Satellite images show mid-May activity at Chinese base
Satellite images analysed by India Today's Open Source Intelligence Team (OSINT) show movement of large vehicles at the Chinese post in Aksai Chin, the part of Ladakh region occupied by Beijing since the 1962 conflict with India.
by Ankit KumarSatellite images analysed by India Today's Open Source Intelligence Team (OSINT) show movement of large vehicles at the Chinese post in Aksai Chin, the part of Ladakh region occupied by Beijing since the 1962 conflict with India.
The permanent camp near the Line of Actual Control (LAC), which is opposite the Gogra post on the Indian side, is the biggest Chinese base in the area.
A comparison of satellite images suggests the activity took place in the second week of May, in line with news reports about Chinese troop movements close to LAC around the same time.
The camp is about 6 km from the nearest point on LAC and about 15 km from the Gogra post on the Indian side.
Older high resolution imagery of the camp shows wide road connectivity with the camp.
While the open area outside the camp is seen inactive and empty in April and in the first week of May, the same place looks occupied in the second week of this month.
These structures vanish from the satellite imagery in the third week.
Earlier, India Today showed signs of large scale movement of Chinese troops the through satellite images on one of the roads in the same Aksai Chin area.
Read | US willing to mediate India-China border standoff, tweets Donald Trump
Also read | Xi Jinping tells Chinese military to prepare for war. Is it against India, US or Taiwan?
Also read | Exclusive: How China used deception to mobilise troops at border with India in Ladakh
Watch | India-China standoff in Ladakh: Ground report from flashpoint