Sanjha Morcha

China may ramp up nuclear arsenal
after Xi’s assertion to establish
strong strategic deterrence

China may ramp up nuclear arsenal after Xi's assertion to establish strong strategic deterrence: Experts

K J M VARMA China is expected to boost its nuclear arsenal after President Xi Jinping’s remarks at the key Congress of the ruling Communist Party here for the first time that Beijing will establish strong strategic deterrence, experts have said. “We will establish a strong system of strategic deterrence,” Xi, who is widely expected to be endorsed for a record third five-year term by the Congress of the CPC, told its opening session on October 16. In the 63-page report, Xi, who also heads the Central Military Commission (CMC) – the overall high command of the two million-strong People’s Liberation Army (PLA) – devoted a special section to the military titled Achieving the Central Goal of the PLA and Further Modernising National Defence and Military. He also called for accelerated development of unmanned, intelligent combat capabilities, promotion of coordinated development and application of the network information system. There was no mention of the concept of strategic deterrence in Xi’s last party Congress report in 2017 or in his historical resolution last year. But the country’s 14th five-year plan report released last year emphasised the need to “build a high-standard strategic deterrence”, the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported. Analysts said Xi’s mention indicated China would improve its nuclear deterrence capability amid its increasing rivalry with the US, which is a major nuclear power. Song Zhongping, a former People’s Liberation Army instructor, said the statement meant China would “strengthen its development of strategic nuclear forces” to safeguard its national security. Song said the PLA must strengthen its “nuclear triad” forces – its combination of ground-based intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), submarine-launched missiles and air-launched weapons – as well as its second-nuclear strike capability to respond to a nuclear attack. “All of these require the PLA to have a modern nuclear-armed force . and to moderately increase the nuclear arsenal,” he said. The US has warned of the expansion of China’s nuclear weapons in the past, with a report released by the Pentagon in November estimating China could have up to 700 deliverable nuclear warheads by 2027 and at least 1,000 by 2030, the Post report said. Song said the need for strong strategic deterrence had arisen as the US had challenged the bottom line of both China and Russia over the Taiwan issue and the Ukraine war, and “only when China has a strong nuclear capability can it effectively safeguard our national security”. There have been calls in recent years for China to build up its nuclear arsenal. China claims it has the lowest number of nuclear weapons to build up its nuclear arsenal. Zhao Tong, a senior fellow at the Carnegie-Tsinghua Centre for Global Policy in Beijing, told the Post that the new wording pointed to an ongoing, significant change in China’s nuclear policy. In 2021, the country moved from its traditional policy of building a “lean and effective” deterrent to one of constructing a “high-standard strategic deterrent”. Then this year the declaration was to create a “strong strategic deterrent capability”. He said it was significant “especially when considering that for many decades China had maintained a traditionally small nuclear arsenal and a very modest, self-restrained nuclear posture. All of this appears to have become history now.” Zhao said it was very hard to tell how many nuclear weapons China planned to build eventually and the appearance of an open-ended nuclear buildup was what was driving concerns in the United States and other countries. P


Repaying a debt of gratitude

Repaying a debt of gratitude

Col HP Singh (retd)

AN intrusion by the enemy necessitated our mobilisation, and within 36 hours of notice, we lifted the skids of our helicopters, getting airborne to support troops in the Kargil war. I convinced my three-month-pregnant wife that this was just another routine mission. Newly married to the olive greens, she believed me.

It was only when the war scenes started getting telecast live on television that the enormity of the situation came upon her. While a fighter aircraft and helicopter were downed in quick succession by the enemy, there was a casualty at my home — our would-be first-born succumbed to stress-induced miscarriage.

In spite of heavy flying commitments, my Commanding Officer (CO) managed to spare a helicopter to fly me out to the nearest rail head. As we landed in Jammu, I was handed a ticket by an officer who accompanied me till I boarded a train for Jalandhar, where my wife was admitted. In those stressful times, when sensible decisions were hard to make, these empathetic gestures helped me reach her with minimum delay.

On my return to the war zone, I expressed deep gratitude to my CO. ‘If you really want to thank me, do something similar to someone else in need,’ he said philosophically.

A decade later, while commanding a regiment in Ladakh, I was informed that a Junior Commissioned Officer had collapsed due to high blood pressure. At that moment, I was in conversation with pilots of a helicopter waiting to take off for air maintenance of troops deployed at Siachen. The pilot immediately ordered his helicopter to be unloaded and flew him out to the nearest military hospital.

As his condition deteriorated, doctors advised further evacuation to the Command Hospital. It was afternoon by now and all scheduled flights had departed. Given the post noon air turbulence in the region, the earliest incoming flight would arrive the next morning. The Air Force base, not very far from the hospital, was then commanded by a gentleman who had been my instructor at the Helicopter Training School. I took the liberty of seeking his help.

‘Kuch karta hoon’ — he was not the kind to throw up his hands in despair. Luckily, an aircraft was returning to the plains after para-dropping its load on icy heights. He ordered it to divert to his base forthwith. I felt huge relief when the patient was in safe hands within an hour and lived to see another day. I met him after a few days as he lay partially paralysed on the hospital bed. ‘We shall remain indebted to you, sir,’ spoke his teenaged son. ‘I rather thank your father for helping me clear my long overdue debt of gratitude,’ I replied.


Indian Air Force to get 68 trainer jets for Rs 6,800 crore

Indian Air Force to get 68 trainer jets for Rs 6,800 crore

Tribune News Service

Gandhinagar, October 21

The Ministry of Defence on Friday said the Indian Air Force and Hindustan Aeronautics Limited have entered into a contract for 70 HTT-40 indigenous trainer aircraft worth Rs 6,800 crore.

The HTT-40 will be used to train pilots of the Indian Air Force, Navy and Coast Guard.

The MoD said the Defence Research & Development Organisation (DRDO) had handed over 16 agreements for transfer of technology for DRDO-developed technologies to 13 industries during the Bandhan ceremony of the 12th DefExpo in Gandhinagar. Defence Minister Rajnath Singh presided over the ceremony.

The technologies transferred by the DRDO are from the area of electronics, laser technology, armaments, material science, combat vehicles, naval systems, sensors etc.

The MoD said a total of 451 MoUs, transfer of technology agreements and product launches were done at the expo. Of 451, there were 345 MoUs, 42 major announcements, 46 product launches and 18 ToTs, it said.


Fisherman hurt as Navy fires ‘warning shots’

Upset, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin writes to PM Modi

Fisherman hurt as Navy fires ‘warning shots’

PTI

Chennai, October 21

A fisherman from Tamil Nadu on Friday sustained a bullet injury when the Navy fired “warning shots” in mid-sea. Upset, Chief Minister MK Stalin sought Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s intervention to prevent such incidents.

The Navy said its ship intercepted a suspicious boat on the Palk Bay. :”As the vessel did not stop despite repeated warnings, warning shots were fired as per the Standard Operating Procedure to halt it,” a Defence PRO tweeted. A crew member on board sustained an injury and was hospitalised.

The boat was noticed by the Navy ship while on patrol near the India-Sri Lanka International Maritime Boundary Line in the early hours of Friday. An inquiry has been ordered. “The injured person was administered first-aid and evacuated by a Chetak helicopter to INS Parandu at Ramnad and then shifted to Government Hospital, Ramanathapuram, for further medical management. His condition is reported to be stable,” a statement read.The Tamil Nadu Government identified the injured fisherman as K Veeravel of Vanagiri village in Mayiladuthurai district.

Stalin said he was shocked by the incident and that he had asked the state-run Madurai hospital, where he had been shifted, to provide the best treatment to the injured fisherman.


Pakistan out of FATF grey list after four years

Tanzania, Mozambique, Congo added to list

Pakistan out of FATF grey list after four years

he Financial Action Task Force (FATF) on Friday allowed Pakistan to exit its grey list after four years against the backdrop of its ties with the West. – File photo
Tribune News Service

New Delhi, October 21

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) on Friday allowed Pakistan to exit its grey list after four years against the backdrop of its ties with the West. Russia was banned from all deliberations of the body. Nicaragua too exited the list along with Pakistan, which had been under a close FATF monitoring since 2018. Tanzania, Congo and Mozambique were added to the list.

An on-site visit by a FATF team in August had found that Pakistan was broadly in compliance with all 34 action points it had been asked to improve upon. Pakistan can now more effectively tackle money laundering and terror-financing, said FATF chief Raja Kumar of Singapore.

Pakistan’s Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Hina Rabbani had reached Paris earlier this week with a team representing the country. Off the grey list, Pakistan will now be able to get more foreign direct investment, which had shown a downward trend recently.


We will keep working to fulfil the vision of Guru Sahibs: PM Modi to Sikh sangat

We will keep working to fulfil the vision of Guru Sahibs: PM Modi to Sikh sangat

Narendra Modi@narendramodi

ਸ੍ਰੀ ਹੇਮਕੁੰਟ ਸਾਹਿਬ ਰੋਪਵੇਅ ਪ੍ਰਾਜੈਕਟ ਦਾ ਉਦਘਾਟਨ ਕੀਤੇ ਜਾਣ ‘ਤੇ ਸਤਿਕਾਰਯੋਗ ਜਥੇਦਾਰ ਸ੍ਰੀ ਅਕਾਲ ਤਖ਼ਤ ਸਾਹਿਬ ਅਤੇ ਸਿੱਖ ਕੌਮ ਦੇ ਸਾਰੇ ਸਤਿਕਾਰਯੋਗ ਮੈਂਬਰਾਂ ਸਮੇਤ ਪ੍ਰਮੁੱਖ ਅਧਿਆਤਮਕ ਸ਼ਖਸੀਅਤਾਂ ਨੇ ਖੁਸ਼ੀ ਦਾ ਪ੍ਰਗਟਾਵਾ ਕੀਤਾ ਹੈ।

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi today thanked Jathedar Sri Akal Takhat Sahib, members of the Sikh community including leading spiritual personalities for their appreciation of the Hemkund Sahib Ropeway project.

The PM assured the Sangat that he would keep working to fulfil the vision of Guru Sahibs.

Earlier today, the Press Information Bureau tweeted Giani Harpreet Singh, Jathedar Sri Akal Takht Sahib’s congratulatory letter to the PM and said, “Giani Harpreet Singh ji has congratulated & thanked PM @narendramodi for laying the foundation stone of the Gurdwara Hemkund Sahib Ropeway. The Hemkund ropeway will connect Govindghat to Hemkund Sahib

The PIB also tweeted a similar letter of thanks issued by Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee on the 12.4 km long Ropeway Project.

Haryana Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee also appreciated the PM’s efforts in the direction as did several Sikh organizations.


Honey-trapped govt employee still cannot believe that the woman he loved was a Pakistan agent:::warning for serving & ESM too

Honey-trapped govt employee still cannot believe that the woman he loved was a Pakistan agent

Jaipur, October 22

Jailed Ravi Prakash Meena, a class-4 employee at the Sena Bhawan in Delhi, is not able to believe that the woman he loved was a Pakistani agent. Honey trapped, the 31-year-old is accused of sharing sensitive and strategic information about the army.

He was “madly in love” with the agent who befriended him on Facebook, said an intelligence officer here familiar with the investigation into Meena’s case.

From Sapotara in Rajasthan’s Karauli district, Meena was apprehended in October first week, making him the 35th person arrested by the state police since 2017 for allegedly sharing sensitive information after being honey trapped by Pakistani agents, including those from the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI).

In Meena’s case, the officer said, “The Pakistani agent, who went by the name Anjali Tiwari, posed as an Indian Army officer posted in West Bengal. Even after his arrest, and looking at the evidence, Kumar could not believe that the woman was a Pakistani agent.”

On October 8, following his arrest, Director General of Police (Intelligence), Rajasthan, Umesh Mishra, had said that Meena was sharing confidential and strategic information about the army with her.

He was providing information to the agent through social media in exchange for money which was deposited in his bank account, Mishra had said, adding that he has been charged under the Official Secrets Act.

Of the 35 people, including civilians and security personnel, six were arrested in 2017, as many in 2019, five in 2020, eight in 2021 and 10 so far this year, according to Rajasthan Police data.


UK PM race: Rishi Sunak, Boris Johnson camps claim hitting 100 MPs mark

UK PM race: Rishi Sunak, Boris Johnson camps claim hitting 100 MPs mark

PTI

London, October 22

Rishi Sunak supporters claimed on Saturday that the Indian-origin former chancellor has hit the threshold of 100 members of Parliament required to make it to the shortlist for the race to replace Liz Truss as the Conservative Party leader and British Prime Minister.

The 42-year-old frontrunner’s tally continues to grow as former prime minister Boris Johnson flew back from his Caribbean holiday and his camp also claimed that he has the requisite minimum of 100 MPs for a possible leadership bid.

Neither Sunak nor Johnson has officially declared their intention to contest the leadership election, with Leader of the Commons Penny Mordaunt the only candidate to formally announce her candidacy so far.

However, the former finance minister has taken a comfortable lead with some heavyweight Tory ministers and MPs from different factions of the Tory party throwing their weight behind him and the betting odds also continuing to rise in favour.

“Rishi had the right plan in the summer and I think it is the right plan now,” former deputy prime minister Dominic Raab told the BBC.

“I think he is the best placed candidate to provide some stability, to provide confidence for the millions of workers and businesses up and down the country,” he said.

Raab warned against a comeback by the partygate scandal-hit former leader Johnson, just over three months after being forced to resign, pointing out that the UK Parliament is still conducting an inquiry into whether he misled Commons over the lockdown law-breaking parties at Downing Street.

“We cannot go backwards. We cannot have another episode of the Groundhog day, of the soap opera, of partygate. We must get the country and the government moving forward,” he said.

It came as Johnson was pictured by ‘Sky News’ on a flight back to London from the Dominican Republic with his wife and children, having indicated to allies of his intention to have another go at 10 Downing Street.

The tally of MPs publicly supporting him for the comeback publicly stands at 53, with former Home Secretary Priti Patel among his high-profile backers and his loyalists are confident that he would hit the 100-MP mark required by 2 pm local time on Monday to make the shortlist.

“Boris has the mandate to deliver our elected manifesto and a proven track record getting the big decisions right. I’m backing him in the leadership contest,” she tweeted.

If only one candidate is left standing by then on Monday, then the online Tory membership vote due to happen next week for a winner announced next Friday, will not have to take place.

If any one candidate secures 156 MPs, then the race would be automatically narrowing to a shortlist of two — given the Tory MPs Commons tally of 357 and not enough to support a third candidate’s minimum 100.

Meanwhile, there is widespread speculation among backers of both candidates that Sunak and Johnson may strike some kind of a deal.

According to ‘The Daily Telegraph’, Sunak is expected to reject any offer of a Cabinet role during the leadership race, given he is the frontrunner and had resigned from a Johnson government once already this year.

But no categorical statement of rejection has been issued, leaving open a job acceptance if Johnson does indeed emerge triumphant.


Mohali court denies bail to Army man

Mohali court denies  bail to Army man

Tribune News Service

Mohali, October 20

A local court today rejected a bail application of the Army man suspected to be involved in the alleged Chandigarh University video leak case.

Chandigarh University ‘video leak’ case

While rejecting the bail application of Sanjeev Singh, the court observed that the defence counsel could not produce relevant arguments supporting the bail plea, whereas the prosecution had substantial evidence for rejecting the application.

Earlier, a Kharar court had rejected Sanjeev’s bail application. The bail applications of the girl allegedly involved in the case was also rejected. They both will remain in judicial custody.

The court had granted bail to Sunny Mehta and Rankaj.

Sunny Mehta was released from jail two days ago though he was granted bail on October 12. The court had opined that Section 67 (A) of the IT Act envisaged that whoever published or transmits or causes to published or transmitted in the electronic form any material which contained sexually explicit act or conduct was liable for punishment, whereas the accused had not committed any of these offences and did not have any connection or relation with the girl for more than a year and a half. Therefore, no offence under Section 67 (A) of the IT Act was made out against the applicant. Further, the offence under Sections 354 (C) of the Indian Penal Code and another offence under the IT Act were bailable. The court also observed that there were no criminal antecedents of the applicant.

The applicant was a young boy of 23 and belonged to a respectable and law-abiding family. In case the applicant would remain with criminals in jail, his future and entire career would be spoiled, the court had observed.


Arunachal helicopter crash: Body of last missing Army personnel recovered, toll rises to 5

Arunachal helicopter crash: Body of last missing Army personnel recovered, toll rises to 5

Itanagar, October 22

The toll in the Army helicopter crash in Arunachal Pradesh rose to five with the on Saturday, a defence spokesperson said.

Pilots sent Mayday call moments before Indian Army helicopter crash

The advanced light helicopter (ALH), carrying five Army personnel including two pilots, was on regular sorties when it crashed at 10.43 am on Friday near Migging, around 25 km south of Tuting, he said.

The bodies of the four other personnel were recovered on Friday evening from the crash site in a densely wooded mountainous area, around 35 km from the border with China, defence spokesperson Lt Col AS Walia said.

The deceased Army personnel were identified as pilots Major Vikas Bhambhu and Major Mustafa Bohara, CFN Tech AVN (AEN) Aswin KV, Havildar (OPR) Biresh Sinha and NK (Ppr) Rohitashva Kumar, he said.https://cb55146fa059c2335569ba6dfe2756cc.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-38/html/container.html

The cause of the crash is not yet known and details are being ascertained, the officer said.

“It is reported that the weather was good for flying operations. The pilots had more than 600 combined flying hours on ALH-WSI and over 1,800 service flying hours between them. The aircraft was inducted into service in June 2015,” Lt Col Walia said.

Prior to the crash, the Air Traffic Control (ATC) had received a ‘May Day’ call suggesting a technical or mechanical failure, he said

“This will form the focus of the Court of Inquiry, which has been immediately constituted to investigate the causes of the accident. Names of the personnel will be released after notification to the next of kin,” Lt Col Walia said.

The Army helicopter, also known as HAL Rudra, had taken off from Likabali in Lower Siang district.

The HAL Rudra is an attack helicopter manufactured by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) for the Indian Army. It is a weapon system integrated (WSI) Mk-IV variant of the Dhruv advanced light helicopter (ALH) and is the first armed helicopter produced indigenously in India

This is the second accident involving an Army helicopter in Arunachal Pradesh this month.

A Cheetah helicopter crashed in Tawang district on October 5 and claimed the life of one of its two pilots. According to official records, Arunachal Pradesh has witnessed 13 crashes since 1995, and 47 people were killed in them.