Indian Deployments
India Moves 10,000 More Troops to Restive China Border, India opened a new naval base, successful flight test of Agni-5 missile, India plans to spend $3 billion on space
UPDATES: India is set to deploy an additional 10,000 troops and redesignate more troops to the restive border with China as the tensions between the two Asian giants prevail.
India opened a new naval base on its Indian Ocean island close to the Maldives, as ties with Male remain tense and New Delhi jostles anew with China for influence in the region.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday congratulated DRDO scientists for 'Mission Divyastra', the successful flight test of Agni-5 missile with Multiple Independently targetable Re-entry Vehicles (MIRV) technology. Only the US, UK, Russia, France and China have MIRV technology.
India plans to spend about $3 billion on space-related contract awards over the next few years to reduce its dependence on foreign satellites and bolster its counter-space capabilities, according to the head of the military.
10,000 Indian “special” forces deployed
By Aadil Brar
India is set to deploy an additional 10,000 troops and redesignate more troops to the restive border with China as the tensions between the two Asian giants prevail.
"A 10,000-strong unit of soldiers previously assigned to the country's western border has now been set aside to guard a stretch of its frontier with China," Bloomberg reported on March 7, citing senior Indian officials.
India has freed thousands of soldiers previously stationed on the country's western border, now reallocating them to fortify its frontier with China.
India has escalated its military readiness along its contentious border with China, marking a potential increase in tensions between the nuclear weapons-armed nations. The recalibration of forces comes in the backdrop of a violent skirmish in June 2020 in the Galwan Valley of Eastern Ladakh region, representing the first deadly clash along the disputed border in over four decades.
China and India have previously fought a deadly war in 1962 over the disputed Line of Actual Control (LAC), a patchwork of boundary lines that separate the two giants. Both countries have a differing perception of the LAC, with overlapping territorial claims in certain sections of the boundary.
Meanwhile, India's defense minister, Rajnath Singh, warned New Delhi that it would give a befitting reply to any country if attacked, while obliquely pointing at China.
"Whether from land, air, or sea, if anyone attacks India, our forces will respond firmly. We have never attacked any country nor have occupied even an inch of anyone's land. But, if anyone bats an eyelid at us, we are in a position to give a befitting reply," Singh said at the NDTV Defence Summit 2024 on Thursday.
The physical skirmish in June 2020 resulted in the deaths of 20 Indian troops and at least four Chinese soldiers as the two sides boosted their military presence along the contested border. The incident led to an ongoing military standoff in the Eastern Ladakh region, with both nations maintaining a significant military presence, which is estimated to exceed 50,000 soldiers on each side in the area to date.
Chinese and Indian armies have held 21 rounds of talks to resolve the ongoing border stand-off, most recent round of talks was held on February 19 at the Chushul-Moldo border meeting point in Eastern Ladakh.
Meanwhile, a Chinese defense ministry spokesperson, Senior Colonel Zhang Xiaogang, recently commented on the 21st round of talks by saying Beijing hopes India and China will meet each other halfway.
"China attaches great importance to the military-to-military relations between China and India, and hopes that India and China will meet each other halfway, enhance mutual trust, properly handle differences, and jointly maintain peace and tranquility in border areas." Zhang said during the defense ministry's monthly press conference on February 29.
In a statement following the 21st round of talks, the Indian side has demanded the complete disengagement of troops from the remaining areas where troops from both sides remain deployed. China has stopped acknowledging India's demand for the disengagement of troops.
"The above remarks are inconsistent with the facts," Zhang responded to India's statement demanding disengagement.
Further intensifying the military stance, Bloomberg reported that an existing contingent of 9,000 soldiers, already designated for the disputed border with China, would also come under a newly established fighting command.
"The combined force will guard a 532 km (330.57 miles) stretch of border that separates China's Tibet region with India's northern states of Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh," Bloomberg reported.
The deployment, backed by dedicated artillery and air support, underscores the strategic importance and increasing sensitivity of this region in India's defense strategy, Bloomberg reported.
Newsweek contacted China's Embassy in New Delhi for comment. Newsweekalso contacted India's Ministry of External Affairs for comment.
In February, Amit Shah, India's home affairs minister, accused China of attempting to replicate the conditions of the 1962 war, a conflict that has long influenced Sino-Indian relations.
"During this period, when the COVID pandemic was raging, China showed its real face, like in 1962. We stood firmly to it and didn't lose an inch of land," Shah remarked in a statement reported by Newsweek.
His comments, made in Lok Sabha, India's lower house of parliament, reflect New Delhi's firm stance against Beijing's aggression and the ongoing strategic challenges along the LAC, a disputed 2,100-mile border area.
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Indian naval base monitors Maldives
By Krishn Kaushik (India Today)
NEW DELHI, March 6 (Reuters) - India on Wednesday opened a new naval base on its Indian Ocean island close to the Maldives, as ties with Male remain tense and New Delhi jostles anew with China for influence in the region.
INS Jatayu, the new base on Minicoy Island, on India's Lakshadweep archipelago, had been under construction for years, and is India's most distant base on its western coast. The navy has had a small presence on the island for decades.
The opening comes just as the Maldives pushes India to start withdrawing its nearly 80 troops who have been stationed there to provide technical and medical assistance on three aircraft given to its southern neighbour nation by New Delhi earlier.
The Maldives, which have traditionally had close ties to India, is pivoting towards Beijing since new President Mohamed Muizzu was elected in October on a promise to end the country's pro-India stance.
India's new base on Minicoy is around 125 km (78 miles) from the Maldives.
The region is important to New Delhi for securing the passage of maritime traffic through the Indian Ocean, and the new base will help in its surveillance efforts in the region.
The Indian Navy said in a statement on Wednesday that the base will strengthen its "foothold in the Lakshadweep island while extending capacity building, operational reach and sustenance in the region."
The navy also commissioned a new squadron of American MH-60R "Seahawk" helicopters in Kochi, also on India's western coast. The squadron, it said, will "augment our maritime surveillance and anti-submarine warfare capabilities".
Male has signed a new agreement on receiving military assistance from Beijing, "fostering strong bilateral ties", its defence ministry announced on social media platform X on Monday.
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India’s Agni-5 (MIRV) Nuclear ICBM
By TOI News Desk
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday congratulated DRDO scientists for 'Mission Divyastra', the successful flight test of Agni-5 missile with Multiple Independently targetable Re-entry Vehicles (MIRV) technology. The development and deployment of MIRV technology are sensitive and closely guarded subjects, given their significant implications for international security and strategic balance.
Deterrence capability
The MIRV tech contributes to the country's deterrence posture in the region and sends a clear message to China and Pakistan. It also puts India in a select group of nations to possess such tech.
The US, UK, Russia, China and France also have missiles capable of carrying multiple independently targetable warheads.
Agni-5 is primarily for enhancing India’s nuclear deterrence against China as it has a range of 5,000km-7,000km.
In November 2021, India tested the nuclear-capable version of Agni-5 successfully.
On December 15, 2022, the first night trial of Agni-5 was successfully carried out by the Strategic Forces Command (SFC) from Abdul Kalam Island, Odisha.
The latest test ensures that a single missile can deploy multiple warheads at different locations.
This system is equipped with indigenous avionics systems and high-accuracy sensor packages, which ensure that the re-entry vehicles reach the target points within the desired accuracy.
The capability is an enunciator of India’s growing technological prowess, government officials said.
The Defence Research and Development Organisation said the flight test named Mission Divyastra was carried out from Dr APJ Abdul Kalam Island in Odisha. Various Telemetry and radar stations tracked and monitored multiple re-entry vehicles. "The mission accomplished the designed parameters," the agency said.
China worried?
Notably, a Chinese vessel was spotted near India's coast in the Bay of Bengal over the weekend.
The Xiang Yang Hong 01 was observed off India's eastern coast over the weekend, according to a Reuters report citing an Indian security official, a geo-intelligence researcher, and ship tracking information.
This comes even as a similar ship - Xiang Yang Hong 03 - is docked at a port in the Maldives.
The ships are conducting peaceful ocean-bed surveys for scientific purposes, but Indian officials worry that they could also be gathering military intelligence, including information related to submarine deployments and missile tests.
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India’s US$3 billion space plan
By Gordon Arthur
India plans to spend about $3 billion on space-related contract awards over the next few years to reduce its dependence on foreign satellites and bolster its counter-space capabilities, according to the head of the military.
Gen. Anil Chauhan’s call to close the gap between India’s own capabilities and other nations that are developing countermeasures in space comes amid tension with China. The neighbors have clashed over a shared border area in the eastern Ladakh region, with both sides in 2020 suffering casualties. In August 2023, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi met with Chinese President Xi Jinping to discuss the unresolved border issue and try to deescalate the situation.
Speaking at the DEFSAT conference, held Feb. 7-9 in New Delhi, Chauhan called for greater investment in India’s military space sector and noted the military has already signed five contracts with the private sector, with four more being drawn up. In addition, the government plans to spend 250 billion Indian rupees — or about $3 billion — on contract awards over the next few years, he added.
“It’s the right time for the private industry to utilize this opportunity,” Chauhan said. “Our leadership has envisioned big targets for the nation, from space augmentation to space exploration.”
Sino-Indian space race
During his speech, Chauhan outlined several areas of focus for India’s space sector. First, he called for an indigenous constellation of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance satellites equipped with optical and hyperspectral sensors.
Next, he said, the military cannot remain dependent on foreign constellations for positioning, navigation and timing requirements.
“We should also be investing in launch on-demand capabilities in the near future. As the national requirements of ISR, PNT and communication grow, this will resultantly increase the number of Indian satellites orbiting the space, [thus requiring the need for] securing these particular assets, which will require space situational awareness.”
To fill these gaps, the general recommended high-speed satellite communications, a satellite-based internet of things and robust, ground-based infrastructure.
“Lastly, when we are developing all this, I think we need to look at counter-space capabilities, which nations are developing, as a means of deterrence. And maybe this would be required in [the] future to safeguard our assets. In order to ensure that these capabilities are rightfully utilized, doctrinal and connected concepts need to be developed,” he added.
Indeed, there is an inequality in China’s space-based assets compared to those of India. According to the “Military Balance” report released in February by the International Institute of Strategic Studies, China operates 245 military satellites, compared to India’s 26. China also has a reusable spacecraft and counter-space technology, the London-based think tank found.
China is certainly interested in dominating the space domain in terms of control and denying access to adversaries, according to Malcolm Davis, a senior analyst focused on space and Chinese military modernization at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
“They’re also developing the counter-space capabilities to threaten U.S. and allied satellites and developing sophisticated launch capabilities that are moving much more toward reusable launch vehicles, heavy-lift and encouraging the growth of commercial space,” he told Defense News. “So in every sense of the word, I think the Chinese are determined to overtake the U.S. in space.”
India is a major ally of the United States, whose own Defense Department warned last year of China’s rise in space capabilities. Its report last year asserted more than 290 systems made up China’s ISR satellite fleet.
“The PLA [People’s Liberation Army] owns and operates about half of the world’s ISR systems, most of which could support monitoring, tracking, and targeting of U.S. and allied forces worldwide, especially throughout the Indo-Pacific region. These satellites also allow the PLA to monitor potential regional flashpoints, including the Korean Peninsula, Taiwan, Indian Ocean, and the SCS [South China Sea],” the report noted.
For example, China has dozens of Yaogan-class satellites in orbit, with 54 dedicated to ISR and another 46 providing electronic or signals intelligence, per IISS data, gathered as late as November.
On Dec. 15, China launched the large Yaogan-41 optical satellite into geostationary orbit. There are also about five Huoyan-1 early warning satellites, and China is testing a quantum-enabled communications satellite that could lead to virtually unbreakable communications.
Beijing’s progress in space, including the creation of its Strategic Support Force in 2015, which is responsible for nearly all PLA space operations, shows “forward thinking,” said David Stupples, an expert in space-based systems and professor at City, University of London.
“China [has] a very agile military, and they follow the latest trends very quickly,” he said, comparing the nation to the U.S. and NATO, which have historically focused more on kinetic capabilities. “Warfare has changed a lot over the last four to five years: Whereas it was 90% kinetic and 10% electronic warfare, it’s now probably 50% to 60% electronic warfare and 40% kinetic.”
China also has its own facsimile of GPS. Known as BeiDou, this constellation has 45 satellites, with the final system launched in June 2020 to provide positioning accuracy at up to 5 meters (16 feet).
China is also developing counter-space capabilities through direct-ascent technology, co-orbital systems, electronic warfare, cyberattacks and directed-energy weapons. These can deny access to and operations in the space domain.
“What you’re seeing is that while the Chinese are developing [these] sort of direct-ascent, kinetic-kill anti-satellite [technology], the favored capability for them will be soft-kill systems that are either co-orbital or ground-based because they can deliver reversible, scalable effects, and they also don’t create clouds of space debris,” Davis said.
Asked whether China has interfered with foreign satellites, Davis said he hasn’t heard of “actual attacks so far, but what they’re demonstrating — perfecting — is the technological means to do these sort of attacks in a crisis leading up to war, to exploit the gray zone attack using, for example, a dual-role commercial satellite that has an anti-satellite capability.” (Gray zone military activities fall below the level of traditional armed conflict.)
China reportedly has multiple ground-based lasers that can disrupt, degrade or damage satellites, with the Pentagon describing the technology as a “current limited capability.”
“They do have lasers powerful enough at the moment probably to destroy a satellite in low Earth orbit,” Stupples concurred. “But they’re also developing satellite-killer satellites, which will go alongside another satellite and then aim a laser at the solar panels or antennas.”
China demonstrated its counter-space work with an anti-satellite test against a defunct weather satellite in 2007. It has continued to launch multiple anti-satellite missiles, like the SC-19 used in 2007, proving Beijing can target systems both in low-Earth and geosynchronous orbits. And in 2018, Lt. Gen. Robert Ashley, then-director of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, warned China was working on the ability to jam satellites from the ground.
Stupples said while the anti-satellite threat is “very serious,” any attack would lead to fratricide due to the likelihood of American retaliation. “What China has then said is: ‘OK, you can do all of that, but we will flood space with our signals intelligence satellites and our reconnaissance satellites, etc., and therefore we’ll make it very difficult to do that.’”
Other notable Chinese capabilities include three tests of a reusable spaceplane and the fielding of transportable, quick-response, solid-fueled space launch vehicles. These could help the PLA rapidly reconstitute its low-Earth orbit capabilities by launching replacement satellites.
China’s commercial constellations also benefit the government, Stupples noted. For instance, Beijing is working on its Guo Wang constellation that could include 13,000 satellites for widespread internet coverage — a concept similar to the Starlink network created by American firm SpaceX. The state-owned company SatNet is to operate this massive constellation.
Juliana Suess, an analyst with the British think tank Royal United Services Institute, wrote in an article that “there are many reasons why China would build a satellite-enabled internet constellation in LEO,” not least of which is to expand its influence overseas.
“The existing strides that China has made in terms of soft power, specifically on the continent of Africa and with regard to internet infrastructure, suggest a relatively fast and easy plug-in into Guo Wang,” she noted.
Playing catchup
In comparison, India’s space efforts, historically headlined by the Indian Space Research Organisation, appear rather modest. But the country has achieved notable feats, including the July 14 launch of the Chandrayaan-3 mission into orbit, which then successfully landed on the moon.
M. Matheswaran, a retired Indian Air Force air marshal, told Defense News the major drivers for India’s focus on space are the 1999 Kargil War, fought against Pakistan over disputed territory, and China’s 2007 anti-satellite test. The Indian government eventually created its tri-service Defence Space Agency in 2019.
“Now the government has brought out a new space policy opening up the space segment to the private sector,” said Matheswaran, who leads The Peninsula Foundation, an India-based think tank. “India is on the right track now to meeting both its civilian and military requirements, but the pace is not going to be comparable to China’s.”
“There are startups that are doing well, and ISRO [Indian Space Research Organisation] is supporting them as well. That needs to be accelerated, which can only be achieved by adequate government and funding support,” he added. “I suppose India will close the gap, but catching up with where China is today is going to take a long time.”
Stupples agreed India is “a long way behind,” citing a lack of research and funding for military space initiatives. “India has the capability of launching satellites,” he said, “but it doesn’t have the impetus to develop this further. Its thinking is more like America’s — you know, kinetic.”
Last year, the Indian government released a space policy to encourage developments in the domestic space sector through private participation. And in February 2024, the government approved a more liberal foreign direct investment policy to attract investors to the industry.
ISRO also announced plans for 30 space launches by March 2025; that’s compared to an average of about three annually in recent years, Matheswaran said.
Meanwhile, China plans to execute about 100 space launch missions this year, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency.
Among India’s private sector, Tata Advanced Systems has emerged as a key player, with local media reporting it can build up to 24 LEO satellites annually. And the startup GalaxEye Space plans to launch its Drishti satellite this year equipped with synthetic aperture radar and multiple sensors to perform multispectral imaging.
The Indian military is also eyeing December for the launch of its GSAT-7R communications satellite for the Navy, reportedly followed by a 2026 deployment of the GSAT-7B that will provide the Army with its first dedicated communications satellite.
India is increasing its navigation capabilities with the so-called NavIC system; that constellation is to grow from seven satellites to 11 within the next five years. A decade later, the government hopes to have 26 satellites in operation to give India a GPS equivalent.
But among India’s production efforts are destructive aims. In 2019, the country test-fired an anti-satellite weapon that destroyed a low-Earth orbit satellite and resulted in additional space debris. Modi said the test was “not against anyone.”
However, Matheswaran said the experiment was meant “to send a message to the rest of the world, particularly to China, because they did it in 2007.″ He said the move exhibited India’s “capability to protect our assets in space, [showing] we have the ability to interfere with your assets in space as well.”
He agreed with Chauhan that India is overly reliant on foreign sources for surveillance data. “When it comes to security-related issues, India cannot depend on that alone for our entire capability. There’s no substitute for creating your complete independence in that capability from other countries, and therefore this is an urgent requirement.”
In January, India and France signed a memorandum of understanding covering satellite launches and space exploration initiatives. The collaboration is expected to lead to a joint constellation of surveillance satellites focused on the Indian Ocean within four years.
They key here is collaboration rather than dependence, Matheswaran said.
“Down the line, it should result in joint training, joint research and development and joint work, including industrial partnerships,” he said. “That’s the way to go.”
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