China has started amassing huge forces against India, warns Mike Pompeo ahead of Delhi meeting


US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Indian Foreign Minister S Jaishankar arrive for their meeting in Tokyo on October 6, 2020, ahead of the Foreign Ministers meeting of the four nations of the Indo-Pacific.  (Charly Triballeau / Pool Photo via AP)

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Indian Foreign Minister S Jaishankar arrive for their meeting in Tokyo on October 6, 2020, ahead of the Foreign Ministers meeting of the four Indo-Pacific nations. (Charly Triballeau / Pool Photo via AP)

The Chinese have now started amassing huge forces against India in the north and the United States, under the leadership of President Donald Trump, has built a coalition that will reject the threat, said US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

  • AFP Washington
  • Last update: October 10, 2020 10:13 am IST
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US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Friday urged closer ties with India as he warned of China’s growing power at its doorstep amid a wave of diplomacy between the world’s two largest democracies.

“They absolutely need the United States to be their ally and partner in this fight,” Pompeo said of his four-way meetings earlier this week in Tokyo with his counterparts from India, Japan and Australia.


“The Chinese have now started amassing huge forces against India in the north,” Pompeo told radio host Larry O’Connor. “The world has awakened. The tide has begun to turn. And the United States, under the leadership of President Trump, has now built a coalition that will reject the threat,” he said.

After the Tokyo meeting, Pompeo will travel to New Delhi with Defense Secretary Mark Esper for annual talks with his Indian counterparts. Under Secretary of State Stephen Biegun will also travel to India next week to prepare for the meeting, the State Department said.

Tensions have soared between India and China since violent hand-to-hand fighting in Ladakh in June that left 20 Indian soldiers dead. China has acknowledged having suffered casualties but has not released figures.

Citing national security reasons, New Delhi has since banned dozens of Chinese apps, including TikTok, the highly successful video-sharing platform that counted India as its largest foreign market.

Despite widespread concerns about China, India has historically moved away from formal alliances with outside powers under its doctrine of “strategic autonomy.”

When asked at the conservative Heritage Foundation about tensions with China, India’s ambassador to the United States, Taranjit Singh Sandhu, noted that the Asian powers had historical ties and welcomed scholars from each.

Ties between the United States and India have grown rapidly, and “this relationship has a much broader perspective than just China,” Sandhu said.

But he said he expected India and the United States to discuss boosting defense ties during Pompeo and Esper’s visit. “I would stress that there is great additional potential for our defense cooperation,” he said.

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