Any country’s representative borders are secured by the military forces. They will go through rigorous training sessions in order to protect the country, and the terminology used to provide them will be very different from that of the other citizens. The military forces will protect the country from unforeseen acts such as border crossings, receiving threatening drones with malicious intentions, attacks from opposing countries, and so on. The troops will be well-structured in all the variants of training, like running, fighting, exercises, etc., to sustain the conditions of the body and in protecting the country.
India and Nepal jointly fielded the two teams, namely, Nepal’s army official Bima Kumar Wagley, leading a team of 334, and India’s Army Colonel Himanshu Bahuguna, leading a team of 334. The military exercises will last until December 29, 2022. Every year, India and Nepal hold the Surya Kiran exercise. The 15th edition of the alignment exercises was held in Pithoragarh, India.
The speciality of this exercise is that the troops gain theoretical knowledge of warfare in the jungles relating to counter mutiny and counterterrorism military skills and disaster management, at the Nepal Army headquarters. The joint armies will be getting practical knowledge simultaneously with certain experiences, too. The surviving capabilities with the terrains, wild animal attacks, travelling from one place to another without proper roads, dense vegetation, treating various diseases with the use of tropical plants and trees, many more. The relationship between the two countries is imperative, because each requires the other and vice versa.
The country shares borders of around 1,850 km with five Indian states, namely: Sikkim, West Bengal, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and Uttarakhand. Nepal is dependent on India for the transportation of goods and services, and both countries have agreed to respect each other’s terminologies as they progress.