‘Modi has planned out war with China, Pakistan’

DM Monitoring

NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has set a date for war with Pakistan and China, according to a senior official of the Bharatiya Janata Party quoted by the Press Trust of India on Sunday.
The news agency said the BJP’s Uttar Pradesh chief, Swatantra Dev Singh, told a meeting of party functionaries that Mr Modi had decided when the country would be at war with Pakistan and China.
The remarks were made on Friday amid tensions at the Line of Actual Control between India and China.
According to the report, quoted by several Indian news outfits, the BJP leader linked his claim to the beginning of construction of a Ram temple in Ayodhya following a Supreme Court judgement and the abrogation of special status to Jammu and Kashmir under Article 370 of the constitution.
“Like the decisions on Ram Mandir and Article 370, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has decided when there would be war with Pakistan and China,” he is heard saying in a video clip on social media. “Sambandhit tithi tay hai (the date has been decided),” he said in Hindi.
Mr Singh was speaking at an event at the home of BJP MLA Sanjay Yadav, who released the video.
In his address, Mr Singh compared Samajwadi Party and Bahujan Samaj Party workers with “terrorists”.
When asked about the remarks, local MP Ravindra Kushwaha said the UP BJP president made them to boost the morale of party workers. Swatantra Dev Singh’s reported remarks appear to deviate from India’s stand, PTI said.
On Sunday, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh reiterated that India wanted an end to the border tension with China while asserting that it would not allow “even an inch” of land to be taken away by anyone.
Moreover, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) chief Mohan Bhagwat has called for India to be more powerful than China in terms of military preparedness, and strengthen ties with other neighbours to counter the Chinese. While doing so, though, he said that China had crossed into Indian territory something Prime Minister Narendra Modi first categorically denied, and has since failed to mention.
“China encroached on our borders amid the pandemic,” Bhagwat said, adding the world knows the expansionist nature of that country. India’s response to the “encroachments” in Ladakh had “numbed and jolted” China, he reportedly said on Sunday at the RSS’s annual Vijayadashami event.
“We don’t know how it will react. So the way forward is to be alert and prepared. We should be more powerful than China in terms of military preparedness, economic conditions, international relations and also relations with neighbouring countries,” he said.
The government should forge an alliance against China with immediate neighbours like Nepal, Sri Lanka and others, he said. “India needs to grow bigger in power and scope than China,” he added.
The RSS, though, didn’t appear too happy that Bhagwat had openly contradicted the prime minister. Soon after the speech, the RSS tweeted an edited text of the address, changing “hamari seemaon ka jo atikraman kiya (intruded across our borders)” to “atikraman ka prayas kiya (attempted to intrude)”, the Telegraph reported.
Modi’s assertion that “no one has intruded into our territory” had invited a lot of criticism from the opposition. Congress leader Rahul Gandhi used the words in Bhagwat’s original to lash out at the government, saying the RSS chief too knew that Modi had lied. ANI deleted its original tweet quoting Bhagwat directly, but Gandhi shared a screenshot as proof.On June 15, at least 20 Indian soldiers were killed in a brutal border clash with Chinese soldiers at the Galwan valley in Ladakh region. A few days after, on 19 June, Modi at the all-party meeting on China said, “Na koi wahan hamari seema mein ghus aaya hai, na hi koi ghusa hua hai, na hi hamari koi post kisi dusre ke kabze mein hain (No one has intruded and nor is anyone intruding, nor has any post been captured by someone).”
During his nearly 80-minute speech, the RSS chief supported the Centre’s move on the three contentious farm laws, and backed Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath’s theory of an “international conspiracy” against the state government. However, there was no mention of the Hathras incident which had triggered widespread powerful protests against the Adityanath government, which the state police is investigating to look into alleged foreign influences.
Bhagwat also supported the Centre’s move over reading down of Article 370 in Jammu and Kashmir and the passage of Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) in parliament.
On the pandemic, he said, “We need not fear the coronavirus, but should be alert and cautious. We cannot stop living. Coronavirus is spreading but fatalities are less. Due to the pandemic, we have started learning the importance of hygiene, cleanliness, environment, family values all over again.”