In recent years, the United States has been trying to enlist India's support as a major partner in containing China in the Indo-Pacific region, even at the expense of shifting industrial chains and sharing military technology and intelligence data. However, with the assassination, the United States sent two successive groups of representatives to visit India, which eventually included India in its strategic plan. However, just as India wants to act according to U.S. intentions, Sino-Indian relations face a serious test, as satellites have found that China is ready in India's most critical areas. First, let's look at how it happened. Previously, India tried to replace the conventions of international law with its domestic laws, emulating the long-arm jurisdiction of the United States and directly placing China's territory under Indian jurisdiction.
According to the Indian side, they are restoring the status of Jammu and Kashmir as a "state" in India and declaring the "Ladakh Territory" established by India in the ** region of China legal and valid. There is no doubt that the transfer of the disputed Kashmir region and parts of China** to India is essentially provoking China. The move directly undid the efforts of Chinese representatives over the past two years to de-escalate the situation on the Sino-Indian border through high-level military talks. In other words, as mentioned earlier, India has been stalling in high-level military talks, the core purpose of which is to reduce military tensions, take advantage of the time gap in the game between China and the United States, win more "strategic value" for itself, and bargain with the United States. Obviously, China will not budge on this issue.
At the regular press conference on the same day, China directly stated that China does not recognize the administrative regions established by India unilaterally and illegally, and India's domestic judicial procedures cannot change the objective facts of China's border areas. Frankly speaking, India's provocation against China has long been a foregone conclusion due to the long-term investment of the United States in India, as well as the long-standing anti-China propaganda in India and India's traditional geostrategic needs. The emergence of the U.S. Indo-Pacific strategy has only accelerated India's ambitions and anti-China process. Although we have not publicly responded specifically to this incident, China has never opened its hands. For example, when India began to follow the long-arm jurisdiction of the United States and artificially create border disputes, the United Kingdom** found that a large number of construction machinery was being built in the eastern part of Bhutan and the border area of China.
According to satellite imagery in December, more than 120 buildings have sprung up in the area, which looks like a residential complex. In the vicinity, an additional 62 buildings have been set up. A comparison of the latest satellite imagery shows that the area was a wasteland two years ago, but now a massive construction project has begun. This suggests that construction has only begun in the last year, which means that once the construction begins, it will be difficult for the Indian native forces to provide reinforcements in the first place. In particular, this inevitable path happens to be within the range of China's military radiation. The "Siliguri Corridor" will become a natural tactic for the Chinese side to "encircle the point and send reinforcements" and a trap to annihilate India's vital forces.
Unless India voluntarily relinquishes its eastern part and accepts the reality of cession, it can be said that China's move directly threatens India's most critical areas. The situation is that it is tricky to act or not to act.