target" in the way the Chinese military has built culverts and compactors, trying to build roads.
Meanwhile, a report claimed on the same day that the Chinese army was obstructing the patrol of the Indian Army at the patrol point 10 to 13 in Daulat Beg Oldi area north of Galwan. The Indian Air Force base is located in the area near Karakoram Pass. And Karakoram has become the Sino-Pak economic corridor from Kashgar in Xinjiang province to the port of Gadwar in Pakistan. As a result, military experts believe that Daulat Beg is the cause of Old China's headaches. The Chinese entered the nearby Depsang area in 2013 and set up base there for about three weeks. Once again, the Chinese military is reportedly preparing to establish dominance in the Depsang area to increase pressure on India.
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