US senate comments on India - China Stand-off


South Asian politics focused on the India-adjacent home. For those who have created a naturalistic approach, they have to claim that the People's Liberation Army (PLA) is the first to provoke the first conflict.


The issue of India-China conflict came up in the US Senate foreign policy discussions on Thursday. Mitch McNeil, the majority leader of the US Senate, slammed China there. "This is the biggest land dispute between the two countries since the 1962 war," he said. It is understood that the Chinese forces are provoking the conflict to occupy the territory.


McNeil also commented that China is becoming increasingly dangerous to the United States and its allies. "Needless to say, the whole world is deeply concerned about the conflict between the two nuclear powers," he said. We are trying to calm the tension so that peace can return.

However, the whole world could not have got a better indication of what China is doing to the people within its borders, trying to change the design of the whole world by violating international law and order and creating its own rules and regulations.


Congressman Jim Banks also spoke directly for India. After the Ladakh clashes, Delhi is considering banning Chinese mobile device makers Huawei and ZTE. Jim Banks welcomed that thought. "The Chinese goons have to be pushed this way," he said. India cannot be intimidated. That's a good decision.

On the other hand, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has expressed his condolences to India for the loss of 20 Indian soldiers in Ladakh in the face of Chinese aggression. "I extend my deepest condolences to all Indians who lost their lives in the conflict with China," he wrote on Twitter. We will remember the families of those soldiers. "



 

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