Blood On The Barbed Wire
Outlook
|June 29, 2020
Named after Ladakhi explorer Ghulam Rasool Galwan, the Galwan river flows west from Aksai Chin to converge with the Shyok in Ladakh. It slices through high-altitude mountains and the peaks overlook the valleys and pass—especially a stretch of India’s 255-km Darbuk-Shyok-Daulat Beg Oldi road running close to Galwan valley.
Although a fierce battle was fought in 1962 in Galwan valley, the area has been peaceful since. Chinese transgressions have been mostly concentrated in Pangong Tso, Demchok, and Daulat Beg Oldi. But China perceives the new road as a threat to Aksai Chin and the Tibet-Xinjiang highway. It wants to control the heights in Galwan valley.
This summer, Chinese soldiers entered Galwan valley and billeted in camps, leading to an Indian pushback. They exchanged blows, threw stones...(an informal agreement forbids troops from carrying guns in the buffer area). On June 15/16, the Chinese attacked Indian troops with nail-studded clubs, killing 20 and capturing ten.
Can war and pestilence come together? A pandemic is already upon us, akin to hemorrhage for the body of systems and resources that make up a nation. War is no less severe: the blood loss it entails is of another (if equally real) sort; the debility it causes gradually leaches into the economy too. Can the body even take two extreme stressors, two co-morbidities, at once? India came close to testing that proposition this week, with the violent India-China face-off at Galway in eastern Ladakh making world headlines. No bullets were fired, but so blood-soaked was the episode that it was described as the biggest military confrontation between the two countries in over five decades. Even as New Delhi claimed military and diplomatic engagement had de-escalated a testy situation, Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) soldiers, armed with iron rods and batons wrapped in barbed wire, attacked Indian troops in unprecedented and brutal combat, killing 20 of them.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 29, 2020-Ausgabe von Outlook.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Outlook
Outlook
JOHNSON GRAMMAR SCHOOL, HYDERABAD
A Legacy of 45 Years in Academic Excellence and Holistic Development
2 mins
January 01, 2026
Outlook
Refuse, Don't Reuse!
Beyond the Recycle Bin: How Vantage Hall Girls' Residential School is Redefining Sustainability
1 mins
January 01, 2026
Outlook
Pragyan School: Where Learning Spreads Its Wings Beyond the Horizon
Pragyan School Greater Noida : Empowering Young Minds, Fostering Holistic Growth, and Shaping Future Leaders
2 mins
January 01, 2026
Outlook
A School That Celebrates Every Child's Potential
At Doon Public School, tradition meets innovation to shape confident, compassionate global citizens
2 mins
January 01, 2026
Outlook
Lodha Alibaug Penthouse Sale Boosts Coastal Luxury
A marquee penthouse at acquired in a transaction creating strong buzz within luxury real estate circles.
1 min
January 01, 2026
Outlook
K-12 School Rankings: A Guide to Right Future Choices
India is witnessing a robust transformation of the educational landscape where excellence in education, teaching and learning has scaled to heights like never before.
2 mins
January 01, 2026
Outlook
Scale Gives Way to Substance
As 2026 unfolds, industry experts see Indian real estate maturing beyond volume-led growth toward trust, design excellence, and enduring asset value.
2 mins
January 01, 2026
Outlook
Fully-loaded Magazine
It was in 2012 when I walked into the Delhi Outlook Magazine office and realised that this was a place that was throbbing with a rare energy that newsrooms are known for and I knew I'd always keep that intact. To be on the other side of a media organisation is a difficult road to navigate and yet, it comes with a unique fulfilment that I have felt often as I have defended the editorial freedom and integrity as the CEO.
7 mins
January 01, 2026
Outlook
Diary
Over 30 years ago, when I joined the weekly Sunday as a reporter, everyone around me said it was a big mistake. 'The age of magazines is over' was the chorus. Sunday Magazine did close down for various reasons but the age of magazines was not over. Evidently, it still isn't as this special issue of '30 Years of Outlook' proves. There is something exciting, unpredictable and complete about a magazine. The thrill of sitting down with a new edition of a magazine, holding the cover to the light to examine its design, opening the first pages, to look at the contents to savour what's inside, then to flip the pages to give a look-see at the various stories and articles, stopping at some stunning photograph or an illustration, and then finally zeroing in on which article to start reading from is a unique experience.
2 mins
January 01, 2026
Outlook
To Men Who Write Women Off
“Women feel differently, so they talk differently, have a different relationship to words and to ideas of which these are the vehicle. Asserting difference at the same time as demanding equal rights is obviously the position to take. We must impose female cultural models, which have a universal value in a world where ‘universal’ equals ‘masculine’. In other words, cultivate marginality until the margin takes up half the page. We have a long way to go...”—Marina Yaguello, French linguist
3 mins
January 01, 2026
Translate
Change font size

