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Pak's arms shopping post-Op Sindoor matter of concern; China remains challenge: Navy official

Vice Admiral K Swaminathan notes the Chinese Navy has already become the largest in the world and is expanding like never before

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Following Operation Sindoor in May, Pakistan’s procurement of arms from all over the world is a matter of concern, while China also remains an enduring challenge amid its growing assertiveness, Vice Admiral K Swaminathan has said.

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The senior officer, who heads the crucial Western Naval Command headquartered in Mumbai, noted the Chinese Navy has already become the largest in the world and is expanding like never before.

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He was speaking at a security conference organised here by the Bramha Research Foundation on Wednesday.

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Vice Admiral Swaminathan noted that the commissioning of Fujian, the third aircraft carrier of the Chinese Navy, along with the demonstration of fifth and sixth-generation fighters, is part of the Communist nation's global strategic narrative and signalling.

"China, also worryingly for us, continues to maintain five to eight ships in the Indian Ocean Region," he said.

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This group comprises warships, research vessels, satellite tracking vessels and fishing crafts, the officer pointed out.

"China is not only becoming more assertive in the South China Sea but also in the Indian Ocean Region. Therefore, China will continue to be an enduring challenge," he observed.

Operation Sindoor, which saw Indian armed forces target terror hubs in Pakistan and PoK, and later also multiple air bases in the neighbouring country, has been a significant inflection point and has established a new normal in New Delhi's relationship with Islamabad, the Navy officer said.

The Indian military campaign was in response to the Pahalgam terror attack in April, which claimed the lives of 26 people, most of them tourists.

"It is a very significant departure from how we view Pakistan and the response that Pakistan brings about in whatever happens in the subcontinent," the Vice-Admiral underlined.

"Pakistan, of course, after the end of the operation, has been on an exercise to arm itself like never before. So that again should be a matter of concern for all of us in the subcontinent," he said.

Swaminathan highlighted that Pakistan is arming itself in utter disregard for the economic hardships faced by its citizens.

"The Pakistani Army is shopping all around the world for arms and ammunition with very scant regard to what else is happening in that country," he said.

Operation Sindoor revealed new challenges and harsher realities, the officer noted.

"One, of course, was the collusion between Pakistan and China that we always knew manifested. We somehow thought that might be covert, but somewhat over a little bit. But it was undeniably overt in very clear broad daylight," the Vice-Admiral maintained.

He also said the emergence of Turkey as a key sponsor, supporter and supplier (to Pakistan) is a new development that has to be watched very carefully.

"This was something we had always suspected and knew. The fact that it manifested a little more than we thought, in a way, was a new opener," Swaminthan emphasised.

China and Turkey had openly backed Pakistan during Operation Sindoor.

Speaking further on the military conflict in May, Vice Admiral Swaminathan said the exercise was yet another demonstration of how the Indian armed forces synergised and carried out well-synchronised, well-coordinated, well-planned and well-executed strikes on chosen targets.

The success of these strikes demonstrated the collapse of regional assumptions that Pakistan's nuclear shield, besides covert and overt support from sponsors and financial backers, will deter India from carrying out conventional operations, he asserted.

The four-day operation demonstrated the multi-domain capability of the Indian armed forces, he told the conference.

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