Nayan Prajapati retweetledi
Nayan Prajapati
263 posts

Nayan Prajapati
@n124d
Be the Reason to Make Someone Happy. Om Namah Shivay 🕉️
Katılım Ağustos 2020
101 Takip Edilen31 Takipçiler
Nayan Prajapati retweetledi

The way big three franchise fans (CSK, MI, and RCB) are demeaning other franchises, especially GT and LSG, do they have any right to call themselves cricket fans? I can’t speak for others, but GT’s record in the IPL is nothing but exceptional.
We have a system in place and we follow it every year. What @gujarat_titans believes in is that if you play according to the system laid out, the results will take care of themselves.
Your franchise can’t play like GT, then why do you want my team to play according to your style? We GT fans love our team unconditionally and that is the beauty. We don’t demean other teams or players like you guys do.
HAMARE YAHAN AISA HI HOTA HAI!
English
Nayan Prajapati retweetledi

Heard a Pendustani strategic expert say the Indian Navy has no chance against the Chinese Navy.
Yes, the Chinese Navy is much larger, but the Indian Navy is a regional power, and its strength lies in geographic advantage. China’s naval expansion is primarily focused on the Western Pacific and the South China Sea. To operate in the Indian Ocean, it must pass through narrow chokepoints like the Malacca Strait, which India can easily monitor or block.
India, on the other hand, is in the middle of the Indian Ocean, with naval bases along both coasts and in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, giving it absolute regional dominance.
The Chinese Navy’s operational experience is also limited, while the Indian Navy has decades of blue-water experience, operating from the Persian Gulf to the Western Pacific. Its officers have trained extensively with the US, Japanese, French, and Australian navies, giving India a qualitative edge in interoperability and tactics.
In submarine warfare and surveillance too, India is catching up fast. While China has more submarines, India has a strong anti-submarine warfare (ASW) network across the Indian Ocean, aided by the US and Quad partners. India’s P-8I Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft and satellite surveillance capabilities give it a wide intelligence lead in the region.
China may have more ships, but India has better access, logistics, and partnerships in the Indian Ocean. The Indian naval presence in Oman, Seychelles, Mauritius, and Indonesia gives it reach far beyond its coastline, while China relies heavily on port access in Gwadar (Pakistan) and Djibouti, which are politically fragile and easily monitored.
So yes, the Chinese dominate in the Pacific, but the Indians are the primary power in the Indian Ocean.
If there is ever a localised conflict near India’s maritime domain, the Indian Navy would almost certainly have the upper hand. The Chinese fleet is huge, but its strategic reach into India’s maritime backyard is shallow and vulnerable.
In short, China’s navy is larger, but India’s is smarter, better placed, and more regionally dominant. But who’s gonna tell the Pendustanis?
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