Doklam or Galwan? What Rahul Gandhi actually said in Lok Sabha and why it matters
Between repeated adjournments and a Heated debate in Lok Sabha Above Excerpts from former Army Chief General MM NaravaneAccording to his unpublished memoir, the political confrontation boils down to one unresolved question: Was Rahul Gandhi referring to Doklam or Galwan?
What Rahul Gandhi said inside the House was clear. He named it Doklam.
He said the episode he was referring to involved Chinese tanks entering Indian territory and attempting to capture a hill in Doklam, which he described in an excerpt from General Naravane’s memoir quoted in a magazine article.
On that statement the Treasury Bench took sharp objection not only to the parliamentary rules but also to the source. Defense Minister Rajnath Singh and Home Minister Amit Shah objected that an unpublished book could not be cited. Chairman Om Birla upheld the objections and repeatedly directed Gandhi not to read the memoir.
Despite the rulings, Gandhi persisted, arguing that the excerpts had already appeared in a published magazine article and asking why the government was “so uncomfortable” with reading them.
However, a separate debate took hold outside Parliament.
A section of social media users questioned whether Gandhi had said the wrong thing. His argument hinged on deadlines. Manoj Mukund Naravane served as the Army Chief from 2019 to 2022, while the Doklam standoff took place in 2017, two years before Naravane took charge.
In contrast, the article Gandhi cited refers to events in 2020 during the eastern Ladakh crisis following the Galwan Valley conflict. The article describes the advance of Chinese tanks towards Rechin La and Indian positions on the Kailash Range, developments related not to Doklam but to the Galwan-era standoff.
“Rahul Gandhi says Doklam instead of Galwan,” wrote one
The magazine itself has said that its article is taken from Naravane’s memoir and is based on 2020, the year of the Galwan conflict. An excerpt shared online describes a tense night in eastern Ladakh when Chinese armor came closer to Indian positions, forcing urgent military decisions at the highest levels.
The BJP seized on this discrepancy and accused Gandhi of misrepresenting facts and dragging a former army chief into politics. BJP leaders said Naravane has publicly said that China “did not lose even an inch of ground” during the standoff.
Amid the uproar, the House was adjourned for the day, but the parliamentary dispute over procedure formally persisted. However, politically and publicly, the focus shifted elsewhere – whether Rahul Gandhi’s words match the historical record.
But outside Parliament, the discussion continued: In the debate to thank the President, was Rahul Gandhi referring to Doklam, or did he accidentally fall into the Galwan debate?
Another user on Twitter accused Rahul Gandhi of misusing General MM Naravane’s name and questioning the bravery of the Indian Army, saying, “The difference between truth and lies became clear in Parliament.”
While one user said that Rahul Gandhi was attempting to quote from an unpublished and unverified book by former Army chief MM Naravane, he questioned why he did not instead mention videos and interviews that are already in the public domain.
General MM Naravane served as the Army Chief from December 2019 to April 2022, a period marked by several major military and political decisions.
He was at the helm during the clash with Chinese troops in Galwan Valley in June 2020, in which 20 Indian soldiers were killed.
– ends
tune in


