Namka Chu

Namka Chu is a river that flows near the Tawang district in the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh. It is located to the east of the trijunction of Tibet, Bhutan and India and is about 200 kilometers away from the Misamari railhead and 60 kilometers from the Tawang road head. The Namka Chu valley was the scene of some of the most fierce fighting between India and China during the 1962 Sino-Indian war.

Battle of Namka Chu

Namka Chu was the site of the battle during the Sino-Indian War in 1962. The battle of Namka Chu began on 10 October 1962 and continued until 16 November of the same year. The Indian brigade was headed by Brig. John Dalvi.[1]

It concluded with the total destruction of 7 Brigade of the Indian Army and the capture of Dalvi, who was repatriated in 1963. His book Himalayan Blunder is a detailed analysis of the prelude and conduct of the battle from the Indian point of view. The Indian defeat at the Nam Ka Chu was the first in the India-China border war of 1962, which ended with a unilateral Chinese ceasefire and withdrawal after capturing almost the entire disputed territory of NEFA (now Arunachal Pradesh).

gollark: This is important in paths.
gollark: It's a byte sequence internally, yes, but Rust is more honest about that and treats raw byte sequences and UTF-8 strings differently.
gollark: I mean, even Node.js has Buffers and strings separate.
gollark: Go's are byte sequences but they just hope you won't notice the difference because stuff is probably UTF-8.
gollark: It's verified when you construct a string. Disregarding unsafe hackery or any implementation bugs, a string will always be valid UTF-8.

References

  1. "The Battle of Tawang". 5 September 2015. Retrieved 1 August 2017.

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