logo
First visit since Galwan clash: EAM Jaishankar meets China's Vice President Han Zheng; signals thaw in ties

First visit since Galwan clash: EAM Jaishankar meets China's Vice President Han Zheng; signals thaw in ties

Time of India14-07-2025
External affairs minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, who is on his first China trip in five years, met Chinese Vice President Han Zheng on Monday, and expressed confidence that the two neighbours would maintain the positive trajectory of the recent improvement in their bilateral ties.
Tired of too many ads? go ad free now
"Pleased to meet Vice President Han Zheng soon after my arrival in Beijing today. Conveyed India's support for China's SCO Presidency. Noted the improvement in our bilateral ties. And expressed confidence that discussions during my visit will maintain that positive trajectory," Jaishankar posted on X.
Jaishankar X post
During their bilateral talks, the ex-foreign secretary told the Chinese vice president that New Delhi backs Beijing's successful presidency of the SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organisation).
"India supports a successful Chinese presidency at the SCO. Our bilateral relationship, as you have pointed, has been steadily improving since the
between Prime Minister Modi and President Xi Jinping in (Russia's) Kazan last October," Jaishankar said.
"The
of the Kailash Mansarovar Yatra is also widely appreciated in India. Continued normalisation of our ties can produce mutually beneficial outcomes. The international situation, as we meet today, is very complex.
As neighbouring nations and major economies, an open exchange of views and perspectives between India and China is very important," he added.
Jaishankar's China visit, his first here since the deadly Galwan Valley military clash of June 2020, follows visits by defence minister Rajnath Singh and National Security Advisor (NSA) Ajit Doval, who had travelled to China in June for meetings of the defence ministers of SCO member states.
Tired of too many ads? go ad free now
What's on Jaishankar's agenda?
The external affairs minister is expected to meet his counterpart, Wang Yi, for a bilateral meeting on Monday. The former arrived in China from Singapore, for the second and final leg of his 2-nation tour.
The two top diplomats previously met in February on the sidelines of a G20 meeting in South Africa's Johannesburg, where both sides echoed calls for mutual trust and support.
The SCO foreign ministers meeting will be held in Tianjin on Tuesday.
Wang Yi is also expected to visit India next month to meet NSA Ajit Doval - part of a planned round of dialogue under the Special Representatives (SR) mechanism aimed at resolving the decades-old boundary dispute.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

State Department Confirms China Barred US Citizen From Leaving
State Department Confirms China Barred US Citizen From Leaving

Mint

time8 minutes ago

  • Mint

State Department Confirms China Barred US Citizen From Leaving

The US State Department confirmed that a US Patent and Trademark Office employee has been barred from leaving China, and said officials were working to resolve the situation. The department said the employee was 'made subject to an exit ban' while traveling in China 'in a personal capacity.' 'We are tracking this case very closely and are engaged with Chinese officials to resolve the situation as quickly as possible,' the department said. The statement confirmed earlier reports in the Washington Post and elsewhere that China had stopped the US citizen from departing for several months. The Post said the ban was put in place over an apparent failure to disclose on a visa application that he worked for the US government. Officials from Beijing and Washington — including in the Commerce Department — are negotiating a trade deal after President Donald Trump hit goods from China with heavy tariffs that he later paused. Trump also wants a meeting with Chinese leader Xi Jinping to sort through their problems, which touch on technology curbs, rare earths and the status of Taiwan. The Commerce Department employee, a veteran of the US Army, was detained when he arrived in the southwestern city of Chengdu in April, the South China Morning Post reported Sunday, citing a person familiar with the situation. He was being prevented from leaving China because his case was 'related to actions Beijing deemed harmful to national security,' the newspaper reported, though the specifics couldn't be confirmed. Since the man arrived in Chengdu, he had also traveled to the Chinese capital with a US official, the newspaper reported. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

Revealed: Not Chinese J-35 Jets, But a ‘Ghost Weapon' – Pakistan Air Force's Most Dangerous Plan Under Munir
Revealed: Not Chinese J-35 Jets, But a ‘Ghost Weapon' – Pakistan Air Force's Most Dangerous Plan Under Munir

India.com

time8 minutes ago

  • India.com

Revealed: Not Chinese J-35 Jets, But a ‘Ghost Weapon' – Pakistan Air Force's Most Dangerous Plan Under Munir

New Delhi: In the days following the bruising military clash between India and Pakistan from May 7 to 10, something changed deep within Pakistan's military command. At the centre of this change lies not a fighter jet, not even the Chinese-made J-35s the media speculated about, but something quieter. Something Pakistan does not want anyone to see. Not yet. What began as whispers has now taken shape through a revealing report by Quwa, a Pakistan-based defense analysis platform. And it points to something far more ambitious than buying more jets. Pakistan's next big leap may not be in the skies, but in the shadows. The report details a high-stakes project brewing inside Pakistan's Air Force – an invisible defense network designed to outthink and outpace future threats. The system is not about raw speed or firepower. It is about sensing danger before it strikes and responding in ways the enemy cannot detect. Senior Pakistani defense planners are now convinced that the future of air dominance will not be won with just wings and missiles. It will depend on how fast information flows, and how silently. The plan is to build a dispersed network that ties together hundreds of sensors, drones, radars and data relays, all communicating with each other like nerves in a living body. A network that does not shout or blink, just watches, calculates and acts. At the core of this strategy lies one of Pakistan Air Force's most difficult tests, which is how to stay invisible in a world flooded with electromagnetic noise. In any modern war, electromagnetic attacks, radio jamming, data interception and signal disruption, are likely to be the first wave. And it is in that chaos that this invisible grid must not just survive, but lead. The ambition goes beyond simply dodging detection. Military engineers are working on a next-generation Tactical Data Link (TDL), a digital nervous system for war. It is more than a tool. It is a language, one that could allow pilots, ground units and command centers to think as one, even under the fog of war. As one Pakistani analyst observed, what Pakistan is building is not only an upgrade, it is a rewriting of the rules. A defense system that breathes. A force that speaks in silence. And as Pakistan absorbs the lessons of Operation Sindoor, its eyes are not just on India's jets, but on the invisible battlefield in between.

Ahead Of New Talks, Iran Blames Europeans For Nuclear Deal Collapse
Ahead Of New Talks, Iran Blames Europeans For Nuclear Deal Collapse

NDTV

timean hour ago

  • NDTV

Ahead Of New Talks, Iran Blames Europeans For Nuclear Deal Collapse

Tehran: Tehran blamed European powers on Monday for the failure of a landmark 2015 nuclear deal, accusing them of breaking commitments ahead of renewed talks in Istanbul with Britain, France and Germany. The 2015 agreement -- reached between Iran and UN Security Council permanent members Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, plus Germany -- imposed curbs on Iran's nuclear programme in exchange for sanctions relief. However, it unravelled in 2018 when the United States, during Donald Trump's first term as president, unilaterally withdrew and reimposed sweeping sanctions. Though Europe pledged continued support, a mechanism intended to offset US sanctions never effectively materialised, forcing many Western firms to exit Iran and deepening its economic crisis. "Iran holds the European parties responsible for negligence in implementing the agreement," said foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei ahead of Friday's talks in Istanbul with Britain, France and Germany on the deal's future. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan spoke by phone Monday to discuss the talks, Fidan's office said, confirming the date had been set for Friday. Iran will also host a trilateral meeting today with Chinese and Russian representatives to discuss the nuclear issue and potential sanctions. The Chinese foreign ministry said Beijing would "continue to play a constructive role in pushing relevant sides to restart dialogue and negotiations, and reach a solution that takes in account the legitimate concerns of all parties". In recent weeks, the three European powers have threatened to reimpose international sanctions on Tehran, accusing it of breaching its nuclear commitments. Germany said the Istanbul talks would be at the expert level, with the European trio, or E3, working "flat out" to find a sustainable and verifiable diplomatic solution. "If no solution is reached by the end of August... the snapback also remains an option for the E3," said its foreign ministry spokesman, Martin Giese. A clause in the 2015 agreement allows for UN sanctions on Iran to be reimposed through a "snapback" mechanism in the event of non-compliance. However, the agreement expires in October, leaving a tight deadline. - 'No intention of speaking with America' - The International Atomic Energy Agency says Iran is the only non-nuclear-armed country currently enriching uranium to 60 percent -- far beyond the 3.67 percent cap set by the 2015 accord. That is a short step from the 90 percent enrichment required for a nuclear weapon. Using the snapback clause was "meaningless, unjustifiable and immoral", Baqaei told a news conference, arguing that Iran only began distancing itself from the agreement in response to Western non-compliance. "Iran's reduction of its commitments was carried out in accordance with the provisions outlined in the agreement," he said. Western powers -- led by the United States and backed by Israel -- have long accused Tehran of secretly seeking nuclear weapons. Iran has repeatedly denied this, insisting its nuclear programme is solely for civilian purposes such as energy production. Tehran and Washington had held five rounds of nuclear talks starting in April, but a planned meeting on June 15 was cancelled after Israel launched strikes on Iran, triggering a 12-day conflict. "At this stage, we have no intention of speaking with America," Baqaei said Monday. Israel launched a wave of surprise strikes on its regional nemesis on June 13, targeting key military and nuclear facilities. The United States launched its own strikes against Iran's nuclear programme on June 22, hitting the uranium enrichment facility at Fordo, in Qom province south of Tehran, as well as nuclear sites in Isfahan and Natanz.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store