Both India and Pakistan
claim sovereignty over the entire Siachen region. In June 1958, first
Geological Survey of India expedition went to the Siachen glacier. It was the first official Indian survey of Siachen Glacier by Geological Survey of India post-1947 and that was undertaken to commemorate the
International Geophysical Year in 1958. The study included snout surveying of five glaciers namely Siachen,
Mamostong,
Chong Kumdan, Kichik Kumdan and Aktash Glaciers in Ladakh region. 5Q 131 05 084 was the number assigned to the Siachen glacier by the expedition.
U.S. and Pakistani maps in the 1970s and 1980s consistently showed a dotted line from
NJ9842 (the northernmost demarcated point of the India-Pakistan cease-fire line, also known as the
Line of Control) to the
Karakoram Pass, which India believed to be a cartographic error and in violation of the
Simla Agreement. In 1984, India launched
Operation Meghdoot, a military operation that gave India control over all of the Siachen Glacier, including its tributaries. Between 1984 and 1999, frequent skirmishes took place between India and Pakistan. Indian troops under Operation Meghdoot pre-empted Pakistan's Operation Ababeel by just one day to occupy most of the dominating heights on
Saltoro Ridge to the west of Siachen Glacier. However, more soldiers have died from the harsh weather conditions in the region than from combat. Pakistan lost 353 soldiers in various operations recorded between 2003 and 2010 near Siachen, including 140 Pakistanis killed in the
2012 Gayari Sector avalanche. Between January 2012 and July 2015, 33 Indian soldiers died due to adverse weather. In December 2015, Indian Union Minister of State for Defence
Rao Inderjit Singh said in a written reply in the
Lok Sabha that a total of 869 Army personnel have died on the Siachen glacier due to climatic conditions and environmental and other factors from the date that the Army launched Operation Meghdoot in 1984. In February 2016, Indian Defence Minister
Manohar Parrikar stated that India will not vacate Siachen, as there is a trust deficit with Pakistan and also said that 915 people have died in Siachen since Operation Meghdoot in 1984. According to official records, only 220 Indian soldiers have been killed by enemy bullets since 1984 in Siachen area. Both India and Pakistan continue to deploy thousands of troops in the vicinity of Siachen and attempts to demilitarize the region have been so far unsuccessful. Prior to 1984, neither country had any military forces in this area. Aside from the Indian and Pakistani military presence, the glacier region is unpopulated. The nearest civilian settlement is the village of
Warshi, 10 miles downstream from the Indian base camp. The region is also extremely remote, with limited road connectivity. On the Indian side, roads go only as far as the military base camp at Dzingrulma (), 72 km from the head of the glacier. The Indian Army has developed various means to reach the Siachen region, including the
Manali-
Leh-
Khardung La-Siachen route. In 2012,
Chief of Army Staff of the Indian Army General Bikram Singh said that the Indian Army should stay in the region for strategic advantages, and because a "lot of blood has been shed" by Indian armed personnel for Siachen. The present ground positions, relatively stable for over a decade, mean that India maintains control over all of the Siachen Glacier and all of its tributary glaciers, as well as all the main passes and heights of the Saltoro Ridge immediately west of the glacier, including
Sia La,
Bilafond La,
Gyong La, Yarma La (6,100m), and (5,800m). Pakistan controls the glacial valleys immediately west of the Saltoro Ridge. According to
TIME magazine, India gained over in territory because of its 1980s military operations in Siachen. India has categorically stated that India will not pull its army from Siachen until the 110-km long
AGPL is first authenticated, delineated and then demarcated. .
Balti people grow this rose family in their houses as decoration, and its bark is used in
payo cha (
butter tea) instead of green tea leaves in some areas The
1949 Karachi agreement only carefully delineated the line of separation to point
NJ9842, after which, the agreement states, the line of separation would continue "thence north to the glaciers". According to the Indian stance, the line of separation should continue roughly northwards along the
Saltoro Range to the west of the Siachen glacier beyond NJ9842; international boundary lines that follow mountain ranges often do so by following the watershed
drainage divide The 1972
Simla Agreement made no change to the 1949 Line of Control in this northernmost sector. == Drainage ==