china made a sudden attack on india in
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I think in 1962....................
jana561:
month pta hai aapko
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Malcolm Fraser recently cautioned against viewing the development of China’s military without considering the broader context in which it takes place.
This warning is appropriately applied to past experience as well.
The Chinese leadership was slow to appreciate the seriousness of the challenge presented to it by India’s border policy during the Nehru government. Soon after the establishment of the PRC in 1949 its government recognised border settlement to be a problem involving all its numerous neighbours. China’s strategy for dealing with it was to accept the border alignments with which history had left it and negotiate, where necessary, to formalise and confirm them in the spirit of ‘mutual understanding and mutual accommodation’.
This meant that India should be allowed to retain the territory in its north-east up to what the British had named the ‘McMahon Line’, when the British seized it from Tibet, just before and during WWII in their final foray of imperialist expansion. Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai gave assurances to that effect in his several meetings and exchanges with Jawaharlal Nehru in the 1950s, and Beijing, foreseeing no territorial dispute with India, expected cordial relations to continue.
This warning is appropriately applied to past experience as well.
The Chinese leadership was slow to appreciate the seriousness of the challenge presented to it by India’s border policy during the Nehru government. Soon after the establishment of the PRC in 1949 its government recognised border settlement to be a problem involving all its numerous neighbours. China’s strategy for dealing with it was to accept the border alignments with which history had left it and negotiate, where necessary, to formalise and confirm them in the spirit of ‘mutual understanding and mutual accommodation’.
This meant that India should be allowed to retain the territory in its north-east up to what the British had named the ‘McMahon Line’, when the British seized it from Tibet, just before and during WWII in their final foray of imperialist expansion. Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai gave assurances to that effect in his several meetings and exchanges with Jawaharlal Nehru in the 1950s, and Beijing, foreseeing no territorial dispute with India, expected cordial relations to continue.
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