Some of the videos of the Sino-Indian battle in the Garhwan Valley, which showed Chinese faces, were investigated and found to be the Indo-Tibetan Special Border Force (IBSF) formed by Tibetan separatists.
Chinese police arrested netizen “Spicy Pen” on the 19th, claiming that his Sina and Weibo posts maliciously distorted the truth and denigrated the five heroic border guards, thus causing a bad social impact. After the police tracked down the suspect, he was criminally detained on suspicion of provocation and nuisance.
Then, the Chinese Communist Party officially released part of the film of the Battle of the Garhwan Valley, in which an Indian soldier who pounced on the communist army’s Qifa Bao leader looked like a Chinese-American face. So netizens wondered, “Could it be that this is a Chinese mercenary in the Indian army?”
This check only found that this is the Indian army Naga captain Manningba. This is an Indian paramilitary unit: India-Tibet Special Frontier Force (English name Special Frontier Force, or SSF). Created on November 14, 1962, the SSF was originally formed by former Tibetan resistance forces and refugees in exile in India, with the primary objective of conducting covert operations in the People’s Republic of China in the event of renewed war between India and China. There are currently over a thousand Tibetans serving in the Indian Special Forces, many of whom are serving in this unit. This unit is under the Indian Ministry of Home Affairs, but they are directly under the responsibility of the Research and Analysis Wing of the Indian Cabinet Secretariat, one of India’s secret intelligence agencies.
Some of the films of the Sino-Indian Battle of the Garhwan Valley, in which Chinese faces were seen, were investigated and found to be the Indo-Tibetan Special Border Force, formed by Tibetan separatists.
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