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Bogeyman 

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Again, the similarities to Xinjiang’s inter-provincial transfer scheme are significant: unified processing, batch-style transfers, strong government involvement, financial incentives for middlemen and for participating companies, and state-mandated quotas. However, for the TAR’s labor transfer scheme, there is so far no evidence of accompanying cadres or security personnel, of cadres stationed in factories, or of workers being kept in closed, securitized environments at their final work destination. It is possible that the transfer of Tibetan laborers is not as securitized as that of Uyghur workers. There is also currently no evidence of TAR labor training and transfer schemes being linked to extrajudicial internment. The full range of TAR vocational training and job assignment mechanisms can take various forms and has a range of focus groups; not all of them involve centralized transfers or the military-style training and transfer of nomads and farmers.

The Coercive Nature of the Labor Training and Transfer System

Even so, there are clear elements of coercion during recruitment, training and job matching, as well as a centralized and strongly state-administered and supervised transfer process. While some documents assert that the scheme is predicated on voluntary participation, the overall evidence indicates the systemic presence of numerous coercive elements.

As in Xinjiang, TAR government documents make it clear that poverty alleviation is a “battlefield,” with such work to be organized under a military-like “command” structure (脱贫攻坚指挥部, tuopin gongjian zhihuibu) (TAR Government, October 29, 2019; Xinhua, October 7, 2018). In mid-2019, the battle against poverty in the TAR was said to have “entered the decisive phase,” given the goal to eradicate absolute poverty by the end of 2020 (Tibet.cn, June 11, 2019). Since poverty is measured by income levels, and labor transfer is the primary means to increase incomes—and hence to “lift” people out of poverty—the pressure for local governments to round up poor populations and feed them into the scheme is extremely high.

The Training and Labor Transfer Action Plan cited above establishes strict administrative procedures, and mandates the establishment of dedicated work groups as well as the involvement of top leadership cadres, to “ensure that the target tasks are completed on schedule” (see [2]). Each administrative level is to pass on the “pressure [to achieve the targets] to the next [lower] level.” Local government units are to “establish a task progress list [and] those who lag behind their work schedule… are to be reported and to be held accountable according to regulations.” The version adopted by the region governed under Shannan City is even more draconian: training and labor transfer achievements are directly weighed in cadres’ annual assessment scores, complemented by a system of “strict rewards and punishments.” [11] Specific threats of “strict rewards and punishments” in relation to achieving labor training and transfer targets are also found elsewhere, such as in official reports from the region governed under Ngari City, which mandate “weekly, monthly and quarterly” reporting mechanisms (TAR Government, December 18, 2018).

As with the Uyghurs in Xinjiang, overcoming Tibetans’ resistance to labor transfer is an integral part of the entire mechanism. Documents state that the “strict military-style management” of the vocational training process causes the “masses to comply with discipline,” “continuously strengthens their patriotic awareness,” and reforms their “backward thinking.” [12] This may also involve the presence of local cadres to “make the training discipline stricter.” [13]

Because the military-style vocational training process produces discipline and transforms “backward employment views,” it is said to “promote labor transfer.” [14] Rural laborers are to be transformed from “[being] unwilling to move” to becoming willing to participate, a process that requires “diluting the negative influence of religion,” which is said to induce passivity (TAR Commerce Department, June 10). The poverty alleviation and training process is therefore coupled with an all-out propaganda effort that aims to use “thought education” to “educate and guide the unemployed to change their closed, conservative and traditional employment mindset” (Tibet’s Chamdo, July 8, 2016). [15] One document notes that the poverty alleviation and labor transfer process is part of an effort to “stop raising up lazy people” (TAR Government, December 18, 2018).

A 2018 account from Chamdo of post-training follow-up shows the tight procedures employed by the authorities:

Strictly follow up and ask for effectiveness. Before the end of each training course, trainees are required to fill in the “Employment Willingness Questionnaire.” Establish a database…to grasp the employment…status of trainees after the training. For those who cannot be employed in time after training, follow up and visit regularly, and actively recommend employment…. [16]

These “strict” follow-up procedures are increasingly unnecessary, because the mandated “order-oriented” process means that locals are matched with future jobs prior to the training.

“Grid Management” and the “Double-Linked Household” System

Coercive elements play an important role during the recruitment process. Village-based work teams, an intrusive social control mechanism pioneered by Chen Quanguo, go from door to door to “help transform the thinking and views of poor households.” [17] The descriptions of these processes, and the extensive government resources invested to ensure their operation, overlap to a high degree with those that are commonly practiced in Xinjiang (The China Quarterly, July 12, 2019). As is the case in Xinjiang, poverty-alleviation work in the TAR is tightly linked to social control mechanisms and key aspects of the security apparatus. To quote one government document, “By combining grid management and the ‘double-linked household’ management model, [we must] organize, educate, and guide the people to participate and to support the fine-grained poverty alleviation … work.” [18]

Grid management (网格化管理, wanggehua guanli) is a highly intrusive social control mechanism, through which neighborhoods and communities are subdivided into smaller units of surveillance and control. Besides dedicated administrative and security staff, this turns substantial numbers of locals into “volunteers,” enhancing the surveillance powers of the state. [19] Grid management later became the backbone of social control and surveillance in Xinjiang. For poverty alleviation, it involves detailed databases that list every single person “in poverty,” along with indicators and countermeasures, and may include a “combat visualization” (图表化作战, tubiaohua zuozhan) feature whereby progress in the “war on poverty” is visualized through maps and charts (TAR Government, November 10, 2016). Purang County in Ngari spent 1.58 million renminbi ($233,588 dollars) on a “Smart Poverty Alleviation Big Data Management Platform,” which can display poverty alleviation progress on a large screen in real time (TAR Government, February 20, 2019).

Similarly, the “double-linked household” (双联户, shuang lian hu) system corrals regular citizens into the state’s extensive surveillance apparatus by making sets of 10 “double-linked” households report on each other. Between 2012 and 2016, the TAR established 81,140 double-linked household entities, covering over three million residents, and therefore virtually the region’s entire population (South China Morning Post, December 12, 2016). An August 2020 article on poverty alleviation in Ngari notes that it was the head of a “double-linked” household unit who led his “entire village” to hand over their grassland and herds to a local husbandry cooperative (Hunan Government, August 20).

Converting Property to Shares Through Government Cooperatives

A particularly troubling aspect of the Training and Labor Transfer Action Plan is the directive to promote a “poverty alleviation industry” (扶贫产业, fupin chanye) scheme by which local nomads and farmers are asked to hand over their land and herds to large-scale, state-run cooperatives (农牧民专业合作社, nongmumin zhuanye hezuoshe). [20] In that way, “nomads become shareholders” as they convert their usage rights into shares. This scheme, which harks back to the forced collectivization era of the 1950s, increases the disposable incomes of nomads and farmers through share dividends and by turning them into wage laborers. They are then either employed by these cooperatives or are now “free” to participate in the wider labor transfer scheme. [21] In Nagqu, this is referred to as the “one township one cooperative, one village one cooperative ” (“一乡一社”“一村一合” / “yixiang yishe” “yicun yihe”) scheme, indicating its universal coverage. [22] One account describes the land transfer as prodding Tibetans to “put down the whip, walk out of the pasture, and enter the [labor] market” (People.cn, July 27, 2020).

Clearly, such a radical transformation of traditional livelihoods is not achieved without overcoming local resistance. A government report from Shuanghu County (Nagqu) in July 2020 notes that:

In the early stages, … most herders were not enthusiastic about participating. [Then], the county government…organized…county-level cadres to deeply penetrate township and village households, convening village meetings to mobilize people, insisted on transforming the [prevailing attitude of] “I am wanted to get rid of poverty” to “I want to get rid of poverty” as the starting point for the formation of a cooperative… [and] comprehensively promoted the policy… Presently… the participation rate of registered poor herders is at 100 percent, [that] of other herders at 97 percent. [23]

Importantly, the phrase “transforming [attitudes of] ‘I am wanted to get rid of poverty’ to ‘I want to get rid of poverty’” is found in this exact form in accounts of poverty alleviation through labor transfer in Xinjiang. [24]

Given that this scheme severs the long-standing connection between Tibetans and their traditional livelihood bases, its explicit inclusion in the militarized vocational training and labor transfer policy context is of great concern.


Chamdo-School-ground-768x381.png


Images: Different views of the “Chamdo Golden Sunshine Vocational Training School” in the Chamdo region of eastern Tibet. / Figure 4 (top): The facility at ground level. (Image source: https://bit.ly/2Rr6Ekc) / Figures 5 and 6 (below): Satellite views of the facility. (Source: Google Earth, image dates: 11/22/2018)

Chamdo-Overhead-combined.png


Militarized Vocational Training: Examining a Training Base in Chamdo

The Chamdo Golden Sunshine Vocational Training School (昌都市金色阳光职业培训学校, Changdushi Jinse Yangguang Zhiye Peixun Xuexiao) operates a vocational training base within Chamdo’s Vocational and Technical School, located in Eluo Town, Karuo District. The facility conducts “military-style training” (军旅式培训, junlüshi peixun) of rural surplus laborers for the purpose of achieving labor transfer; photos of the complex show a rudimentary facility with rural Tibetan trainees of various ages, mostly dressed in military fatigues. [25]
Satellite imagery (see accompanying images) shows that after a smaller initial setup in 2016, [26] the facility was expanded in the year 2018 to its current state. [27] The compound is fully enclosed, surrounded by a tall perimeter wall and fence, and bisected by a tall internal wire mesh fence that separates the three main northern buildings from the three main southern ones (building numbers 4 and 5 and parts of the surrounding wall are shown in the accompanying Figure 4). The internal fence might be used to separate dormitories from teaching and administrative buildings. Independent experts in satellite analysis contacted by the author estimated the height of the internal fence at approximately 3 meters. The neighboring vocational school does not feature any such security measures.

Conclusions

In both Xinjiang and Tibet, state-mandated poverty alleviation consists of a top-down scheme that extends the government’s social control deep into family units. The state’s preferred method to increase the disposable incomes of rural surplus laborers in these restive minority regions is through vocational training and labor transfer. Both regions have by now implemented a comprehensive scheme that relies heavily on centralized administrative mechanisms; quota fulfilment; job matching prior to training; and a militarized training process that involves thought transformation, patriotic and legal education, and Chinese language teaching.
Important differences remain between Beijing’s approaches in Xinjiang and Tibet. Presently, there is no evidence that the TAR’s scheme is linked to extrajudicial internment, and aspects of its labor transfer mechanisms are potentially less coercive. However, in a system where the transition between securitization and poverty alleviation is seamless, there is no telling where coercion stops and where genuinely voluntary local agency begins. While some Tibetans may voluntarily participate in some or all aspects of the scheme, and while their incomes may indeed increase as a result, the systemic presence of clear indicators of coercion and indoctrination, coupled with profound and potentially permanent change in modes of livelihood, is highly problematic. In the context of Beijing’s increasingly assimilatory ethnic minority policy, it is likely that these policies will promote a long-term loss of linguistic, cultural and spiritual heritage.
Adrian Zenz is a Senior Fellow in China Studies at the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, Washington, D.C. (non-resident), and supervises PhD students at the European School of Culture and Theology, Korntal, Germany. His research focus is on China’s ethnic policy, public recruitment in Tibet and Xinjiang, Beijing’s internment campaign in Xinjiang, and China’s domestic security budgets. Dr. Zenz is the author of Tibetanness under Threat and co-editor of Mapping Amdo: Dynamics of Change. He has played a leading role in the analysis of leaked Chinese government documents, to include the “China Cables” and the “Karakax List.” Dr. Zenz is an advisor to the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, and a frequent contributor to the international media.

Notes
[1]
See for example https://archive.is/wip/4ItV6 or http://archive.is/RVJRK. State media articles from September 2020 indicate that this type of training is ongoing https://archive.is/e1XqL.
[2] Chinese: 大力推广军旅式…培训 (dali tuiguang junlüshi…peixun). See https://bit.ly/3mmiQk7 (pp.12-17). See local implementation documents of this directive from Shannan City (https://bit.ly/32uVlO5, pp.15-24), Xigatse (https://archive.is/7oJ7p) and Ngari (https://archive.is/wip/R3Mpw).
[3] See also https://archive.is/wip/eQMGa.
[4] Provided that the person was employed for at least 6 months in a given year. Source: https://archive.is/KE1Vd.
[5] See the author’s main work on this in section 6 of: “Beyond the Camps: Beijing’s Long-Term Scheme of Coercive Labor, Poverty Alleviation and Social Control in Xinjiang,” Journal of Political Risk (Vol. 7, No. 12), December 2019. https://www.jpolrisk.com/beyond-the-camps-beijings-long-term-scheme-of-coercive-labor-poverty-alleviation-and-social-control-in-xinjiang/.
[6] See https://archive.is/wip/Dyapm.
[7] See https://archive.is/wip/XiZfl, https://archive.is/RdnvS, https://archive.is/w1kfx, https://archive.is/wip/NehA6, https://archive.is/wip/KMaUo, https://archive.is/wip/XiZfl, https://archive.is/RdnvS, https://archive.is/w1kfx.
[8] See https://archive.is/KE1Vd and https://archive.is/wip/8afPF.
[9] See https://archive.is/KE1Vd and https://archive.is/wip/8afPF.
[10] See https://archive.is/KE1Vd.
[11] See https://bit.ly/32uVlO5, p.24.
[12] See https://archive.is/wip/fN9hz and https://archive.is/NYMwi, compare https://archive.is/wip/iiF7h and http://archive.is/Nh7tT.
[13] See https://archive.is/wip/kQVnX. A state media account of Tibetan waiters at a tourism-oriented restaurant in Xiexong Township (Chamdo) notes that these are all from “poverty-alleviation households,” and have all gone through “centralized, military-style training.” Consequently, per this account, they have developed a “service attitude of being willing to suffer [or: work hard]”, as is evident from their “vigorous pace and their [constant] shuttling back and forth” as they serve their customers. https://archive.is/wip/Nfxnx (account from 2016); compare https://archive.is/wip/dTLku.
[14] See https://archive.is/wip/faIeL and https://archive.is/wip/18CXh.
[15] See https://archive.is/iiF7h.
[16] See https://archive.is/wip/ETmNe
[17] See https://archive.is/wip/iEV7P, see also e.g. https://archive.is/wip/1p6lV.
[18] See https://archive.is/e45fJ.
[19] See https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/securitizing-xinjiang-police-recruitment-informal-policing-and-ethnic-minority-cooptation/FEEC613414AA33A0353949F9B791E733 and https://www.hrw.org/news/2013/03/20/china-alarming-new-surveillance-security-tibet.
[20] E.g. https://archive.is/R3Mpw. This scheme was also mentioned in the TAR’s 13th 5-Year-Plan (2016-2020) (https://archive.is/wip/S3buo). See also similar accounts, e.g. https://archive.is/IJUyl.
[21] Note e.g. the sequence of the description of these cooperatives followed by an account of labor transfer (https://archive.is/gIw3f).
[22] See https://archive.is/wip/gIw3f or https://archive.is/wip/z5Tor or https://archive.is/wip/PR7lh.
[23] See https://archive.is/wip/85zXB.
[24] See the author’s related work on this in section 2.2 of: “Beyond the Camps: Beijing’s Long-Term Scheme of Coercive Labor, Poverty Alleviation and Social Control in Xinjiang,” Journal of Political Risk (Vol. 7, No. 12), December 2019. https://www.jpolrisk.com/beyond-the-camps-beijings-long-term-scheme-of-coercive-labor-poverty-alleviation-and-social-control-in-xinjiang/.
[25] Located as part of the 昌都市卡若区俄洛镇昌都市职业技术学校 campus. See https://bit.ly/2Rr6Ekc; compare https://archive.is/wip/uUTCp and https://archive.is/wip/lKnbe.
[26] See https://archive.is/wip/WZsvQ.
[27] Coordinates: 31.187035, 97.091817. Website: https://bit.ly/2Rr6Ekc. The timeframe for construction is indicated by historical satellite imagery and by the year 2018 featured on a red banner on the bottom-most photo of the website.

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Anmdt

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The chance shouldn't be left to Winter, China has settlement in Antarctica mainly operated by military personnel they have their training programs for the personnel deployed in Arctic missions, these two might seem irrevelant but i presume the heights in Ladakh has similar logistic challenges to the Antarctica.
Just to note, China has one station stationed in Remote area (not on the shore), even seem to be operated in Summer, consider what "summer" exactly is in Antarctica.

Cpl points,

1) Ignoring for time being Chinese radar quality (and doctrine) which I have no real idea about, there are ways to develop methods to detect and even track in radar "shadow" zones.

They are not truly uniform pitch black areas, it just becomes a lot harder (given such things as diminishing returns on the peak power burst you have and best pulse compression method/analysis you can achieve among other things.... available to say single/multiple awacs in area able to compute together focusing on backscatter and other phenomenon which is pages long convo I wont go into here).

These kind of situations of course have to be actually relevant in the situation at hand given dominance you need to exert to achieve it (i.e the costs of commiting such to say just one fighter is untenable for many reasons in warfare). Such doctrine these days mostly are geared toward detection of cruise missiles targetting critical infra on your side for example....as the cost ratio in conflict of the current modern window makes more sense for that.

These are developed from about 2 - 3 core methods* developed in the 70s by both sides of the cold war (though NATO had the clear edge in sheer electronics industry scale at the crucial mid-lower tiers especially where you get scaled production feedback) regarding Behind the horizon (BTH)

This is because any other shadow zone phenomenon is basically the same issue overall. i.e You just are bringing the horizon closer to you due to Earth not being perfect sphere noticeably with mountains and plateaus like described here....my gut instict tells me the max height of AWAC cruise makes this less extreme than the pic conveys...but I am going to double check this later as I never quite mapped this out in this area. It effectively would come down to the prominence of the slope on shadow side of the peak feature with relation to max alt of the AWAC at the longest range of interest).

2) The denial to China by Russia of Il-76 platform has come up a number of times now. I really wonder about their relationship truly given this. There have been other such information on some other critical refusals too.

3) Overall a very interesting video for bringing up this subject that I have discussed at some length with couple other professionals before but in different contexts.

======================

*They have been improved in robustness during the 90s and more recent digital era given level of algorithm RnD to make use of even legacy systems (these have been applied in both E-3 AWAC and also AEGIS for example to extract platform and deployed system mileage).

@Vergennes @ANMDT @Cabatli_53 @Joe Shearer et. al
Just to ask, since i am not really into airborne stuff;
Doesn't shadow zone applies in both parties? Unless India has installed early warning radars in Nepal, there is also a shadow in Chinese airspace (from point of view of the plane stationed in shadow) which Indian planes eventually need to go high to detect incoming Chinese planes which then will reveal. (i am putting aside the complicated methods to detect aerial activities)
And once Chinese is aware of the AWACS, they would guess what is waiting for.
 
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Paro

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The chance shouldn't be left to Winter, China has settlement in Antarctica mainly operated by military personnel they have their training programs for the personnel deployed in Arctic missions, these two might seem irrevelant but i presume the heights in Ladakh has similar logistic challenges to the Antarctica.
Just to note, China has one station stationed in Remote area (not on the shore), even seem to be operated in Summer, consider what "summer" exactly is in Antarctica.
Ladakh and Antarctica are different. It’s to do with sea level and high altitude. The air contains 20% oxygen and 80% nitrogen. This is same at both sea level and high altitude but in high altitude the oxygen pressure drops to 1/3 from some 159 mmhg to 60 mmhg. Because of this a person consumes less oxygen molecules, increases stress on breathing causes dehydration but will eventually get acclimated and despite these adaptations in the body to compensate for hypoxic conditions physical performance will always be worse at high altitude than for the equivalent activity at sea level. The point is I would rather die in Antarctica than dying breatheless in Ladakh.
 

Anmdt

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Ladakh and Antarctica are different. It’s to do with sea level and high altitude. The air contains 20% oxygen and 80% nitrogen. This is same at both sea level and high altitude but in high altitude the oxygen pressure drops to 1/3 from some 159 mmhg to 60 mmhg. Because of this a person consumes less oxygen molecules, increases stress on breathing causes dehydration but will eventually get acclimated and despite these adaptations in the body to compensate for hypoxic conditions physical performance will always be worse at high altitude than for the equivalent activity at sea level. The point is I would rather die in Antarctica than dying breatheless in Ladakh.
I suggest you to check elevation map of the Antarctica, and also to consider atmosphere is slightly thinner in there.
The southern Chinese base is not located at the shore, as i have indicated earlier referring as "remote area"
For convenience:
The earth's atmosphere is roughly 21% oxygen, and as far as I know this is true everywhere (except some holes in the ground). Air currents at the upper levels of the atmosphere tend to push air towards the poles, where the air is then pushed down and back toward the equator near ground level. This results in nearly constant winds in Antarctica.

Being in the southern hemisphere where there is less industry and less pollution, with a constant supply of fresh air carried by the prevailing currents, Antarctica has the cleanest air in the world.

However, the atmosphere is thickest at the equator and thinnest at the poles, so Antarctica does have slightly lower air pressure than normal - a difference that is equal to about 1500 feet of elevation. Besides this, Antarctica has an average elevation of 8200 feet - much higher than any other continent, which means the atmosphere - and oxygen - actually available to breathe tends to be a bit low - low enough to sometimes cause difficulty, especially when exertion is made. However, the percentage of oxygen in the air remains about the same as elsewhere. There are no plants to supply oxygen, but there are no animals to consume it, either.
We can conclude that, loss in oxygen saturation accounting the thinner atmosphere, equals of 9500-10000 feet (3000 meters) of height in average of Antarctica and 4500 (4000 actual + 500 correction due to the atmosphere thickness) meters of elevation at exact location of Southern Chinese station.
I haven't been to there personally but i know some friends who has been to there.
 

Paro

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I suggest you to check elevation map of the Antarctica, and also to consider atmosphere is slightly thinner in there.
The southern Chinese base is not located at the shore, as i have indicated earlier referring as "remote area"
For convenience:
Is there less oxygen in Antarctica? - Quora
Interesting. Especially the skydivers death. I wasn't aware of this incident.
And Southpole is 9k mts. Mt Everest base camp is at 88k if is remember correctly.
 

Nilgiri

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Just to ask, since i am not really into airborne stuff;
Doesn't shadow zone applies in both parties? Unless India has installed early warning radars in Nepal, there is also a shadow in Chinese airspace (from point of view of the plane stationed in shadow) which Indian planes eventually need to go high to detect incoming Chinese planes which then will reveal. (i am putting aside the complicated methods to detect aerial activities)
And once Chinese is aware of the AWACS, they would guess what is waiting for.

Yes it would work both ways...in fact the fighter has a much less powerful radar so it would have a larger radar shadow concerning it if its hugging a mountain slope itself etc. Same thing if you have a ground radar right next to the mountain too etc.

But its not really a fighters job in this instance anyway (compared to AWACS) since the AWACs main role is to have the maximum situational awareness as possible to figure out the best play possible to execute the pre-contact gameplan given to it in a previous team huddle (much like a quarterback in american football)

....the argument being proposed here is thus a way to hide fighters (and other airborne assets in general) in a known shadow to offer some tactical advantages, say last minute surprises...like invisible opposition players at the moment of the quarterbacks decision to pass to a particular allied player that he has determined...but they become visible downstream in the play and can offer some degree of upsetting to the plan being executed (they also have no idea about the quarterback moves directly, but they are waiting in ambush and likely directed by other "eyes" staying further back etc).

The overall area of where these invisible players can reside would also be known to the quarterback though, he would factor it into his gameplan too...just like PLAAF would know about about where these radar shadows exist on other side of himalayas, they have probably tested it out in interior China (where tibetan plateau ends there for example) and wargamed it all, I would be very surprised if they havent already. Anything can really be accounted for these days, just depends on what the scope on offer is (which is something potentially interesting here) and how you determine its overall threat and relevance etc. But days of superweapons and superdoctrines are largely over (at least in physical world, virtual world stuff I am fairly ignorant on), last ones arguably being the period between trinity to joe-1 and maybe to some degree stealth technology maturity in the 80s in the US.

This is also part of lot of systems having silent and passive modes too for radar (you are probably familiar with sonar doctrine and development regarding this)...since a radar shadow zone (or well beyond horizon zone) is simply a topographically afforded silence/block etc.

A number of ground attack aircraft (esp variants) for example simply dont have an air-air radar at all (or very limited one), given their main missions simply are best executed by not having any noisemaker directed at that large volume of air at all, a passive listen-only system is deemed too much payload/capacity used....and its simply to deliver the package and its totally steered/organised a different way (dedicated mission computer and dedicated terrain radar if needed only) to say air superiority or multirole fighters.
 

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NEW DELHI: The recent understandings between India and China — by the foreign ministers in Moscow on September 10 and military commanders on Tuesday — are intended to begin the process of a limited disengagement and ensure a continued ‘standstill’ at the Line of Actual Control amid a deep trust deficit between the two sides.

Confirming that meaningful disengagement would depend on the political intent of the Chinese leadership and its willingness to de-escalate on the ground, Indian sources said the two joint statements should be read only to prevent provocative jostling at friction points on the LAC which could flare into hostilities even as India remains prepared for all eventualities.

(more at link)

==============

Honestly this just seems to be a pantomime at this point (at the political level)...I don't see the Chinese withdrawing or the Indians backing down from the positions held even if they do...given that would need some appropriate verification regime/system afterwards which the Chinese won't accept.

The stratnews video about defenders advantage (cross posted above) in the mountains lends a lot of insight to crucial matter of timings regarding such operations....so what would really be the purpose for China to withdraw way further back given the quiet deliberate pre-determined and coordinated behaviour so far?
 

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New Delhi: India has made it clear to China that its soldiers will open fire to defend themselves, and Chinese tactics of “using mass” — or seeking to outnumber Indian soldiers, like in the 15 June Galwan Valley clash — will not be tolerated, top government sources said.

With no signs of disengagement on the ground in Ladakh, where India and China have been locked in a stand-off since April, both sides will stay dug in during the region’s bitter winter too, the sources added. The Chinese, they added, have deployed around 50,000 soldiers and equipment, including missile systems, tanks and artillery, at the border.

(more at link)
 

Nilgiri

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It's not exactly a new thing in Tibet...CCP have been doing the gulag system since the 50s...ethnically + religion/culture identity focused.

It was expanded to Han core areas too esp during GLF and cultural revolution and then transitioned over time to more political opponent + remnant troublemaker+agitators based there once the morale of the population was thoroughly subjugated to the grey level needed (the last mass scale murder by the state that got out in the open of course being tianenmen)... but it has been kept in original raw form notably for both Tibetans and Uighurs....given they are just a few % of total population of PRC, but significantly different people who have more intrinsic inner resistance.

The permeation activities of CCP in Tibet has lot of context for interested reader when you read this SFF story (given the quisling snitching that had set in quite quickly):


and also consider the level found even in US recently:


@T-123456 @bsruzm @Bogeyman @Joe Shearer @Paro @Maximilian Veers @Gautam @#comcom @Kartal1 @Webslave @VCheng
 

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India Deploys its New Nirbhay Long-Range Cruise Missile Amid Border Tensions with China



missile-1562631980_1200x768.jpeg

Nirbhay is homegrown subsonic surface-to-surface missile (File photo)

In a major boost to India's long-range defence, the security forces have rolled out homegrown subsonic missile Nirbhay to counter China's missile deployment along the Line of Actual Control.
The surface-to-surface missile has a reach of up to 1,000 km. The Nirbhay missile is capable of low-level stealth strike on targets. It means it is capable of flying between 100 metres to four km from ground and pick up the target before engaging it.
The Nirbhay missile has been developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). The missile has been in the testing for seven years. This is Nirbhay missile's first deployment.
According to sources, the new missiles have been deployed in a limited number for now. The missile is likely to get full op clearance later.
The all-weather surface-to-surface missile has a range that can go up to 1,000 km, which mean it is capable of striking targets in Tibet.
Chinese missile deployment
According to the satellite images accessed by India Today, there has been a sudden increase in China’s deployment of surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) at new locations in Tibet along the Indian frontier. Chinese missile sites have come up in areas bordering Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Ladakh.

India's counter to Chinese aggression
Apart from deployment of brand new Nirbhay missiles, Indian troops on the ground have been equipped with tanks and combat vehicles that can operate in harsh winters. India Today's team recently visited the LAC and witnessed India troops' preparedness of any eventuality in coming months.
To counter the Chinese People's Liberation Army's deployment of armoured columns, India has its T-90 and T-72 tanks along with the BMP-2 Infantry Combat Vehicles which can operate at temperatures up to minus 40 degree Celsius.
The Indian armoured regiments have the capability to reach the LAC within minutes if they are required and did so recently, when the Chinese activated their tanks after India occupied several heights near the southern bank of Pangong Lake following the incidents of August 29-30.
Speaking to India Today, Major General Arvind Kapoor said that the army is logistically prepared in terms of tackling the harsh weather with special winter clothing and other facilities such as fuel, spares and assemblies in place.

 

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India Deploys its New Nirbhay Long-Range Cruise Missile Amid Border Tensions with China



missile-1562631980_1200x768.jpeg

Nirbhay is homegrown subsonic surface-to-surface missile (File photo)

In a major boost to India's long-range defence, the security forces have rolled out homegrown subsonic missile Nirbhay to counter China's missile deployment along the Line of Actual Control.
The surface-to-surface missile has a reach of up to 1,000 km. The Nirbhay missile is capable of low-level stealth strike on targets. It means it is capable of flying between 100 metres to four km from ground and pick up the target before engaging it.
The Nirbhay missile has been developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO). The missile has been in the testing for seven years. This is Nirbhay missile's first deployment.
According to sources, the new missiles have been deployed in a limited number for now. The missile is likely to get full op clearance later.
The all-weather surface-to-surface missile has a range that can go up to 1,000 km, which mean it is capable of striking targets in Tibet.
Chinese missile deployment
According to the satellite images accessed by India Today, there has been a sudden increase in China’s deployment of surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) at new locations in Tibet along the Indian frontier. Chinese missile sites have come up in areas bordering Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Ladakh.

India's counter to Chinese aggression
Apart from deployment of brand new Nirbhay missiles, Indian troops on the ground have been equipped with tanks and combat vehicles that can operate in harsh winters. India Today's team recently visited the LAC and witnessed India troops' preparedness of any eventuality in coming months.
To counter the Chinese People's Liberation Army's deployment of armoured columns, India has its T-90 and T-72 tanks along with the BMP-2 Infantry Combat Vehicles which can operate at temperatures up to minus 40 degree Celsius.
The Indian armoured regiments have the capability to reach the LAC within minutes if they are required and did so recently, when the Chinese activated their tanks after India occupied several heights near the southern bank of Pangong Lake following the incidents of August 29-30.
Speaking to India Today, Major General Arvind Kapoor said that the army is logistically prepared in terms of tackling the harsh weather with special winter clothing and other facilities such as fuel, spares and assemblies in place.

Great news!!!
 
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