Is it the "bhishma pitamaha" KS himself?The person who argued about giving away Tawang and building up Indian opinion through opinion-makers is as well known as M.K. Bhadrakumar who wrote the above article.



Is it the "bhishma pitamaha" KS himself?The person who argued about giving away Tawang and building up Indian opinion through opinion-makers is as well known as M.K. Bhadrakumar who wrote the above article.
And here is the other side of the storyThe recent developments in Myanmar show that not only have the Indian “experts” been completely off the mark in assuming that Yangon was about to become a Chinese pearl, China may actually be caught in a tangled web. Not only does Beijing lack the stranglehold over Myanmar, as our experts blithely believed, but the issue is more about how Beijing could easily extricate itself from supporting the isolated regime in Yangon. We are seeing a curious spectacle of Yangon taking full advantage of Beijing's predicament.
The significance of this should be obvious to any one who even has a passing interest in these matters.When completed, the pipeline will help unlock large untapped deposits of natural gas off Myanmar's coast and carry it hundreds of miles to southern China, expanding Myanmar's role as one of Asia's important energy exporters and enhancing its influence over other countries that rely on its supplies.
The project also is expected to include a port that can take deliveries of oil from the Middle East and Africa before transferring them to China. That will give China a new route for oil that bypasses the congested Strait of Malacca near Singapore, which handles a large portion of China's imported crude today.
The project is an important part of China's wider strategy to diversify energy sources and reduce its reliance on supplies that could be blocked easily by foreign powers or pirates.
Damn even sri lanka is flexing its muscle against us. Anyways rajapakse should be shot for massacre of the tamils. And so should sarath fonseka.Prabu wrote:Makkal TV (news) reported that there wEre chinese soldres seen among the sri lankan Navy ! Cippings were shown , where in 2 tamil fishermen (indians) claimed that they have seen chinees among the sri lankam Navy. Any furthEr news on this ? If true this is a worry somE news !?Is our Navy(MI) /RAW probing this report ?
Philip ji,Philip wrote:Utter crap.SL has a few Chinese origin vessels,Isralei missile craft and have in recent times bought Indian OPVs,therefore if any foreign sailors were on board it could be to check on eqpt.We have a number of Russian origin vessels and subs in the IN and if a few Russians are on board to check on eqpt. it does not mean that India has become a Russian satellite! Secondly,Rajapakse has done Indiaa nd the globe a signal favour by eliminating the LTT,NOT the "Tamils".
The Chinese are building the Hambantota Port becuase we in India rejected the offer made to us first and are paying the price for it.There is not a single project in Lanka,or edifice of lasting significance when compared with what China has given the island,like the BMICH international convention centre,the Supreme Court,etc.Though we have given aid,there is not a single major building built with Indian aid.The Hill Country needs good medical facilities and with lakhs of Indian tea workers,the least we could've done was to have built a good hospital in the hills.The symbolism with such gifts is that buildings last for centuries and remind the locals of the generosity of the nation that was the giver.
Myopic midgets in the MEA have been responsible for untold damage to our interests abroad by their indifference and moronic mindset.The Indo-Lankan defence agreement which has been pending for years is another! So who is to blame really? MKB has a point,though criticising Indian diplomacy,but is off course when he says that China has little influence in Burma.How do you think that they have acquired NoKo help for their nuclear reactor and weapon plants allegedly being built underground and in tunnels? The NoKo N-proliferation industry has a Chinese godfather that coordinates such international proliferation.
Officials at the Indira Gandhi International Airport, Delhi prevented a prominent Kashmiri academic from boarding a flight to Beijing on Saturday night, refusing to recognise his Chinese visa.
The visa was not stamped on his passport, but had been issued on a separate piece of paper.
http://www.zeenews.com/news575759.html: China on Tuesday accused the Dalai Lama of seeking to undermine Beijing's relationship with Delhi through a visit to a disputed border region, insulating India's government from direct Chinese wrath over the dispute.
The exiled Tibetan spiritual leader has riled Beijing by arranging a trip next week to Arunachal Pradesh, parts of which China claims as its own. The Chinese government has condemned the trip several times and asked Delhi to stop it going ahead.
But with ties between the two Asian giants strained by a flare-up of disputes over their shared boundary, Beijing apparently hopes to keep its ire over the trip, due to start November 8, from inflaming diplomatic tensions.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu repeated earlier criticism of the Dalai Lama for "separatist" activities, but did not condemn Delhi for allowing the trip to go ahead, and underlined the importance Beijing places on Sino-Indian ties.
Blame for tensions, Ma said, rested with the Dalai Lama.
"The Dalai Lama often lies and often engages in acts to sabotage China's relations with other countries," Ma told a regular news briefing, when asked about the trip.
"I am confident that his scheme to wreck China's relations with the relevant country will come to nothing."
China claims about 90,000 sq km (55,900 square miles) of Arunachal Pradesh along the border as part of its territory, that it sees as "southern" Tibet.
Ma said that late last month, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh had agreed to focus on promoting "healthy and stable relations."
"We hope that each side will continue striving to make strides in that direction," Ma added.
But in a reminder of the many sources of friction between the two as they chase economic growth and jostle for influence in Asia, Ma also said China had asked India to ease visa red tape after new regulations upset Chinese firms.
Delhi recently cut back on business visas to curb a flow of unskilled labour, much of it Chinese.
Many Chinese workers had travelled to India on multiple entry business visas to fill jobs in sectors ranging from power generation to telecoms, the official China Daily said on Tuesday.
These visas will now be restricted to a smaller pool of senior executives, trade consultants and other specialists, affecting an estimated 25,000 Chinese workers, the paper added.
"China has expressed its concerns to India many times," Ma said, adding that Chinese businesses were involved in building projects in India that helped economic ties.
They tried their utmost to use local labour, but also needed to bring in technicians from China, he said.
Santoshji,santoshriyer wrote: Slit eyes have only targetted HH Dalai Lama this time.
That is indeed the case and the Arunachal Pradesh State Government extending all courtesies of a State Guest to HH the Dalai Lama is another right thing:csharma wrote:GoI isdoing all the right things these days.
Paper visa’ row: India holds back China-bound J&K academic
http://www.hindustantimes.com/News-Feed ... 72050.aspx ..................
Dalai Lama will be our state guest: Arunachal CM
Updated on Wednesday, October 28, 2009, 19:32 IST
New Delhi: Notwithstanding Chinese objection to the Dalai Lama's proposed visit to Arunachal Pradesh, Chief Minister Dorjee Khandu on Wednesday said the Tibetan spiritual leader will be accorded the honour of 'state guest' during his week-long tour beginning November 7.
Khandu said the Dalai will be given all protocol, including a tight security cover, when he arrives.
"He will be accorded with the honour of state guest. He will visit Tawang, Itanagar and some other places," Khandu said. ……………………
Zee News
Not allowed to fly with stapled Chinese visa: Kashmiri profBeijing, Nov 3 (PTI) With some 25,000 of its citizens hit by India's new employment visa regime, China today voiced serious concern over the policy asking New Delhi to be "considerate of the circumstances" of Chinese businesses and workers in the country's power, telecom and petroleum sectors.
China's Ministry of Commerce expressed its deep concern over the new policy after it received many complaints from Chinese companies in India, the state-run 'China Daily' reported.
"We hope India will be considerate of the circumstances of Chinese firms there and provide more convenience for Chinese labourers and firms," the paper quoted an unnamed official with the Ministry of Commerce as saying.
The visa policy, issued in mid-July, mainly affects expatriates working in India on a business visa, which previously had been allowed for a wider range of occupations and employees, the paper noted.
Things heating up!! Is this a start of another cold war?...
Professor Shakeel Ahmad Romshoo, of the department of Geology and Geophysics at the university, said: “I was stopped by Immigration officials at the airport though I had the visa issued by the Chinese embassy. They did not let me go on that visa.”
The Chinese embassy staples a visa in a separate sheet to applicants from Jammu and Kashmir and Arunachal Pradesh. To the people of all other Indian states, it pastes the document on the passport as is the norm. The Indian government, meanwhile, does not accept the stapled visa as valid, sources said.
...
The National Remote Sensing Agency (NRSA) confirmed on Tuesday that construction was on at the Zangmu site on the Chinese side of the Brahmaputra river, prompting the government to take up the matter with China at a “political” level.
In its presentation to the Committee of Secretaries (CoS) formed to assess Chinese plans regarding possible diversion of the Brahmaputra’s water, the NRSA presented evidence of “houses, construction/excavation, and movement of trucks” in and around a 3-4 km range at the site.
...
It’s learnt that the Zangmu hydroelectrical project was inaugurated on March 16 this year and the first concrete was poured on April 2. The 1.138-billion Yuan (1 Yuan = $0.15) project has been awarded to a five-company consortium with China Gezhouba Group along with NIDR (China Water Northeastern investigation, design and research) involved in its construction.
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Hmmmmmmmmmm........................China on Tuesday accused the Dalai Lama of seeking to undermine Beijing's relationship with Delhi through a visit to a disputed border region, insulating India's government from direct Chinese wrath over the dispute.
Killing two birds with one stone.Kailash wrote:Things heating up!! Is this a start of another cold war?
I apologize if I have hurt the sentiments of any fellow indians. I would henceforth not use such a term.milindc wrote:Santoshji,santoshriyer wrote: Slit eyes have only targetted HH Dalai Lama this time.
You are hurting lot of Indians with the remark about eyes. The term we use in BR is either lizard or panda.
Good going!
And the half type which you did not talk about are the Indians whose hate for the West blinds them to the reality of the Chinese threat to the degree that they believe that if it was not for the scheming and plotting of the West, India and China would get along like long lost brothers.Airavat wrote:China is not our friend
It seems to me that there are two-and-a-half types of people who say that we should always try to accommodate China. The first are .....
The second bunch of Hindi-Chini bhai bhai fellows are.... .
IOW, desi commies. A prakash karat and harkishen surjeet come to mind. Losers of the highest order.And the half type which you did not talk about are the Indians whose hate for the West blinds them to the reality of the Chinese threat to the degree that they believe that if it was not for the scheming and plotting of the West, India and China would get along like long lost brothers.
[/quote]AdityaM wrote:China's Communist Party ropes in Dalai Lama's grandniece
so much propoganda
[quote]
Deying, who works at a hospital run by the People's Liberation Army, mentioned Tibet in her inspiration to join the PLA. "When I was a child, I often saw PLA doctors who travelled a lot and underwent great difficulties to relieve herdsmen in Tibet from diseases. I was touched and decided to become a PLA soldier ever since."
The 35-year-old also recalled her rather emotional entry into the party. "I'm proud to join the CPC. I had tears in my eyes when I took the oath. I felt myself the happiest one in the world."
So .................................. there you have it. Peace on the border is normal.To a poser on intrusion by Chinese troops in the neighbouring Arunachal Pradesh state, Major General S S Jog, General Office Commanding of the Red Horn Division, said: “There is some sort of exercises, which they generally do during this particular time of the year. They have done a few exercises and certain amounts of troops have come in but its normal routine exercise.”
Singha: I had posted in the Indian Army Discussion on the new troops strength scenario in NE. It is something like this:Singha wrote:article on arunachal and dalai lama visit today in inside pages of TOI. tidbits were.
1 brigade named "korea brigade" of 2700 people deployed in tawang officially.
one AP person was quoted as saying the road to tawang would remain closed for a
few days as around 1 lakh soldiers and heavy artillery would be using this 24x7 for a
few days. didnt ejatly say when...presumably over the coming few weeks?
JJ Singh who is now governor of AP was also quoted rubbing some chilies into the panda. he said "two mtn divs are being raised for AP"
The technology has been used in computer chip production for a while now and is mature. There is potential to use this technology to literally produce anything given a raw material feed. This is a real technology not science fiction and the way I look at it will break the backbone of Chinese manufacturing sector if everyone could have a replicator running closeby.Space explorers have yet to get their hands on the replicator of "Star Trek" to create anything they might require. But NASA has developed a technology that could enable lunar colonists to carry out on-site manufacturing on the moon, or allow future astronauts to create critical spare parts during the long trip to Mars.
The method, called electron beam freeform fabrication (EBF3), uses an electron beam to melt metals and build objects layer by layer. Such an approach already promises to cut manufacturing costs for the aerospace industry, and could pioneer development of new materials. It has also thrilled astronauts on the International Space Station by dangling the possibility of designing new tools or objects, researchers said.
Jay Leno’s 3D Printer Replaces Rusty Old Parts
Jay Leno has a lot of old cars with a lot of obsolete parts. When he needs to replace these parts, he skips the error-prone machinist and goes to his rapid prototyping 3D printer. Simply scan, print and repeat.
So, rather than have a machinist try to copy the heater and then build it, we decided to redesign the original using our NextEngine 3D scanner and Dimension 3D printer. These incredible devices allow you to make the form you need to create almost any part. The scanner can measure about 50,000 points per second at a density of 160,000 dots per inch (dpi) to create a highly detailed digital model. The 3D printer makes an exact copy of a part in plastic, which we then send out to create a mold. Some machines can even make a replacement part in cobalt-chrome with the direct laser sintering process. Just feed a plastic wire—for a steel part you use metal wire—into the appropriate laser cutter.
Inside the printer, the print head goes back and forth, back and forth, putting on layer after layer of plastic to form a 3D part. If there are any irregularities in the originals, you can remove them using software. Once the model is finished, any excess support material between moving parts is dissolved in a water-based solution. Complexity doesn’t matter, but the size of the object does determine the length of the process. Making a little part might take 5 hours. The White’s feedwater heater required 33 hours.