Chapter 4
The South Asia file
I am against the imperial streak in the
Indian psyche. The 1947 riots had a deep impact on my mind...About 5% to 6%
Brahmanas dominate India.”
“India
will give its land when it will be divided into many pieces. India will have to be broken up. If
India does not give us our
land we will go to war and divide India...believe
me, India
is so fragile. India has
such weak joints that if we want we could strike these weak joints then India
will dismember. But we don’t want India
to break....India
is ridden with problems...There are many other weak joints. Indians have strong
fissiparous tendencies, which is absent in Pakistan. One can easily exploit it
politically… Jinnah was right when he invited Ambedkar to join Pakistan.
Where are the lower classes? I am an Islamist. Islam is the final destiny of
mankind. Islam is moderate, Islam is progressive. Islam is everything that man
needs. It is not necessary to become a Muslim but it is necessary to adopt the
principles of Islam. Naseem Azavi and Iqbal’s writings have influenced my
thinking.”
Hamid Gul, Director General Pakistan ISI
Invent a geography called South Asia
The practice of
referring to the Indian subcontinent as South Asia began picking up momentum in the 90’s
simultaneously with the moves towards globalization in the region. The state department in the US and Foreign
Office (FO) in Pakistan started using it frequently to devalue the implicit
prominence of India as the premier country in the sub-continent. The Pakistan
FO even expressed a desire to rename the Indian Ocean so that the name India
is not associated to the ocean. The South Asian category was used initially to
describe any Indian living abroad. The term South Asia
is intended to ensure the negation of the presence of the Indic civilization
and obviate the fact that the Hindu religion is the religion of the majority of
the residents of the subcontinent. One
can be forgiven the inference that the intent is to submerge the Indian
identity under the general rubric of South Asia
and thereby attempt to erase the distinct Indian civilization after several
generations.
The main aim is to
reduce and ultimately negate the non-Muslim identity in the Indian
sub-continent in the wider world in the long run. When will this happen? Some
Pakistani commentators have remarked to Indian MPs that Pakistan will attain geopolitical balance with India
when the Muslim population will equal the Hindu population in the
sub-continent. In 1947 the Indian sub-continent had a total population of 400
million with 100 million Muslims. By 2000 the Muslims by themselves are 400
million and Bengali Muslims being the largest non-Arab ethnic Muslims in the
world. This has strengthened the vision of the pan Islamists in the
subcontinent to create a pan-Islamic political center, which will have the
largest Islamic block outside the Arab world.
To paraphrase a quote
from Ikram Sehgal, a Pakistani
: In South Asia there
are three major Muslim communities, the largest being in India, the second
largest in Bangladesh and the third in Pakistan. A strong Pakistan and a strong Bangladesh
is the security for the largest community of Muslims who live in India.
It is unfortunate but that sense of security comes from the fact that we are
there together and the people will understand that as long as the two strong
nations are there that they will be secure.
G. Parthasarathy remarks: “At a
recent meeting that I had with a group of prominent Pakistanis in a South Asian
capital, a close associate of General Musharraf bluntly remarked that if India believed that it could ignore differences
with Pakistan
and move ahead economically, his country would have no difficulty in taking
steps to retard Indian economic progress. A few years ago a former
Director-General of the ISI remarked to me that ‘Pakistan
would see to it that jihad in Kashmir would draw support from Muslims all
across India’.
This was in response to an assertion by me that Muslims in India were proud of the secular
ethos of their country. It is important to bear these factors in mind while
assessing the challenge that Pakistani policies pose to India. Pakistani
ideologues, especially in their Punjabi dominated armed forces establishment,
believe that they are the true inheritors of the Mughal throne in Delhi.”
So the intent is
clear. The influential elite of Pakistan
certainly does not believe in peaceful coexistence with India and
probably never did. Their goal remains unswerving and resolute, namely the
disintegration and breakup of India.
The real intent is that the Muslims of the entire South
Asia region will be able to equal and dominate the
non-Muslims in terms of identity, perception and supremacy when the population
equals or exceeds the non-Muslims now or sometime in future. It also means that
as long as a Islamic political center exists inside the subcontinent Muslims are
safe from the non-Muslims. Is this possible? By projecting the Pakistani
Ashrafs as the rightful leaders of all the Muslims in the sub-continent, the
Pakistani ruling elite are waiting for the right moment of ‘awakening’ when the
Muslims of India will join and support the political center in Pakistan and Bangladesh to create one monolithic
Muslim block to rival the non-Muslims.
Under the support of a
hyper power with control over world media, resources and a worldwide
recognition of Islamic religion with no negative implications, the non-Muslims
of the South Asia could be totally sub-merged and negated over a
period of time as early as a century from now.
According to the Pakistani elite India is not monolithic but a
heterogeneous conglomerate.
The main obstacle for
the Islamists and the pan Islamists in the sub-continent is the evolution of an
India freed from concerns
over the Muslims of South Asia, India
could then turn its full attention to America’s
rival, China.
Neutralizing Pakistan’s
threat to India is an
outstanding achievement for any Indian government; as such an eventuality would
be viewed as the beginning of an era of stability and prosperity for the Hindu State.
Indeed, as such a narrative unfolds, normalization of Indo-Pak relations would
finally enable India to bring the Muslims of the entire region under its writ,
a matter that the Hindus were not able to achieve even when Muslims were
demographically far weaker than today, over fifty years ago. They also admit
that before Prime Minister Vajpayee took power, America
overtly and covertly supported jihad in Kashmir and insisted upon the
implementation of UN Security Council Resolutions concerning Kashmir.
This has helped the Islamists wage a covert war against India.
The Islamists believe
that it was Muslim rule that liberated the Hindu masses of the Subcontinent
from oppression at the hands of their own Brahmana-led elite. According to
their narrative only under Muslim rule was the Subcontinent elevated to such
global economic and material significance, that the British
Empire valued this region above all others as its “Jewel in the
Crown.” Indeed, after Muslim rule, it is contended that the Subcontinent
suffered steep economic decline at the hands of the British, reducing it to
economic misery, a condition that the post-British leadership in India
has been unable to reverse. Accepting
the Hindu State,
as a regional leader merely on the basis of her Hindu majority is naive
political thinking propagated by Pakistan’s rulers. Leadership is
given to the one deserving of it. In reality of course to make a distinction
between the majority of the Pakistani leadership elite and the Islamists is an
exercise in naiveté.
The Islamists are of
the view that without doubt Pakistan
is fully capable of leading the people of the entire region. The Khilafah will
restore the leadership of the region to the Muslims, as well as providing
justice and protection to all the inhabitants of the region, be they Hindu,
Sikh or Christian. According to them, reports of terrible atrocities against
Muslim, Sikh and Christian minorities, as carried by India’s own media, are
more than enough to convince any impartial observer that the Hindu elite is
incapable of bestowing justice upon any people, leaving aside its treatment of
its co-religionist, lower caste Hindus. Indeed, or so the Islamists assert,
expecting justice from a nation, whose own religious teachings openly sanction
caste-based discrimination in society, depriving the majority of its own people
their rights, is nothing but naivete.
By creating a strong
political center in Pakistan,
Kashmiri nationalism was inspired and nurtured to insurgency in 1989. In the
next step Kashmir nationalism was subsumed
under the Islamic political movement in the sub-continent by 1995. The
statement from Islamists in 2003 is “The struggle of the Kashmiri people was not
aimed at securing a piece of land but to ensure the triumph of belief and
supremacy of Islam. The next stage is to create an all South
Asia Islamic political movement
which will create solidarity with Muslims of the sub-continent. When that
happens this movement will be able to oppose the non-Muslims of the
sub-continent when the Indian state becomes weak and create an alternative
Muslim political center for the entire South Asia
as a rival to Indian state”. Pakistan was creating for itself a
larger role in the geo-political game. J.N.Dixit paraphrases a speech
given by the CEO Musharraf to the Pakistan Institute of International Affairs
on 23 June 2000.
The idea of the
integration of Kashmir with Pakistan
may be given up if it is expedient to do so. Pakistan wishes to emerge as the leader of an Islamic bloc comprising
Afghanistan, CAR countries, and Iran with peripheral support from the Gulf States and Turkey. It claims this status by
virtue of the fact that in this century, “the century of gas”, no longer one of
oil, all gas supplies to India,
South East Asia and further East, have to pass through Pakistan.
Amir of the Markaz,
Hafiz Muhammad SA‘eed declares: ‘In fact, the Hindu is a mean enemy and the
proper way to deal with him is the one adopted by our forefathers … who crushed
them by force. We need to do the same’. India is a special target for the
Markaz’s mujahideen. According to the Amir, ‘The jihad is not about Kashmir only. It encompasses all of India’. Thus, the Markaz sees the
jihad as going far beyond the borders of Kashmir and spreading through all of India.
The final goal is to extend Muslim control over what is seen as having once
been Muslim land, and, hence, to be brought back under Muslim domination,
creating ‘the Greater Pakistan by dint of jihad’. Thus, at a mammoth
congregation of Markaz supporters in November 1999, the Amir declared, ‘Today I
announce the break-up of India,
Inshallah. We will not rest until the whole of India
is dissolved into Pakistan’.
On the same occasion, Amir Hamza, senior Markaz official and editor of its Urdu
organ, ad-Da’wa, thundered: ‘We ought to disintegrate India and even wipe India out’. Those who take part in
this anti-Indian jihad are promised that ‘Allah will save [them] from the pyre
of hell’, and ‘huge palaces in paradise’ await those who are killed in fighting
the ‘disbelieving enemies’.
This project for the
disintegration of India,
followed by its take-over by Pakistan
and the establishment of an Islamic state in the entire sub-continent, is
sought to be justified by an elaborate set of arguments that use the rhetoric
of liberation. Thus, instances of human-sacrifice, untouchability, infanticide,
the oppression of the ‘low’ castes by the Brahmanas and the suppression of
women in Hinduism are described in great detail, and on this basis it is sought
to be shown that such a religion as Hinduism should not ‘be allowed to
flourish’. In Markaz literature, incidents such as Godhara and its aftermath
are portrayed as the mass slaughter of Muslims by Hindu chauvinist groups,
often in league with the Indian state and its agencies, and the growing wave of
attacks on other marginalized groups in India such as the ‘low’ caste Dalits,
Shudras and Christians, are presented in stark colors, and the point forcefully
made that such a country ‘where non-Hindus are not allowed to exist’ should
break-up.
Of course such an
assessment comes from a country which has systematically erased all significant
traces of its Hindu population and touts itself very proudly as an Islamic
republic with not even a modicum of judicial recourse for the minorities such
as Christians and Hindus. Even after the exodus of Hindus from what was then
West Pakistan , there had been about 5 million Sindhis, Sikhs and a few others
left behind in that region. Today they have all but vanished, one of the great
but unspoken genocides of the 20th century.
Retired Lieutenant
General Hamid Gul, former head of Pakistan’s Inter Services Intelligence
directorate, asserts ... that the only reason Pakistan does not dismember India
is because “we never wanted to create problems with our Muslim population in
India.”
Also he says and the passage is self explanatory “ I am against the imperial streak in the
Indian psyche. The 1947 riots had a deep impact on my mind...About 5% to 6%
Brahmanas dominate India.”
“India
will give its land when it will be divided into many pieces. India will have to be broken up. If
India does not give us our
land we will go to war and divide India...believe
me, India
is so fragile. India has
such weak joints that if we want we could strike these weak joints then India
will dismember. But we don’t want India
to break....India
is ridden with problems...There are many other weak joints. Indians have strong
fissiparous tendencies, which is absent in Pakistan. One can easily exploit it
politically… Jinnah was right when he invited Ambedkar to join Pakistan.
Where are the lower classes? I am an Islamist. Islam is the final destiny of
mankind. Islam is moderate, Islam is progressive. Islam is everything that man
needs. It is not necessary to become a Muslim but it is necessary to adopt the
principles of Islam. Naseem Azavi and Iqbal’s writings have influenced my
thinking.”
There is another
problem for India especially
when it comes to the US,
which has taken upon itself the role of the protector of Pakistan obviously against its main
adversary. The Indian identity in the US is an ambiguous one. There have
been cases of ordinary Americans who were surprised that Indians are actually
Indians of South Asia and not really the American Indians/native
Americans of North American continent. This is an example of the reality that
vast groups of society in the western world can be ignorant of a prominent
civilization and a national identity, even when such a civilization has a
global reach as in the case of the Indic civilization. The notion here is that
the identity of Indians/Hindus with a unique civilization can be erased over
time if a proper strategy of media, negation of culture, academic work and
judicious headshaping is executed.
Stability in South Asia from a western point of view
When the
Cold War ended, India and Pakistan,
always hyphenated, were often characterized by Western strategists as
irresponsible or dangerous because of their apparent pursuit of nuclear
weapons. Typical of such a viewpoint is
the following passage “Closely
related to nuclear policy is the relationship among India,
Pakistan, and the United States.
That Pakistan
even exists is viewed by most Indians as the result of an act of perfidy by the
British at the time of independence. With a population that is 12 percent
Muslim, India
cannot accept that the two religions must have “two nations” and cannot live
side-by-side. As a result, ever since partition in 1947, the relationship
between Pakistan and India
has been an emotional one. Its intensity is evidenced by the fact that India
and Pakistan have engaged in open warfare five times — in 1948, 1965, 1971,
1984, and 1999 — and India almost started a sixth, all-out war during its
military exercise “Brasstacks” in 1987.”
The above passage, ostensibly
written by a correspondent sympathetic to India, has all the ingredients of
the conventional wisdom as seen by the West. There is the attempt to hyphenate
and equate the two nations. There is a not so subtle attempt to paint India
as the more intransigent nation, in drawing attention to her opposition to the
two-nation theory. What is left unsaid is very revealing. There is no mention
of the fact that Pakistan
has never reconciled itself to the mere existence of India,
not to mention that it totally rejects the notion that India is a multi-ethnic
multi-religious nation with equality under the law guaranteed regardless of
ethnic origin and religious preference. Left unsaid is the fact that, just as
is the case with India,
no European nation would accept the hypothesis of a two-nation theory as a
basis for dividing up its territory. Surely it is not the contention of the
West, that India
should accept the two-nation theory which as we have mentioned in the preface,
is rooted in Islamic theology. There is no mention of the fact that all 5
conflicts with India were
instigated at the behest of Pakistan.
There is no mention that the Hindu minority in Pakistan has been decimated in a
systematic manner since 1947 in what is one of the significant genocidal acts
of the 20th century.
Now, the motives that
created these South Asia programs are becoming
increasingly clear. While the major threats to South Asia are internal low growth rates, inequitable
distribution of wealth, and ethnic and religious conflicts exacerbated by an
environmental crisis these states do have legitimate external security concerns
as well. Pakistan, according
to some in the west, is in the same situation as Israel, in that it is faced with a
much larger adversary that barely recognizes its legitimacy. India, like the Austro-Hungarian empire, is a
multinational entity with both strong (China
and Pakistan) and weak (Sri Lanka, Nepal,
and Bangladesh)
neighbors; it has significant differences with the former, but the very
weaknesses of the latter pose a threat also.
Geopolitical Factors as viewed by the West
It is de rigueur in the West to paint the Indo Pakistan conflict in extreme
alarmist language especially in comparison with the Cold war. Typical of
American viewpoints is that of Stephen Cohen of the Brookings Institute. The
narrative is as follows. “The U.S.–Soviet
relationship was politically stable. There were strong institutional restraints
on the leaders of both the United States and the Soviet Union, the stakes of
the violent conflicts that did take place were relatively small (and were
mostly fought by proxies), and the level of risk that was taken was low except
for the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Some of these political factors are present in South
Asia, others are absent. There are strong
institutional restraints on Indian decision-makers, although at critical
moments these restraints have broken down. This was the case in 1987 during the
Brasstacks exercise, when routine administrative procedures were bypassed in
favor of adventurism. Ironically, in 1962 during the India–China war, the
institutions themselves pushed a reluctant senior leader, Jawaharlal Nehru,
into a conflict he wanted to avoid. In Pakistan, time and again,
institutional restraints have proven to be nonexistent, as a small group of
leaders, usually from the army, decided on regional war and peace without much
in the way of staffing, discussion, or public debate. Indeed, since it was
usually felt that the smaller, more vulnerable Pakistan might have to move first
and fast, there were strategic reasons why the circle of decision-makers was
kept smaller than it should have been.
Furthermore, South Asia differs from the Cold War in that the stakes
for both sides are very high as demonstrated by past wars. Pakistan was severed
in half in 1971, and India
fears that conflicts with Pakistan
could lead to internal Hindu Muslim strains that might again tear India
apart. It was originally thought that the war with China
might result in the loss of all of northeast India and Nehru said as much in a
desperate radio broadcast, virtually writing off the region. So, while the
specific conflicts that engage the two countries are sometimes trivial (and)
the Siachen dispute is the epitome of irrelevance, leaders on both sides are
aware that even a trivial conflict might quickly escalate to something far more
serious.
When it comes to propensity for risk taking, the contention is that “it
is evident that South Asian leaders oscillate between extreme caution and
irresponsible gambling. For the most part, the Indian leadership has been ultra
cautious, but, it is contended by Western observers, the Brasstacks crisis
revealed such a high propensity for risk taking that was by and large absent in
earlier conflicts. On the Pakistani side, there is a long record of speculative
adventurism or, to put it more charitably, of gross misestimates of the
consequences that the use of force might have. Pakistan misjudged the
consequences of supporting the raiders in 1947, the attack in Kashmir in 1965,
and the crackdown on East Pakistan in 1970”.
South Asia from Indian point of view
It is often asserted
that India’s
emergence as a regional power and a key global player depends largely on her
image and standing in the South Asian neighborhood. Further, if India cannot effectively generate and ensure her
key status in South Asia, how can the world be
convinced that it can carve influence farther a field. India’s nuclear weapons, space programs,
missiles development and her overwhelming superiority in military strength are
of no use, or so the argument goes, if the South Asian neighborhood takes India for granted and merrily tramples on India’s
national interests and her image. India
needs to introduce an element of ‘unilateralism’ in her state-craft in South Asia. While this is a reasonable scenario, it
is interesting that no such requirements are placed on China. It is not demanded for
instance, that China convince
Vietnam, Japan or South
Korea in order to prove her standing as ‘first among
equals’ in East Asia
Sri
Lanka
India’s national interests demand maintaining
the unity and sovereignty of the Sri Lanka nation state. India’s domestic Tamil politics should not
become the touchstone of India’s
policies towards Sri Lanka.
India needs to react
forcefully to ensure that Sri
Lanka remains a unified state with a set up
that would meet the just aspirations of a majority of Tamils. Again the connection between the national
integrity of SriLanka and that of India is unnecessary. The simple
fact of the matter is that other than offering moral support for Sri Lankan
Tamils, Indian Tamils do not take their cue from their brothers in SriLanka. If
anything it is the other way around.
Bangladesh
For far too long has India been oblivious to the playing of the
‘Indian-Card’ (for or against) in Bangladesh’s domestic politics. For
far too long has India
tolerated the use of Bangladesh
as a springboard for Pakistan’s
strategic de-stabilization of India’s
North-Eastern states. India
could borrow a leaf from Myanmar’s
dealing with the Rohinggya problem emanating from Saudi based
organizations in Bangladesh.
Al Qaeda’s tentacles exist in Bangladesh.
The China-Bangladesh Defense Cooperation Agreement adds an additional dimension
to the threats. India needs
to draw redlines in terms of India’s
national interests which Bangladesh
must not overstep with impunity. In tandem, India
through its big business houses should integrate Bangladesh into more commercial
linkages. Increased Indian economic investments in Bangladesh
could generate thousands of jobs and remove the root cause of Bangladesh’s instability and move
towards Islamic fundamentalism.
Nepal: Nepal has been wracked by a Maoist
insurgency for the last five or six years. India
has remained a passive bystander witnessing the growing erosion of Nepal’s
state power. Other than giving some military materiel for counter insurgency
operations, no weighty measures have been taken. India has not recognized the gravity of a Maoist
take-over of Nepal.
As per some analysts, the strategic implications of a Maoist take-over of Nepal are that Nepal
becomes a total client state of China.
A Maoist Nepal under Chinese tutelage would be a serious disruptive factor for
US global strategies in the region. Maoist-insurgents ruled Nepal would inextricably get dragged into
Islamic terrorist organizations linkages, besides China’s policies towards the
Islamic world.
India needs to realize the gravity of the
strategic implications, specific to India,
namely that a China-aligned Nepal
removes an important buffer state between India
and China.
India
would have to militarily man the India-Nepal border in strength, which may eat
up two to three infantry
divisions. A China-aligned Nepal
adds to the existing China-client states in South Asia i.e. Pakistan
and Bangladesh.
It would be a very unholy trinity with not only the Western and Eastern flanks
of India under China’s
influence, but the Northern flank too added.
For the majority
peoples of India, the only
Hindu kingdom in the world would slide down ignobly into a Chinese-Islamic
coalition in South Asia. The Hindu identity in
the South Asia will be given a deathblow with
the disintegration of the monarchy.
Structural Factors
In South
Asia, as during a certain period
of the Cold War, a structural asymmetry could make the region less stable in
the future than in the past. And, as in the larger Cold War, the wild card is China.
The United States and the
Soviet Union once feared that China
might precipitate a war between them. However, whereas China never became a decisive factor in
U.S.–Soviet conflict, it could be a determining factor in a future India–Pakistan
conflict that spilled over and involved Beijing.
For the most part, China has
been increasingly restrained in its involvement in South Asia, and its public
statements urging caution and dialog now sound very much like those of Western
states and Russia.
But a degree of uncertainty remains about China’s future role.
Another structural
factor—the imbalance between India
and its neighbors, including Pakistan—is
less important as a cause of instability than it is as a reason why it is so
difficult to reduce instability. During the Cold War, the two superpowers were
about evenly matched, each had strong alliance partners, and their relative
power was always self-evident and generally in balance. In South Asia, however, every regional state
has a border with India. None has a border with any
of the others. This makes it hard for any regional state to step forward and
offer its services as a mediator. With the exception of the still-feeble SAARC,
there are no regional mechanisms that might help moderate, let alone resolve,
disputes between India and Pakistan, India
and Nepal, India and Bangladesh,
and India and Sri Lanka.
Any regional state that might claim the role of intermediary would be accused
of trying to advance its own case vis-à-vis India in the guise of offering its
good offices. This structural peculiarity explains why outside peacekeepers
have been an important feature of the region since 1948. Although they have
rarely been welcomed by the dominant power, India,
they are eagerly sought out by the weaker powers of South
Asia, who cannot find a local peacemaker. The above narrative
betrays a propensity to fail to accept the reality that India is the predominant regional
power in the Subcontinent. As the regional power India
is unlikely to accept mediation in her disputes with neighbors in much the same
manner as China or the US
refuse mediation in their disputes with their neighbors.
Thus, on balance, or
so goes the conventional wisdom in the US,
South Asia is probably more crisis-prone than was the
U.S.–Soviet relationship, especially if we see the introduction of nuclear
weapons, missiles, and other highly destructive, essentially first-strike
weapons into the region. The introduction of such weapons will also have a
secondary impact: they will affect India’s
and Pakistan’s relations
with major powers outside South Asia, especially China,
Iran, Saudi Arabia, and perhaps Indonesia. If, as in the past,
either state enters into a military alliance with one or more of these outside
powers, then the uncertainties will be two-way: How will Indian or Pakistani
power be put in the service of its allies, and in a crisis how will the
resources of an ally affect the India–Pakistan military balance?
There are so many
imponderables and uncertainties, it is hard to draw any concrete conclusions
except that regional stability will have to be calculated, and recalculated,
with national inferior technical means, possibly under the influence of
populist political movements in both states. Most frightening of all, it will
have to be done while one state (or perhaps both) is trying to contain a
separatist movement aided by the other. The analogy here is not so much the
Cold War, where the United States and the Soviet Union had no direct economic,
territorial, or cultural conflicts, but the still-strained relationship between
North Korea and South Korea, or between Israel and its major neighbors, or
between France and Germany in the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries—conflicts that had a “family” element to them, between adversaries
that had much in common, but real and substantive disagreements as well.
North-East
India consists of part of the state of West Bengal, Assam,
Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, Tripura and Meghalaya. Most
people of the area are isolated from mainland India. There has been very little
economic development in the areas. There have been anti-Bengali riots in Assam.
Nagas and Mizos have been engaged in armed war of liberation, insurgencies to
which Pakistan have provided
aid from East Pakistan. There has been
considerable infiltration of Muslims into Assam
from East Pakistan, which has been encouraged
by the Government of India for vote-bank politics. The presence of a sizable
Muslim population will assist the operations. China has large territorial claims
in Arunachal Pradesh and may agree to support the cause. The area is rich in
mineral resources. The area produces 4 million tons of crude oil per year and
accounts for half of the tea exports from India. Its loss will be a major
loss to India.
North-East India is considered to be a suitable target by Pakistan for dismembering India.
The advantages of this area as a target for subversion are;
A improbable target
hence India
is not on its guard.
The local people want
independence.
India will suffer considerable
economic loss.
A long and vulnerable
corridor which can be exploited.
The disadvantage of this target is that;
Nothing can be
achieved without assistance from China
and Bangladesh.
No political benefit
from the events in Pakistan.
As far as relative
strength goes India has a
very substantial military force deployed in Kashmir.
Pakistan does not have the
strength to win a military victory in Kashmir
or on any battlefield in the subcontinent. China is unlikely to be interested
in this adventure, as it has nothing to gain from it. Even if insurgency could
be created in the state and all aid provided, it would still be difficult to
annex Kashmir.
India
also had a very substantial military force deployed in the Northeast. However,
these forces were mainly in a defensive posture on the Chinese border. The few
formations that were spared were deployed for insurgency operations. There were
hardly any troops earmarked for the defense of the Siliguri Corridor,
particularly oriented towards Bangladesh.
Deductions: 1. Both Kashmir and North East India are viable targets for
dismembering India.
2. Loss of North-East India will hurt India more. Hence this should be
the priority one target.
3. It will be easier to get China
interested into the scheme if North-East is the target. Support of China
in the matter is most vital.
4. If Pakistan continues to
target Kashmir, Pakistan could:
a) Continue to foster the communal schism in the state. This could be by
infiltrating the ranks of the religious teachers and school teachers and
constant anti-India propaganda with the youth as the target. There is enough
unemployment and economic discontent to be exploited.
b) Identify potential insurgent leaders from the educational institutions and
encourage them to come to Pakistan
for training and indoctrination. c) Create and strengthen militancy by
providing military and financial aid.
d) Intervene militarily at the appropriate time.
5. If Pakistan adopts North-East India as the target, it could
a) Eliminate Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. (1975)
b) Convert Bangladesh
into the Islamic state instead of a secular one after elimination of Sheikh
Mujibur Rahman. (1975)
c) Regain political and military influence in Bangladesh. (1975)
d) Take China
into confidence.(1975)
e) Provide financial aid for infiltration of Muslims into Assam. (1975)
f) Provide all possible aid to the insurgents in the North-East (1999)
The above plan in a
fictional account mirrors the reality of a South Asia plan by Pakistan,
Bangladesh and China
in future. If Nepal also
joins this group then we have a grand plan to dismember India in the long term. The new
hope for Pakistan Islamists came after the assassination of Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman by some pro-Pakistan colonels and majors and resumption of the training
of the anti-India insurgents of North-eastern States in Bangladesh, as East
Pakistan used to do earlier. Then Secretary of State Kissinger and the US
government supported such a action. Major Zia-ur-Rahman who followed Mujib as
President restarted the training camps for Indian insurgent groups. Khaleda
Zia’s return to power was very helpful in this respect after the toppling of
two military dictators Zia-ur-Rahman and H.M. Ershad. ISI was able to operate
again from Bangla soil. Captain Sher Nawaz, now Maj. Gen. Sher Nawaz was posted
as First Secretary in Pakistan
embassy in Dhaka. There were frequent military
exchanges between the three countries as China
too was now co-opted in the new plot to cut off Northeastern States from India by the cutting-off of the narrow Siliguri
enclave joining India with Assam.
Regular meetings of Bangladesh
ex-Army leaders of the leftist political party JSD were held in China.
Sher Nawaz, in Dhaka took northeastern guerilla leaders from Assam, Nagaland, Mizoram, Manipur
and Tripura. China had
active interest in Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim. It started strengthening
its logistics, infrastructure and artillery and air bases in Tibet. Bangladesh
was helped to raise two new divisions with the help of China and Pakistan.
Political Analysis of India
The nature and
character of the Indian nation-state and its political boundaries—internal and
external—have evolved throughout the centuries. It has shown a varying mix of
“high” and “low” degree of statehood or nationhood that varied with historical
experience, institutional legacies and political culture. The state-society
relationship in pre-colonial India
was primarily instrumental, “the state upheld and protected society and its
values rather than itself constituting the highest form of community and the
means for realizing value”. The colonial state structure in India was, however,
qualitatively different as the British constructed a unitary state and
centralized political unity based on the notion of a ‘singular and indivisible
sovereignty’ through its practices of ‘bureaucratic authoritarianism’. Such an
administrative structure was rooted in an impersonalized and institutionalized
vast administrative structure that penetrated the lowest rungs of the Indian
society. The nationalist consciousness of the nineteenth century did not
question or attempt to radically transform the colonial state. The dominant
argument was that the British rule was alien and unrepresentative, and hence
the demand for an independent state representing Indian nationalism. The logic
of a modern state representing one nation, or of transferring the
responsibility of managing social relations among individuals and collective identities
from indigenous social regulatory mechanisms to the state, was not questioned.
The political leadership of modern India perceived the state as the
prime mover, the key repository of political power that would act as an agency
of collectively intended social change.
The Constituent
Assembly rested the foundations of the Indian State
on three key pillars of democracy, federalism and secularism. The Congress
leadership had upheld the secular, pluralist idea of the Indian nation. Given
the European model of nation building, however, the cultural unification of India
was a prerequisite for building a modern nation state, which did not fit the
pluralities and diversity of Indian society. The result was a paradox. Nehru
insisted that conceptually the imagining of the Indian nation was an
accomplished and irreversible fact that did not have to be constantly
negotiated, presented and justified. Materially, however, it was in infancy, a
nation-in-the-making that needed to be protected against contending identities.
Accordingly, state formation processes were geared towards constructing a
strong state, capable of defending a nascent nation.
US took over the
pivotal leadership role of the sub-continent after the independence of the new
states from UK
the old colonial master in 1940s. By independence, the India’s new elite which had formed by
interaction with Britain had
dominated India’s
political landscape for nearly a century, through institutions such as the
Indian National Congress established by the British in 1885. They shared a remarkably
uniform intellectual worldview, which in time came to include the tenets of
Fabian socialism.. This particular brand of socialism developed in the 1880s in England
as an attempt to salvage Marxism from what then appeared to be its all too
accurate predictions of class struggle and labor violence. This may have been
what the British wanted the leadership in India post independence to have and
were comfortable to deal with a class with uniform view about the world. But
the real aim of the British was to have a dominion rule over India for 500 years as some
speeches in commonwealth reveal in 1900.
The UK was not happy to see India consolidating itself into a
large country with a democratic political system under the leadership of Nehru.
The British hoped that India
would revert to an agglomeration of quarreling states after Independence and become susceptible to
influence from other powers. They wanted a large Muslim political center which
will dominate the rest of the smaller states and be seen by all the Muslims in
the sub-continent as protector of their interests. However what they did not
reckon was that the Indian freedom movement was a genuine freedom struggle and
threw leaders who were intellectually equal to the best in the world. The
efforts of two of them Sardar Patel and V.P. Menon who single handedly brought
about the end of history in the sub-continent and brought about a relatively
bloodless revolution by merging the so called Princely states into the Indian
union. Nehru and Krishna Menon acquired some influence in the world affairs
from 1950 to 1962, when colonialism was being ended and cold war at its height.
But this influence died with Chinese invasion of 1962[this may have been the
motivation for the war in 1962]. Jawaharlal Nehru never quite recovered from
the debacle of 1962, Menon was fired and whatever moral influence India
had carved out for itself in the post independence era, vanished.
India’s dalliance with
the nuclear question goes way back to the early 1940s well before India shook
itself free from British colonialism, the American use of atom bombs against
Japan, and the full story of the efforts-unsuccessful in Germany and successful
in the United States-to build nuclear weapons came to light. India’s interest in the nuclear issues was
spurred by the emergence of an impressive community of scientists in the early
decades of the 20th century in India, who managed to produce world
quality work despite the utter backwardness of the country. Scientists like
C.V.Raman, Ramanujan, and S.N. Bose were making substantive contributions to
international scientific development. Indians, with a long tradition of
excellence in mathematics, took eagerly to modern physics that was about to
fundamentally transform the world.
The Indian scientists
were part of the exciting developments that were taking place in Europe in the field of atomic physics and clued into the
debate on the economic and political implications of the prospect of harnessing
nuclear energy. One of them, Dr. Homi Jehangir Bhabha was determined to ensure
that when the Second World War ended and India became independent, it should
be ready to enter the atomic age quickly. In 1944, fully three years before
independence, Bhabha wrote and got a grant from the Tata Trust to set up a
facility-the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research at Bombay-to for advanced work on nuclear and
allied areas of physics. Prime Minister Nehru, who took a strong interest in
the development of India’s
scientific capabilities, gave unstinting support to Bhabha in building a
wide-ranging national nuclear program.
The focus of Bhabha
and Nehru was on peaceful uses of nuclear energy. Like all the physicists and
politicians who backed them in the 1950s, Bhabha and Nehru believed that nuclear
research will lead to “energy too cheap to be metered”; and energy was to be
the cornerstone of India’s
rapid development. Nehru’s own high-profile international diplomacy, and
Bhabha’s wide-ranging contacts in the community of Western physicists-many of
whom were now close to policy-making circles-ensured that India got substantive
international co-operation in building an infrastructure for atomic research
and development. Bhabha’s standing was high enough to be elected as the
president of the world’s first international conference on atomic energy for
peaceful purposes at Geneva
in 1955.
Even as they laid the
foundations of a broad-based nuclear program, Bhabha and Nehru were not unaware
of its military potential. But Nehru clearly ruled out the military application
of nuclear energy although he said could not vouch for the policies of the
future generations of Indian leaders. With Nehru’s emphasis on peace and
disarmament in India’s
foreign policy, it could not have been otherwise. He took the lead in calling
the world to come to a standstill on nuclear weapon development, adopt a ban on
nuclear testing and a freeze on production of nuclear material.
Even as they
campaigned for nuclear disarmament, Nehru and Bhabha were clear in their mind India should
not give up the option to make nuclear weapons in the future. For this reason
they refused to support any control mechanism-whether it was the Baruch Plan of
the U.S. in 1945 or the
international safeguards system-that sought to limit India’s nuclear potential and
future decision making on the bomb. Until the mid 1960s, the primary focus of
the Indian nuclear policy was on building civilian nuclear technology,
de-emphasising the military spin-off, and actively campaigning for nuclear
restraint at the global level. This policy mix came under tremendous pressure
in October 1964, when China
conducted its first nuclear test and declared itself the fifth nuclear weapon
power. China’s test, coming
barely two years after Beijing humiliated New Delhi in a border conflict, forced India to debate for the first time
in open its nuclear weapon option. There were strong demands within India
for acquiring nuclear weapons; but there was also considerable hesitation
arising from the deep revulsion against nuclear weapons and the notion of
deterrence. This deep feeling in the polity was a cultivated experience by the
UK/US soon after the WWII. Nehru’s death five months before China’s test had made it more difficult for India
to make up her mind on nuclear weapons.
What explains the
failure of Indian nationalism to deliver an Indian national identity? India’s
extraordinary social diversity continues to find expression in a plethora of
political movements. In the absence of the political symbols and values that
comprise a single national identity, the resulting political conflicts are
probably more intense and difficult to resolve. What went wrong?
When India attained freedom, it thought
of emerging as a global leader, without becoming a global power. Its
claim to leadership rested on the age-old Indian, value of universal tolerance,
peace and happiness. But the post-war World afflicted by cold war had no
reverence for such high values. So India was swiftly marginalized in a
World which respected only power. But, within India, the Indian leadership did
the other way round - it persuaded the people not to pursue their age-old
values, but, accept the Anglo-Saxon ideas and institutions in the main. It
folded back the philosophic lead shown by Gandhi, Aurobindo, and Tilak. Their
definition of the Indian identity was substituted by the western ideas of
secularism and socialism. Since then, for over four decades, the Left-Socialist
parties and intellectuals mounted a vicious attack on the Indian past, and
virtually de-linked the Indian polity, economy,
history and education from its past and turned to Anglo-Saxon values. This is
the subversion of the Indian political philosophy (one of the center of
gravity) successfully carried out by the Anglo-Saxon colonial powers.
This is precisely what
the Indian freedom movement had struggled against before independence. Because
of this drift of the Indian intellectual, India’s past became a burden - and
ceased to be matter of pride. Also, the secular-socialist leadership
systematically fragmented Indian society into majority and minority, rich and
poor, forwards and backwards - and denied India of the deeper awareness of its
intrinsic unity brought about by the Indic values and Indic civilization. This
resulted in setting one Indian against another leading to massive
self-deprecation - and eroded India’s
self-confidence as a nation. The idea of a powerful India could not be internalized in
a situation where every Indian was running down every other.
Founding of a Nation, 1948-1956
Jawaharlal
Nehru recognized that “India
as a nation in 1947-48 had a deeply ambiguous inheritance”. Nehru’s “forging”
of an Indian nation and establishing for it an international identity was the
first task. Looking from the perspective of the end of Nehru’s century and the
ending of a world order demarcated by blocs ranged against each other in fear
and hostility, it is perhaps difficult to recognize quite what an innovative
and visionary stand India
took under Nehru.
The Frustration of a Vision, 1957-1964
Forging
a democracy was the most difficult task for Nehru. In 1957 the Communist Party
came into power in the state of Kerala. Nehru, much against his sense of fair
play and democratic norms, was forced to agree to the dismissal of a
democratically elected state government by the Center. The failure of Nehru’s China
policy led to considerable erosion of his authority. Krishna Menon, who was
close to Nehru, later wrote, “It had a very bad effect on him. It demoralized
him very much. Every thing that he had built was threatened; India was to adopt a militaristic
outlook which he did not like. And he also knew about the big economic burdens
we were carrying.”
In
August 1963 Nehru faced the first ever no-confidence motion in the parliament.
Though the motion was defeated 346 to 61, it was an indication of the declining
authority of the Prime Minister. On crucial policy matters Finance Minister
Morarji Desai and Food and Agriculture Minister S.K. Patil defied Nehru. It was
against this background that the Kamaraj Plan was adopted and Nehru got rid of
both Desai and Patil from the cabinet. But Nehru was not left with much time to
reassert his authority in any meaningful fashion. He had a mild stroke while he
was about to address the party delegates in Bhubaneshwar in January 1964.
1950 - India
becomes a republic with Nehru as its prime minister. He was deeply involved in
the development and implementation of the country’s five-year plans that over
the course of the 1950s and 1960s see India become one of the most
industrialized nations in the world. Industrial complexes are established
around the country, while innovations are encouraged by an expansion of
scientific research. In the decade between 1951 and 1961, the national income
of India
rises 42%. In foreign affairs, Nehru advocates policies of nationalism,
anti-colonialism, internationalism, and nonalignment or “positive neutrality”.
He founds the nonaligned movement with Yugoslavia’s
Tito and Egypt’s Nasser and
becomes one of the key spokesmen of the nonaligned nations of Asia and Africa.
1956 - India
under Nehru is the only nonaligned country in the United
Nations (UN) to vote with the Soviet Union on the invasion of Hungary,
calling into question the country’s nonaligned status. This stance of India sets in motion of the West to align with Pakistan
and become anti-India for a long time throughout the cold war. The public
perception of India
in the west being a supporter of Soviet Russia stayed on from that time and
lingered even after the cold war. The perception of the world by Nehru during
1910-1950s was greatly influenced by Soviet Union
and other liberal movements which made him sympathetic. But his leaning towards Soviet could have
been plotted by the British using their control over the Indian policies to
make it seem that India
was anti-west.
India has never developed a
critical core uniform set of polity [ powerful group of people] which controls
the destiny of the country. Indian National Congress consisted of colonial
educated deracinated elite which had a non-real view of the world of power.
Other large countries have a core group which is homogeneous in either
ethnicity or culture and also has sufficient influence in the polity. The basic
assumption in the western political analysis is that members of social groups
share common consciousness. Shared religion, language, caste, or classes are
all assumed to generate not only consciousness of group identity but also agreement
about common interests. The US
has the Anglo Saxons, Chinese have the Han population, Russia has the Slavic people. The
theory of political science according to Tomas Hobbes says that the political
structure is a balance between three entities. One is the State, the second is
the special group or a strong group of people within the country usually a
common ethnic group and the third entity in the political structure is the
common people. India
is perceived to be deficient in the basic foundation of the political structure
by some western analysts. According to them Indian
nationalism delivered a state but not a nation at the time of independence.
The earlier homogeneous group of people that formed the core leadership of the
Congress party and the most influential, has withered away due to the severing
of its base/kinship with the help of the leftists and the decay in its
ideology.
The first attempt to
reduce the union was the Kashmir war in 1948
itself. This was considered a victory by the Ashrafs and the political elite in
Pakistan
in its self appointed role as the ideological leader of the Islamic ummah.
Nothing would shake the deeply held conviction that the forces of the Islamic
Khilafat have always won against the non-Islamic forces in the sub-continent
for over 1000 years. The second attempt to reduce the Union of India was
attempted after Nehru’s death in 1964. Ayub Khan blundered headlong into a war
with India in 1965 after
convincing himself that a weak political leadership under Prime Minister
Shastri would wilt to give concessions on Kashmir.
After the Pakistan
defeat the strategy to create a Muslim political history in the sub-continent
was taken with the publishing of History of India in 1966 by Romila Thapar. The
goal was to make Pakistan
more secure and strong enough to break the Indian political union. The
OIC[Organization of Islamic countries] was created in 1969 under Pakistani
sponsorship and support of Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to create a large international Islamic
political body which can balance and ultimately dominate India. This body over time was
supposed to get sufficient weight and influence that it can then oppose India
in the international forums.
The Anglo American
alliance considered the increasing influence of India
after Independence
as a threat to their influence and standing in the world. The
combination of Nehru’s idealism and Mrs. Gandhi’s adroit use of power on the
international scene is credited by some students of Indian foreign policy with
having placed this country among the world’s most influential nations. During
Mrs. Gandhi’s tenure, for example, India
had solidified its position as a leader of the third world and of the
Commonwealth, and become the dominant power in South Asia.
After the 1971 break
up of Pakistan, the US strategy was accelerated to weaken the
political structure of India.
The strategy was to downplay India
in particular and the sub-continent in Asia so
that its trade with the rest of the world decreases and to ensure that
successive Indian governments were relegated to the end of the diplomatic
table. The US relationship
with India seems to
constantly have the objective of keeping the conflict with Pakistan simmering but to prevent
it from erupting into an open war, knowing very well that the Pakistanis would
promptly and ignominiously lose rather decisively in such a battle.
India however, failed to
consolidate its position after 1971. From a position of dominance over Pakistan and an economy larger than that of China in 1971, India
moved to a position of weakness and strategic disadvantage vis-à-vis China and Pakistan by 2000. In the meanwhile,
the strategy of working inside India
to create fissures was started after 1971 with the creation of South Asia studies departments in US Universities under
the garb of studying social changes to Indian society. The dissent inside the
congress political party was taken up by internal proxies such as leftists and
communists to create suspicion, distrust and finally division. In order to
appreciate these developments it must be realized that the Congress Party under
Indira Gandhi was a a powerful force in the country unlike the congress in 2003
which is a pale shadow of the pre-independence Congress and even the Congress
under Indira Gandhi in 1971.
From a US perspective
in the first two decades of the Cold War, India and Pakistan both had been
viewed as frontline states, critical to containing the expansion of Soviet and
(after 1949)
Chinese communism in South Asia. By the late 60s, however, India
had proved to be a feckless partner — a would-be great power, with neither the
military nor the economic strength to enforce its utopian foreign policy.
Worse, at least in the view of the American elite, India in 1971 abandoned its preachy
neutrality to become a full-fledged member of the Soviet camp. Pakistan, for its part, had been a more loyal
ally in the Cold War, but was fractious in its relations with India. By the late 60s, both
countries had come to be considered in Washington
as “too difficult” to deal with. This development coincided with doctrinal
changes that had begun to downplay the strategic importance of South Asia generally. This was a way to ensure that India did not gain any importance as a head of NAM
and leader of the third world. Pakistan
was also downplayed but was given enough support by the military program during
the 80s so that the Pakistan
army would stand on its own with confidence to defend and finally have the
acumen to defeat the Indian army at least in Kashmir.
The main strategy
against the political leadership in India was the personality attack on
top leaders. Since Nehru, Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi were the political
center of the party, by attacking them in character and leadership, the Indian
political structure, dominated as it was by a single political structure, would
crumble and eventually lead to the disintegration of the political union of India.
This has been a long term plan for several decades to undermine the prestige
and name of India in
comparison to the Islamic world particularly to Pakistan.
This strategy is not
often appreciated by the Indians of the subcontinent in general. The common
perception, one would go so far as to say the hagiographic account of Indo US
relations is that Nehru burnt his bridges with the west after the Soviet
invasion of Hungary and slowly but surely veered towards the Soviet Union
thereafter, except for a brief interregnum during the 1962 India China war.
While such actions may have contributed to the US
stance towards India,
the fundamental policy imperative of the influential elite in the foreign
policy establishment such as the State Department has always been the
prevention of the rise of a strong nation state, a democratic republic to boot,
in the subcontinent. It is this larger agenda that is largely unappreciated in
the Subcontinent and particularly in India even today. If, the reason
for the US animosity towards
India is the Nehruvian tilt
towards the Soviet Union, it does not explain why there is unremitting
hostility towards the current major party in the governing coalition of India.
In the current context it is assumed that the animosity towards India
is the result of the rise to power of a ‘Hindu nationalist’ Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP). Nowhere in its pronouncements or in their agenda do the leaders of
the BJP advocate the establishment of a
Hindu republic similar to that of a Islamic republic in Pakistan. When translated into
English the acronym BJP stands for Indian Peoples Party. Yet, the BJP is never
referred to without its Hindu nationalist qualifier in the western press, the
inference being that there is something wrong with a Hindu being in power and
furthermore that it is sacrilegious that a Hindu should be a nationalist.
It appears therefore,
to be a characteristic of the Indian that he focuses solely on the actions of
his country and her leaders to the exclusion of the interests of other states and
in particular the interests of the sole superpower the US. Coupled with an indifferent
sense of his/her own History, and an even greater ignorance of world history
and the history of countries in the immediate region, it draws a devastating
caricature of the modern Indian, as one who is excessively self centered and
parochial or tribal in outlook with little appreciation of the larger world
around him. This propensity of the Indian to ignore the forces of history has
been noticed by others visiting the subcontinent including Al Biruni, the
scientist historian who accompanied Ghazni on one of his rampages into India and has recorded his keen observations on
the India
of that age. We have alluded to this characteristic and its realization by
others elsewhere in the essay on Western studies of the Indic Civilization. We
will remark more on the perception of the Indian through the ages later in this
essay.
The fragmentation of
the Indian polity into regional parties was seen as the step towards weakening
of the union in the 90s. Pakistan
became more aggressive perceiving this weakness in India during the 90s with
insurgency and internal subversion resulting in Kargil war in 1999.
The overall strategy
over time was intended to result in the diminution of the importance and
influence of Indian political leaders in the rest of Asia, NAM and world so that the political leadership
of India is not in the
limelight in comparison to that of Pakistan. This was to raise the
political leadership of Pakistan
in the eyes of the Muslims of the sub-continent so that they still consider Pakistan
as the sole political center of Muslims. The political leadership of Pakistan
is given enough support at all times including during war against India so that
it is never seen defeated by the media and the elite in India. The policy of
zero sum game was created to make sure that the position of Pakistan is never lowered with respect to India
at any given time. The prime motivation for the constant hyphenation of
India/Pakistan in the US is
that Pakistan is never
relegated to a lesser status than India
when ‘South Asia’ policy is considered. Even
when a sham election and assembly is held in Pakistan,
it is not criticized much since it will lower the position of Pakistan in the eyes of the Muslim population in
South Asia. This psycho-media propaganda
has been carried out for several decades and is still being done which the
Indian population has fallen for. The Indian media is worked incessantly.
Negative articles about India
and its non-achievements are highlighted especially inside the sub-continent
resulting in Muslims of the region viewing the idea of India as a diminishing entity.
Indian communists and leftists
The Indian communists
were the product of European history during the early 20th century
when socialism and communism was sweeping Europe
after the industrial revolution. They brought in the ideas inside India
and interpreted the Indian history under the training of Marxist theoreticians.
They changed the perception of the Indian caste system so that it would be
viewed as a exploitative class system and as a perpetual class struggle. There
is enough literature about the leftists and communists of India and their role in pre
independence and post independence. The colonial
attack on India
was reinforced by another attack, namely Marxism. Its source too was Europe and it was even more Eurocentric than regular
Imperialism. It used radical slogans but its aims were reactionary. It taught
that Europe was the center and rest of the
world its periphery - not by chance but by an inherent dialectics of History.
Marx fully shared the contempt of British Imperialists for India. He said: “Indian society has
no history at all, at least no known history. What we call its history, is but
the history of successive intruders.” He also said that India neither knew freedom nor
deserved it. To him the question was “not whether the English had a right to
conquer India, but whether
we are to prefer India
conquered by the Briton.” This also became the faith of his Indian pupils.
The most important
opponents of Indian society and national political identity today are not the
Islamic communal leaders, but the interiorized colonial rulers of India,
the alternated English-educated and mostly Left-leaning elite that noisily
advertises its secularism. It is these people who impose anti-Hindu policies on
Indian society, and who keep Hinduism down and prevent it from proudly raising
its head after a thousand years of oppression. The worst torment for Indian
society today is neither the arrogant and often violent agitation from certain
minority groups, nor is it the handful of privileges which the non-Hindu
communities are getting. The worst problem is this
mental slavery, this sense of inferiority which Leftist intellectuals, through
their power positions in education and the media, and their direct influence on
the public and political arena, keep on inflicting on the Indian mind.
Communists are still
playing a crucial role in the evolution of the Indian political structure and
its philosophy and control the political/policy debates inside India.
But they have another role when they co-opted with the British during the
independence and continued working with the western institution to continue the
project of civilizing the Indians. In India,
Macaulayism prepared the ground for Marxism - early Marxists were recruited
from Macaulayites. Marxism in turn gave Macaulayism a radical look and made it
attractive for a whole new class. While Marxists served European Imperialism,
they also fell in love with all old Imperialist invaders, particularly Muslim
ones. M.N. Roy found the Arab Empire a “magnificent monument to the memory of
Mohammad.” While the Marxists found British Imperialism “progressive”, they opposed
the country’s national struggle as reactionary. They learnt to work closely
with Indian Islamists both during and after Independence.
The common perception
of India
as a newly created country without any historical heritage brought the Indian
leftists and communists close to the western strategic and academic community
and united them in a common cause. They have co-opted the west in the overall
strategy to continue the force of history during the cold war in a manner
favorable to the earlier Islamic force of history. Their intimate contact with
the west was developed during the Emergency [1975-77]. Such contacts were
nurtured and encouraged by the US
academics at institutions such as U.C. Berkeley and University of Colombia.
The formation of FOIL[Forum of Indian leftist] in US and similar leftists
organization in various institutions reflect the reality that an entire
generation of leftists are being well cultivated by the west. They are also
attached to various NGO which are basically fronts for the leftist
organizations. These groups have become the rallying groups for various issues
such as human rights, environmental issues which the western governments would
then use to exert pressure on the majority community and the Indian government
.
Romila Thapar in 1993
interview with a French magazine says - The foremost factors of unity which
have characterized India
in the premodern period are, at the elite level, Brahminical culture, then
Turco-Persian culture, then that of the English-speaking middle class. The
crucial change came about with the passage from tribe to caste, one of the main
elements of India’s
unity, more important than a superficial political unity.” This isn’t too far
removed from what serious pro-Hindu scholars have written.
Brahminical culture and the integration of separate tribes into a pan-Indian
caste society created a pan-Indian consciousness of a single civilizational
identity, more profound and more enduring than any political unity or disunity.
What one can foresee, perhaps, for the end of the next century, is a series of
small states federated within a more viable single economic space on the scale
of the subcontinent.”
For over a hundred
year the British and then subsequently the Indian Communists have been trying
hard to break what they regard as the unity
resulting from the Hindu Brahminical ethos, so that a unity based on a Turco-Persian identity
will prevail and will dominate the entire population after a revolution in a
predominantly Islamic society.
Experience with Socialism
Not part of the main
narrative but a development that had profound implications was the adoption of
Socialism as a guiding policy imperative, so much so that it is now enshrined
in the Indian constitution. The socialist regime turned two generations of
potential entrepreneurs into job seekers. Permit, quota and license raj, not
efficiency or merit, became the route to business success. The competitive
strength of India
was systematically weakened, and the traditional skills of the trading and
business communities in India
were dissipated. Some have argued that the devastation caused by the socialist
regime in the post independence period was more pervasive than the devastation
of the Indian economy by the British rule.
The pre-British India described
as caste ridden, feudalistic and anti-modern, was economically ahead of the
rest of the World - including Britain
and USA.
The Indian economy had a share of 19% of global production in 1830, and 18% of
global trade, when the share of Britain
was 8% in production and 9% in trade; and that of US 2% in production and 1% in
trade. India
had hundreds of thousands of village schools and had a functioning literacy
rate of over 30%. In contrast, when the British left, India’s share
of World production and trade declined to less than 1% and its literacy down to
17%. And yet, in 1947, India
had had large Sterling reserves, no foreign
debt; and Indians still had an effective presence in such trade centres as Singapore, Hong Kong, Penang, Rangoon and Colombo.
But by the time the
socialist regime came to a close. India had become politically and
economically weak and disoriented, lacking in self-confidence. Its Indian
influence in South Asia too had waned.
Indian political scene
in the 1990s and early 21st century-
With the demise of communism, the decline of socialism and the
disappearance of Nehruvian secularism very much in sight, an ideological vacuum
has emerged in India.
India’s pseudo-democracy —
Quote from Satyabrata Rai Chowdhuri
Parliament’s increasing irrelevance in sorting out problems —
indeed, its role in exacerbating them — is fuelling a growing preference among
Indians for a presidential system of government. Recently, India’s Prime
Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee said that despite the outward appearance of
health, Indian democracy appears to have become hollow, with elections reduced
to a farce and the “party system eroded due to unethical practices.” According
to Vajpayee, “The outer shell of democracy is, no doubt, intact, but appears to
be moth-eaten from inside.”
Indeed, in the preface to a recent collection of his speeches,
Vajpayee wondered whether democracy had truly taken root in India. “How can
democratic institutions work properly,” he asked, “when politics is becoming
increasingly criminalised?” This is a
strange turn, for parliamentary democracy has long been a source of pride for
most Indians. The country may not match up to its Asian neighbours in
prosperity, but Indians have always been able to boast of the vitality of their
parliamentary system. Nowadays, such boasts are heard far less frequently.
Not only are India’s
economic failures more obvious, in comparison to Asia’s
revived economic juggernauts; so, too, are the failures of its political
system. Unprincipled politics, cults of violence, communal rage, and macabre
killings of religious minorities have all combined to shake people’s faith in
the political system’s viability. Small wonder, then, that people are starting
to ask whether India
needs an alternative system of government.
Part of the problem
lies in India’s
deracinated party politics. For decades,
the Congress Party of Nehru and his daughter, Indira Gandhi, basically ruled
the country unchallenged. But with the assassinations of
Indira Gandhi and her son, former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi,
Congress disintegrated and has not recovered. Rather than ushering in an era of
recognisable multi-party politics, Indian democracy still lacks a party system
worthy of the name.
One reason for this is that there are barely any national parties.
Instead, India
is saddled with highly volatile leader-based groups. When the leadership is
charismatic and strong, the party is a servile instrument. Lacking coherent
principles or an overriding ideology, these groups fragment when their
leadership changes or splits, as Congress did.
Where parties are weak, there can be no party discipline. India’s
parliament is riddled with defections by MPs, who move freely from one party
grouping to another. So endemic is the buying and selling of legislators that
parliament looks a lot like a cattle market. The prizes conferred on
opportunistic defectors not only undermine the party system, but weaken the
foundations of parliament by making organised opposition impossible.
Public apathy bordering on fatalism is the inevitable result. This
is dangerous because apathy does not take the form of withdrawal from public
life, but increasingly finds expression in sectarian and religious conflict. Of
course, politicians incite many of these conflicts, using caste, sect, and
religion — not political ideas — to build voter loyalty. But apathy about
democracy is what makes so many ordinary Indians prey to poisonous appeals.
This susceptibility is the clearest sign that India’s
experiment with the Westminster
model of parliamentary democracy has failed to justify the hopes that prevailed
fifty years ago when the Constitution was proclaimed. Back then, parliament was
seen as a means to bridge the divides of caste, religion, and region.
Parliament’s increasing irrelevance in sorting out these problems — indeed, its
role in exacerbating them — is fuelling a growing preference among Indians for
a presidential system of government that removes executive functions from the
oversight of an institution that has been addled and rendered impotent by
undisciplined factions.
Of course, politicians are not the only people at fault here.
Sadly, Indian society never really embraced the consensual values that India’s
Constitution proclaims: a participatory, decentralised democracy; an
egalitarian society with minimal social and economic disparities; a secularised
polity; the supremacy of the rule of law; a federal structure ensuring partial
autonomy to provinces; cultural and religious pluralism; harmony between rural
and urban areas; and an efficient, honest state administration at both the
national and local level.
Instead, race and caste remain as potent as ever. Wealth is as
grossly distributed as ever. Corruption rules many state governments and
national ministries. Urban and rural areas subvert each other.
But parliaments demand a minimal national consensus if they are to
function, for they are creatures of compromise in decision-making. Executive
governments, on the other hand, are creatures of decision: a popularly elected
president is ultimately responsible to his voters, not to his party colleagues.
The very election by national suffrage of an executive provides the type of minimal
consensus that India’s
faction-riven parliaments have, sadly, never been able to cultivate. Of course,
a president will undoubtedly need to compromise with his legislature, but the
general consent that is gained by popular election implies at least some
broader agreement behind the platform that he or she campaigned on.
Of course, no magic bullet will do away with the forces that divide
India.
But at least some of the maladies of the current parliamentary system, such as
defection, party factionalism, inherent political instability, and crippling
coalition politics can be minimised, if not eliminated, by adopting an
executive-dominant model of presidential democracy. In adopting such a system,
Indians would have nothing to lose but the corruption and chaos of today’s
discredited parliament.
Another analysis of the Indian
state has a different view. Reinventing India: Liberalization,
Hindu Nationalism and Popular Democracy by Stuart Corbridge and John Harriss;
Oxford University Press, Delhi, 2001;
The authors say- INDIA’S passage through its fifth
decade of Independence was scarred by several manifestations of a deep-seated
political pathology. It was a decade of violence and social turmoil, centred
particularly on an effort to define a sense of nationhood in terms of
primordial religious loyalties. At the same time, a shift in economic course was
signalled by the social and political elite, who in an exuberance of
self-rediscovery turned decisively against the philosophy that had guided
policy since Independence.
The Indian state as constituted at Independence
was the central focus of nationhood, deriving its legitimacy in turn from the
promise of development. For Jawaharlal Nehru and others who pioneered the programme
of modernity, the state was an agency of progress and enlightenment, which
would shine the light of reason on areas steeped in superstition and ignorance,
pulling the masses into a new realm of prosperity and promise. The invention of
India
suffered from the inherent contradictions of the manner it was imagined. The
idea of democracy came to India
with Independence,
but in the absence of a bourgeois revolution. Colonialism had modernised
certain narrow enclaves, but left deeply entrenched a traditional “cellular”
structure in Indian society. The caste system and village organization had
engendered, as the political scientist Barrington Moore puts it, “a huge mass
of locally coordinated social cells”. The bourgeoisie, for all its ambitious
visions, had not managed to cement its solidarity on a national scale and
remained hamstrung in its modernizing project by the competing visions of the
agrarian elite. In having to deal with a multiplicity of interests, the
bourgeoisie was unable to institute a “developmental state” in the manner of
the East Asian nations. The situation bristled with the potential for conflict,
which was only partially obscured by the invocation of four grand themes in the
modernizing project - democracy, federalism, socialism and secularism.
Unable to surmount its
inherent deficiencies, the Nehruvian planning project ran aground in the
economic crisis of the mid-1960s. Indira Gandhi managed to break the resultant
political impasse in 1971 with the revival of the socialist project that her
father had only very tentatively embraced. By way of conclusion, the authors
offer the prognosis that the “defining struggle” in Indian politics today is
that between the “centralizing instincts” of Hindu nationalism and the
countervailing mobilization of lower castes and subaltern groupings. The Indian
state, they contend, may well be forced under the pressure of the new forms of
political mobilization to “do the bidding of India’s lower orders”. This would
be the final act in the invention of the India that the Constituent Assembly
had imagined. But in the bargain it is unlikely that either the political
structure or the geography of India
will remain unchanged.
Federal
structure of Indian state
India’s federal
set-up especially the state-state relations were designed after the 1935 Act.
The need for instituting power-sharing devices was subordinated to the
imperatives of state building and forging national solidarity. Since the
federation was founded by the Union vesting powers in the states, “most
institutional devices for inter-governmental consultation and participation of
states in national decision-making processes owed their origins to central
initiatives, their authority to central statutes and their agendas and terms of
reference to central ministries”. Federalism under Nehru’s regime, the first
phase of its evolution, functioned essentially within the Congress system, to the
extent that inner party democracy within the limits of the consensual model was
a reality. In Nehru’s vision, a person could be an Indian and be a Bengali or
Tamil or Hindu or Muslim. It was the primacy a person accorded to the regional,
religious or ethnic identity and the national identity that was in question.
Nehru hoped that in the process of nation building, an individual would become
first an Indian and then Bengali or Tamil or Hindu or Sikh, and perhaps
ultimately the forces of modernization would sweep away the ascriptive
identities of ethnicity, caste and religion. Secondly, the Congress leadership
had developed a secular nationalism, which could encompass all Indian cultures
and religions. Nehru’s concept of a secular state did not negate religions; it
meant equal protection to all faiths. The core of this value system was the
recognition of multiple diversities, both behavioral and normative, and
legitimacy of group identities and autonomies.
The Indian State
is under growing pressure for redrawing the country’s political map. Demands
for new states and/or administrative units exist in fourteen states. These include
Uttarakhand/Uttaranchal, Bundelkhand (with Madhya Pradesh districts) and
Purvanchal (Rohilkhand and Bundelkhand) and Bhojpur in Uttar Pradesh; Mithila
(Bihar); Coorg (Karnataka); Kosal Kajya (Orissa); Maru Pradesh/Marwar
(Rajasthan); Gorkhaland (West Bengal); Bodoland (Assam); Jharkhand (Bihar,
Orissa and Madhya Pradesh); Chattisgarh, Gondwana and Bhilistan (Madhya
Pradesh); Telangana (Andhra Pradesh); Vidarbha and Konkan (Maharashtra); and
Jammu (Jammu & Kashmir). Others seeking separate administration include the
Garo tribals and Hmar tribals in Meghalaya and Assam, and Kukiland and the Zomi
tribals in Manipur, while the people in Karbi Anglong and North Cachar region
demand better democratic treatment and economic development. Such demands are
partly due to increasingly assertive voices of regional and sub-regional
identities within states, and partly because of the unwieldy and unmanageable
size of India’s
larger states where certain regions have flourished and others have stagnated.
Indian
states started asserting against the center from 1980s after the Punjab problems. The resulting debates were taken up at
every level from media to the election debates. It continued even in the 90s
with political parties taking a regional view of the Indian State.
In 1996, for example, a prominent section of the Congress in Tamil
Nadu broke away to form the Tamil Maanila Congress (TMC). In 1998, the Congress
witnessed Mamata Banerjee breaking away the West Bengal
unit to launch the Trinamool Congress; S. Bangarappa
cut loose in Karnataka to form the Karnataka Vikas Party; Jagannath Mishra in Bihar created the Bihar Jan Congress and V. Ramamurthy in
Tamil Nadu floated his own outfit. Sharad Pawar formed the Nationalist Congress
Party in 1999. In the Janata Dal, an influential section of the party in Orissa
broke away to launch the Biju Janata Dal; the entire Bihar unit broke away with
Lalloo Yadav to form the Rashtriya Janata Dal; and Ramakrishna Hegde floated
Lok Shakti in Karnataka. Even the BJP did not escape this phenomenon when S.S.
Vaghela split the Gujarat unit to launch the
Rashtriya Janata Party.
The steady decline of
Congress, the rise of the BJP and rapid growth and political clout of regional
parties has brought about a new phase in the evolution of Indian politics
marked by coalition politics and regionalization of the Indian polity. The Indian State
is undergoing a widening and deepening historical current of regionalization of
all political forces. The regional political parties having successfully
mobilized the linguistic, ethnic, cultural and regional identities in the
states in the 1980s have come to center stage at the national level.
Political Analysis of the Islamic world and Islamic
civilization
Today Muslims are
living all over the globe with a population of 1.2 B approximately. There are
220 million Arabs living in 22 countries, ruled by Arabs. 450 Million Muslims
are living in 33 non-Arab Muslim countries. The term Dar-ul-Islam is applied to
these independent Muslim countries. Muslims, who are living under the rule of
non Muslims, such as in India,
Europe, North America,
Russia,
and China,
are about 330 Millions. This segment of Muslim population is known as
Dar-ul-Harb. Then there are Muslims who are refugees, roaming all over the
world, numbering about 20 Million and they constitute 80 % of the world’s
refugee population. This is called Dar-ul-Muhajireen.
The fact of the matter
is that the demographic center of gravity of Islam has shifted towards the
Indian subcontinent (450 million Muslims) and Indonesia (200 million) and the
majority of Muslims today no longer speak a Semitic language. Demographically
and or geographically this may be accurate, but the Arab world [Iran is a wild
card here] dominates Islamist thinking. Islamists whether in Lahore, Dacca,
Acheh or Bali draw inspiration from Arab
Islamists like Ayub etc, while Arab Islamists are not influenced by South Asian
or SE Asian Islamists. Arabs are already a minority numbering 220 m out of a
total of 1.2 B Muslims. There is an imperial idea at the heart of Islamism,
based on ethnicity and race. The struggle of the Islamists can be seen as a
conflict between imperialists and nationalists. The imperialists want the
caliphate back as it was in the 9th century, a purely Arab empire.
Islamist leaders in South East Asian countries, always claim blood ties with
Arabic ancestors. Hence the center of gravity may not shift towards the east
due to the population. The Center of
Gravity of the Islamic world is not in the numbers but in the mind. The Arab
population IS the center of gravity but that precisely is the cause of
instability. The seeds of the intra-civilization conflict are built in. Thanks
to Gulf money the Salafi perspective dominates the majority of Muslim
organizations in the West. The influence of Wahhabi and Salafi has increased
the profile of the Kingdom after 1975 and with Pakistan are trying to create the
political center of the new Islam in the 21st century.
Political
Decentralization
In an effort to forge
unity among Muslim countries, initial attempts were made to create economic
ties between them. In pursuit of this objective, the first International
Islamic Economic Conference was held in Karachi
in 1949 and the second at Tehran
in 1950. These conferences were followed by a conference of Muslim religious
scholars at Karachi
in 1952 on the initiative of grand Mufti Aminal Husayni of Palestine who was a
strong advocate of Muslim unity. The 1960s were a decade of significant developments
vis-a-vis formation of a united Muslim platform. The most important of these
developments was the 1967 Arab-Israel war in which the latter occupied a
considerable chunk of lands including the Al-Aqsa Mosque. In August 1969, a Jew
activist set fire to a part of this mosque. This event brought about the first
ever, Islamic Summit at Rabat
on 22-25 September 1969.
The leaders assembled
at Rabat were
convinced that Muslims constituted an indivisible Ummah and committed
themselves to consolidated efforts to defend their legitimate interests under
the banner of the Islamic Conference. This resolve resulted in the birth of
Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), formally proclaimed in May 1971.
The highest policymaking body of the OIC is the meeting of Heads of State of
the Muslim world. There have been several Islamic summits at Rabat (1969), Lahore (1974), Taif Makkah (1981), Dakar (1991), Tehran (1997), Qatar (2000),
and Malaysia
(2003). These summits reviewed the conditions of the Muslim world in the
context of international politics. The second policymaking organ is the annual
conference of foreign ministers, which also reviews conditions in the Muslim
world but concentrates on international political, economic, social, and
cultural issues.
King Faisal, in 1962,
convened an International Islamic Conference in Mecca where the Saudis unveiled their World
Muslim League (Rabita al-Alam al-Islami). The Muslim Brotherhood told the
gathering, “Those who distort Islam’s call under the guise of nationalism are
the most bitter enemies of the Arabs, whose glories are entwined with the
glories of Islam.” The Brotherhood invoked the idea of shu’ubi (anti-Arab) to
cast aspersions specifically at Nasserism (or Pan-Arabism) and Communism (Egypt and Iraq, at this
time, had vibrant communist parties, with the Iraqi party by far the strongest
in the region). The combination of anti-communism and pro-Islam developed by
the Saudis and their Islamicist allies appealed greatly to the United States
government, so much that the head of the Brotherhood, Sayed Kuttub wryly called
it “American made Islam.” The road was open to the most virulent forms of Sunni
Islam to take precedence over all that is beautiful in both heterodox Islam and
in the democratic urges of the Arab people.
The United States
gives the Saudis carte blanche, the white card, to do what it wants in the
lands of the Gulf. According to Amnesty International’s 2001 Report on Saudi Arabia,
“Serious human rights violations continue. Suspected political or religious
activists suffer arbitrary arrests, detention, and punishment under secretive
criminal justice procedures which deny the most basic rights, such as the right
to be defended by a lawyer. One person had his eye surgically removed as
judicial punishment.” State control of almost every aspect of women’s lives is
pervasive; women cannot walk alone even in their own neighborhood without fear
of being stopped by the religious police and suspected of being moral
offenders.
There has been an
ongoing search for a true Islamic state which can be a core state and be the
center of the Islamic world as a political center. There was a time when
Muslims were the masters of the earth, controllers of destiny, but today they
are on a path of continuous decline. There is a feeling of helplessness,
hopelessness, and frustration among the Muslims. Muslims had their own social, economic
Judiciary and political system of Khilafat, that was established by Mohammed Rasoolullah
and the system was further advanced by Kulfae Rashideen (rightly guided
successor). After 40 years, the system of Khilafa was derailed, and changed
into Kingship, though the rulers continued to call themselves Khalifas. The single centralized authority was divided
into political and religious wings. The rulers invented the laws to serve their
aims and goals and distanced themselves from the guiding principles of the Quran.
They did not care for immediate and delayed deleterious effects of decentralization
of the Ummah. Allama Iqbal expressed it well: There is death for the
nations, in detachment from the center, There is life for the nations in
attachment with the center.
By
the beginning of the 20th century the entire Muslim world came under western domination
except Turkey, Iran, Saudi
Arabia and
Afghanistan. According to
Bernard Lewis there was no
attraction to colonize the last two countries because they were very poor
territories but he did not mention the failed British attempt to conquer to Afghanistan. Even Turkey and Iran came under indirect control of the West. But
after 1980 US strategic interest increased with Islamic states
and they need a geo-political Islamic block which can be given a recognition in
the world. Turkey was considered but it has problems. Quote
from a reviewer: “Without a core state the
Muslims can never restore their dignity in the world and be equal partners with
other civilizations. It is only a core Muslim state that could address the
paradox of geopolitics in the interest of international peace and security.”
And the only country that fits that status is Turkey because as observed by Huntington it has history, population, middle level
economic development, national coherence, military tradition and competence to
be the core state of Islam. So long as Turkey continues to define itself as a secular state
leadership of Islam is denied it.
Iran is not accepted as the
center of Islam since it is predominantly Shia. Shia islam does not compete
with Sunni Islam for political space since sunni islam has a political doctrine
which is ambitious. Saudi
Arabia is a state which has a history
of only a 100 years and does not have any manpower to project a large power. It
has the religious legitamacy and can be the center of gravity of the islamic
world. But the population spread and location of the Muslims are more towards
the east of afghanistan with Pakistan, Bangladesh and Indonasia which form
the critical nations of Islam. Saudi
Arabia even though is the spiritual
center of Islam has a small population and does not have the political and
military class required for a core state.
Pakistan is one candidate which
has been eager for such a role of political center and are willing to do
anything to get a political structure and center which can project such a world
islamic political center with influence. Writing his memoirs in his prison
cell just before he was executed by General Zia-ul-Haq in 1979, Zulfiqar Ali
Bhutto stated that his aim as prime minister of Pakistan had been to put the
“Islamic Civilization” at par with the “Christian, Jewish and Hindu
Civilizations,” by giving the Islamic world a “full nuclear capability.” In a
meeting of top scientists and advisers that he had convened on Jan. 20, 1972,
just after assuming office, Bhutto made it clear that he was determined to
achieve nuclear capability, not merely to neutralize India’s inherent conventional
superiority, but also to make his country a leader of the Islamic world. But the
praise for Pakistan’s
nuclear achievement by radical Islamic leaders highlights fears of more
“Islamic bombs.” For example, Sheik Ahmed Yassin, spiritual leader of the
Palestinian terrorist group Hamas, hailed Pakistan’s nuclear tests as an
“asset to the Arab and Muslim nations.” Iran’s foreign minister, Kamal
Kharrazi, praised Pakistan’s
weapons achievement as a potential deterrent to Israel’s presumed nuclear
capability, and went on to say, “From all over the world, Muslims are happy
that Pakistan
has this capability.” And Sheik Hayyan Idrisi of Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque went so far as to
proclaim that “The Pakistani nuclear bomb is the
beginning of the resurgence of Islamic power.”
Since they are not the
spiritual center of Islam Pakistan needs the support of Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia. Two divisions of Pakistani troops,
or some 20,000 men, served in Saudi
Arabia in the mid-1980s. They were based
along the southern border with Yemen.
U.S.
troops were sent to Saudi
Arabia in 1990 ahead of the Gulf War and
they stayed on to protect the country from invasion by Iraq. For support they need to win
against India and create a equivalent
of modern Mughal state. Jamaat e Islami of Pakistan quoted in Urdu press has
stated that Pakistan is the center of axis
spanning from Morocco to Indonesia. It is a nuclear
state
and has a large population. It can create a democratic order to suit the
western world and be the center of the Islamic world. There has been a pressure
inside the army in Pakistan to fulfill its goal of
creating space as the center of Islam. This vision is what is driving the
intense behavior of Pakistan’s army. Pakistan would
prefer only a Islamic political order over a larger geographic area which
includes India.
The total GDP of the Islamic Ummah is quoted at $1 Trillion
and the GDP of India is $500B. Despite the great disparity between India and Pakistan when
it comes to GDP, Pakistan
regards itself as being on par with India, when viewed as the core
state of Islamic world with a higher GDP. Pakistan has been creating an image
of the center of the axis which can act as the core state of Islam. After
independence in August 1947, the first major international move by Pakistan
following the firming up of relations with United Kingdom and United States of America
was to allow Finance Minister Ghulam Mohammad to act as Financial Advisor to
the King of Saudi Arabia. In that capacity Ghulam Mohammad helped King Saud to
organize Saudi Arabia’s
financial and accounting system and further, to finalize oil agreements with USA and an
American oil company. That was the start of a happy relationship that brought
great dividends both to Pakistan
and Saudi Arabia.
These included billions of dollars of aid and assistance to Pakistan, in a
variety of forms, specially after the Western oil companies raised the price of
crude oil to new heights during the nineteen-seventies, to bring the Arab-oil
price in line with the projected sale price of oil from their new off-shore
oil-wells, particularly in the North Sea region that was estimated between US
dollars seven and ten per barrel against the then current price of less than
three US dollars.
Zia-ud-din Barani, who
wrote the history of the Turkic sultan Alla-ud-din Khalji is considered by many
as the Islamist answer to Kautilya. His work on statecraft, Fatawa-i-Jahandari,
is a successor of the one by Nizam ul Mulq of the Seljuq court in Central Asia. Barani is well know for his famous
statement regarding the stability of an Islamic state in a place inhabited by
kafirs like India:
“Detailed education in Islam, shariat and its
implementation must only be the premise of the high born Ashrafs. The lowly
Ajlaf, that is a Hindustani kafir who has been recently converted should be
content with a very basic knowledge of Islam.” By this way the Madrassah
can control the people. The reason for
comparing the Islamic scholar with the famous Kautilya and the India
statecraft is very obvious. The need to maintain equality and then supercede
the Indian theory of statecraft is very much needed if Islamic civilization
needs identity and recognition in the long run. The aim is to prove that the Mughal
dynasty was not just for 150 years but will revive again and be superior to the
non-Muslims of the sub-continent.
The ambition of the
political Islam has been steadily increased after the Iranian revolution in
1979. The afghan war and win over a super power was the final confirmation of
the reality of the global political Islam. The pan Islamist movement that was
low key took a global role after 1989 with the advent of globalization. This
was directed against all the countries declared as oppressors of Islam, which
included Israel
and India
in Kashmir. The US was in the sidelines watching
the movement and its implication on large countries such as India and Indonesia.
Until 2000 the state dept annual report of Terrorism did not mention
Afghanistan/Pakistan as the epicenter of Terrorism. The implication being that
they were giving implicit support for change in the sub-continent including a
jihad revolution in India
proper. The Al-Qaeda attack on US targets in the years 1993, 1995, 1998, 2000
were given low priority in the larger world scene for various reasons but one
of them could be to sustain this movement to create an upheaval and anarchy
until a big change occurs in large countries such as India. This is the only
way we infer from the policies of US towards the Islamists cause from 1950 to
2000.
Western Perception about Modern India
US President
Bill Clinton in 2000 made the remark about India that “She is an ancient
civilization and a modern nation. India is a resilient democracy.”
The general perception about modern India and the Indian society from
the western strategist and analyst point of view is in reality nothing to crow
about. An open society like India
gives many outside powers opportunity to monitor the change and to influence
even small and insignificant changes which favor these powers. India is also a
country with weak institutions which are critical to the stability of the
political structure and which can be manipulated by outside powers.
The strategic
communities from major powers are monitoring the changes happening inside India. Among
the changes being monitored and calibrated are demographic, industrialization,
militarization and educational changes in Indian society. Many events inside India are
sought to be influenced from outside to obtain an advantage for the outside
powers and even if a small percentage of these efforts succeed these powers
reap disproportionate benefits.
In describing the
beginnings of India’s quest for status and prestige, most western analysts look
as far back as the policies of Jawaharlal Nehru, but in fact notions of Indian
greatness are rooted in a far more distant past, stretching continuously to the
Mughal period. The
Indic system of international politics viewed the state as the extension of the
king, and thus as being separate from society.
The main ideals are peace, tranquility, and “energetic beneficence”
domestically, but international politics is marked by struggle between
expansionists and preservationists, a Kautilyan political realism, and the
absence of peaceful coexistence and cooperation. The Indic system ceased to operate under
Muslim rule and died out completely under British imperialism, but its basic
character remains, especially in the persistence of anarchic rather than
hierarchic relations. During the
imperial period, the British conceived of India as the linchpin of their
empire, occupying as it did a key strategic location and providing immense
prestige and material resources. To
protect India
from land-based threats, a system of “ring fences” was constructed. The “inner ring” comprised of the Himalayan
kingdoms and tribal areas of the northeast were defended with military power;
the “outer ring” comprised of the Persian Gulf, Iran, Afghanistan, and Thailand
were denied to external powers though diplomacy and the occasional use of
force. While Nehru placed his emphasis
on diplomacy, most Indian nationalist leaders internalized this “linchpin”
view.
Nehru’s nonalignment
policies were rooted in Gandhian notions of nonviolent struggle against British
rule. These policies were facilitated by
India’s
geographic isolation from the key cold war arenas of Europe
and East Asia.
India
also sought a leadership role in the Non-Aligned Movement. Yet post-independence government views of
security were also based on a historical narrative of successive invasions,
mainly from the northwest, and a series of internal integrations and
disintegrations. The invasions succeeded
due to India’s
internal disunity and its backwardness in terms of military technology and
tactics. Security thinking since 1947
has been driven by four main considerations:
1) India’s
aspirations to be a major power and the need to be vigilant against external
forces; 2) the need for power to defend the nation; 3) the need for internal
stability; and 4) the need for mediating institutions to check regional power
politics .
After British rule,
the South Asian subsystem became Indo-centric, marked by the attempts of
smaller states to balance against Indian hegemony. India has long sought preponderance
rather than balance as a means of keeping peace in the region. As an aspiring hegemon, India has also
sought to limit or offset the influence of external powers in the region. Pakistan became a significant
challenger to Indian domination only after its alliance with the US (and the
subsequent infusion of American weapons) in the mid-1950s, and even more so
upon its later alignment with China
(especially after the 1962 India-China war).
India’s
defeat in the war with China
emboldened Pakistan
to act in Kashmir in 1965 and also to align
itself even more closely with Beijing. Smaller powers began drifting from India’s orbit,
with Sri Lanka
independently organizing an international conference to resolve the
Indian-Chinese border dispute. Thus,
from 1962-1971 India’s
attempts at exercising regional leadership were either questioned or rejected
by regional states.
Only after the 1971
defeat and partition of Pakistan
did India
regain its position of undisputed military supremacy. The victory against Pakistan
restored Indian dominance and the 1972 Simla Agreement by establishing a
framework of bilateralism and regionalism formalized New Delhi’s status. Yet the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
again brought Pakistan
into alliance with the US. The 1983 formation of the South Asian
Association of Regional Cooperation (SAARC) was a modest attempt to displace
Indian hegemonic aspirations, but demonstrations of Indian military power beginning
in the late-1980s (Maldives
and Sri Lanka)
renewed regional tensions. The Kashmiri
revolt of 1989-90 further exacerbated regional anxieties, which have remained
high ever since.
The military strategists are studying India from its
ability to think strategically in the globalized world. One such study
by an author George Tanham in 1992 was
commissioned by the US Government and the Rand Corporation. His report analyzes
the historical, geographic, and cultural factors influencing Indian strategic
thinking: how India’s past has shaped present-day conceptions of military power
and national security; how the Indian elite view their strategic position vis-a-vis
their neighbors, the Indian Ocean, and great power alignments; whether Indian
thinking follows a reasonably consistent logic and direction; and what this
might imply for India’s long-term ability to shape its regional security
environment. In 1992, Tanham published Indian Strategic Thought: An
Interpretive Essay, the study that gained him most prominence. In it Tanham
sought to understand the cultural and historical factors that have shaped
Indian strategic thinking. Indian elite, he argued, “show little evidence of
having thought coherently and systematically about national strategy.”
Moreover, history is a
poor guide for understanding Indian strategic thought because “Indian history
is often dimly perceived and poorly recorded,” and until fairly recently “Indians knew little of their national history and seemed
uninterested in it.” So, how does one explain Indian actions and views
about power and security?
Tanham focused on four
key elements. Geography lent Indian
thinking an “insular perspective and a tradition of localism and particularism.”
The discovery of history by Indian elite in the
past 150 years was the second element, which leads inexorably to the third: the
primacy of culture in India’s world outlook and
the “assumed superiority” of this culture. According to this theory, without a
linear history Indians will not be able to create a vision and a destiny for
its people. Finally, Tanham pointed to the experience
of the British Raj, which nurtured in Indian thinkers a predisposition
toward a predominately defensive, land-dominated strategic orientation.
George Tanham raised a
public debate on India’s strategic culture and his small essay touched off a
roaring debate among Indian thinkers, later captured in a volume “Securing India: Strategic Thought and Practice” edited
by Kanti Bajpai and Amitabh Mattoo (Manohar, 1996) which contained Tanham’s
original essay and responses from a wide range of Indian specialists. It has
two essays by Tanham, and then commentaries by Bajpai, Varun Sahni, WPS Sidhu, Rahul-Roy Chaudhury, and Amitabh Mattoo.
It also includes a useful bibliography of additional readings.
India retains a
longstanding commitment to strategic independence and autonomy, although its
economic, industrial, and technological shortcomings continue to limit the
success of such a strategic design. Indians realize that the high technology
being developed for India’s
longer-term defense has implications for Indian strategy. Domestic and budgetary constraints will continue to limit
Indian military power for many years.
Since George Tanham
wrote his erudite but critical piece, the Indian strategic culture has
undoubtedly improved. But the history of this culture when it comes to transborder
deployment is hesitant, unsure and timid. India spurned Tunku Abdul Rehman’s
offer of a strategic partnership in 1962 with ASEAN when it was offered to on
being attacked by China.
Subsequently India
spent six years in the nineties trying to get into the ASEAN Regional Forum
(ARF). India
ignored the mounting conflict between the Sinhalese and Tamils for 12 years,
before impetuously sending the IPKF into Sri Lanka. Then did nothing while
the Indians were abused, attacked and hounded out of Uganda, Zanzibar and Fiji. For eight years she watched
her tankers being attacked in the Persian Gulf
during the Iran-Iraq war. India
missed the chance to join the multinational minesweeping force that made Kuwait Harbor
safe after Desert Storm. Indian Air Force and Navy sat idle when Air India lifted
half-a-million Indians out of the Middle East
before Desert Storm.
India is one of
the largest poor countries with a low per capita income. It has more than 70
percent population in the rural areas with one of the lowest infrastructure. In
1980, India
had about 687m people, 300m fewer than China. Living standards, as
measured by purchasing power per head, were roughly the same. Then, as China embraced
modernity with a sometimes ugly but burning passion, it left India behind.
In the next 21 years, India
outperformed its neighbor in almost nothing but population growth. By 2001, India had
1,033m people against China’s
1,272m. But China’s
national income per head, according to the World Bank, was $890, nearly double India’s $450.
Adjusted for purchasing power, the Chinese were still 70% wealthier than
Indians were. In the ten years from 1992, India’s GDP
per head grew at 4.3% a year, China’s
twice as fast. Some 5% of Chinese now live below the national poverty line,
compared with 29% of Indians. Much that holds India’s economy and businesses has
got to do with corruption, fiscal mismanagement, a lack of international
ambition and a history of over-protection at home.
A CIA document on the future of Asia
in the medium term looks at India
as the most diverse country in the world. This alleged excessive diversity is
viewed as a weakness since it is perceived as creating a non-uniform
non-homogenous culture in the social and political sphere, which has fissures.
Difficulty in creating consensus and creating a national policy and national
interest debate is considered one of the biggest weaknesses for the large
country. India’s proximity to Islamic
countries and centers of Islamic terrorism and revolution makes it vulnerable
to social and internal security problem due to a large Muslim population. Steve
Forbes compared India
to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, which at the turn of 20th century
collapsed on its own weight. There is a strong feeling among many in the US elite that
the Indian State will also collapse just like the
Austria-Prussia Empire. There is, among some rightwing (religious) groups in
the US,
contempt towards India,
Indians and Indic traditions. It is too big to succeed and too big to fail. The
perception is that only a long-term approach through social change and
religious conversion is the right remedy for India. This kind of perception is
also with China,
which is another candidate for change.
Even after 30 years of
policy directed against India
to weaken it India
has managed to survive and thrive. This has made some policymakers to reflect
deeply and some to be actually dismayed. There is some element of retribution
due to the lingering feelings of the cold war which are still directed at India. Most of
the policymakers with such feeling will be in power well until 2010 in the US
administration.
Globally, India
presumably would like to think that she has a equidistant location in a polarized
world where there is binary opposition
between West and East, First and Third World, Europe and Non-Europe, modernity
and tradition, colonizers and colonized, rich and poor, developed and
under-developed, privileged and downtrodden.
This above perception
of India
makes many powers and non-state actors to look at India as an artificial state and
has encouraged them to make plans to change India so that it fits their mold. India does not
fit into any standard world segmentation of nations and cultures. Many conclude
that India
is yet to go through an evolution of ideas to fit into the definition of the
modern world and as a consequence have reached the conclusion that India is an
incomplete nation which needs civilizing. It is also realized that India has
withstood the test of force of history and does not deeply get influenced by
major revolutionary concepts.
Quote from a
well-known Indian author who is leftist describes how an outsider would view India:
We need enemies. We
have so little sense of ourselves as a nation therefore constantly cast about
for targets to define ourselves against. Prevalent political wisdom suggests
that to prevent the State from crumbling, we need a national cause, and other
than our currency (and, of course, poverty, illiteracy and elections), we have
none. This is the heart of the matter. This is the road that has led us to the
bomb. This search for selfhood. If we are looking for a way out, we need some
honest answers to some uncomfortable questions.
Once again, it isn’t
as though these questions haven’t been asked before. It’s just that we prefer
to mumble the answers and hope that no one’s heard. Is there such a thing as an Indian identity?
Do we really need one? Who is an authentic Indian and who isn’t? Is India Indian?
Does it matter?
Whether or not there has ever been a single civilization that could call itself
‘Indian Civilization’, whether or not India was, is, or ever will become
a cohesive cultural entity, depends on whether you dwell on the differences or
the similarities in the cultures of the people who have inhabited the
subcontinent for centuries. India,
as a modern nation state, was marked out with precise geographical boundaries,
in their precise geographical way, by a British Act of Parliament in 1899. Our
country, as we know it, was forged on the anvil of the British
Empire for the entirely unsentimental reasons of commerce and
administration. But even as she was born, she began her struggle against her
creators. So is India Indian? It’s a tough question. Let’s just say that we’re
an ancient people learning to live in a recent nation.
What is true is that India
is an artificial State—a State that was created by a government, not a people.
A State created from the top down, not the bottom up. The majority of India’s
citizens will not (to this day) be able to identify her boundaries on a map, or
say which language is spoken where or which god is worshipped in what region.
These following
observations on India
have been made by the western strategic community over several decades.
Chaos in governance,
One major problem in
Indian political setup is Weakness in the government with weak leaders subject
to manipulation. Political legitimacy is weak and can be broken easily. The
flow of support from the local level and state level to the central leadership
is weak and can be manipulated. The critical institutions, which are important
for central political stability, can be manipulated.
Political parties can
be manipulated since most are without any nationalistic and ideological
foundation. Since there is a tendency to listen to a foreigner and give him more
weightage, the political parties can be manipulated with little effort. Governments can be made and unmade at the
slightest whim. The policies for economics, security, education and others can
be changed at will and can be infiltrated with ideas by outside powers. No one
group outside of the planning commission is in control of the agenda or the
direction of the policy in India
for the first 50 years.
Even in terms of
strategic decisions Bharat Karnad says in his book Nuclear Weapons and National
Security, The Indian Army was more
worried about the Indian political establishment making mistakes during the
tension with Pakistan
in 1990, 1991 and 1992. The level of chaos and instability within the
Indian polity does not give much deterrence to a determined foe.
These observations
have made India
as an easy target of anti-India lobbies in major powers. The major powers have
laid the seeds of change inside India
for the last 30 years and have been working in a slow fashion to influence the
changes. One example has been the schooling and teaching of history. For an
entire generation history was taught in such a way that the process of
evolution – discussed earlier in this document – was in the right direction
favorable to the western powers and Islamic history.
Quote from Barnett –
US Naval War College: INDIA First, there’s
always the danger of nuking it out with Pakistan. Short of that, Kashmir pulls them into conflict with Pak, and that
involves U.S. now in way it never
did before due to war on terror. India is microcosm of globalization: the high tech, the
massive poverty, the islands of development, the tensions between cultures/civilizations/ and
religions/etcetera. It is too big to succeed, and too big to let fail.
Wants to be
big
responsible military player in region, wants to be strong friend of U.S., and also wants
desperately to catch up with China
in development (the
self-imposed
pressure to succeed is enormous). And
then there’s AIDS.
The tension between cultures
and civilization is considered a prime target for the western powers to
exploit. This is being used to create chaos and opposing factions which can
lead to anarchy.
Recently
in a seminar in 2003 George Perkovich says
-The Hindutva movement’s
campaign to define India’s national identity in one uniform way heightens
tensions not only among Hindus and Muslims, but along geographic and other
lines as well. This campaign for
cultural nationalism contravenes the essence of India’s “democratic nationalism,”
in Achin Vanaik’s words. Democratic
nationalism seeks to “try and build a sense of an Indian ethos which recognizes
and respects the fact that there are different ways of being and feeling
Indian, and that it is precisely these plural and diverse sources of a
potential nationalism that constitute its strength.” Thus, at the same time India is generating the material
economic and military resources to become a major global power, the Indian
political system struggles to clarify the nation’s essential identity. The outcome of this struggle cannot be
predicted. Yet, the character and
conduct of the struggle will profoundly affect India’s cohesion and
stability. It also will affect the way
the rest of the world regards India.
So
what the analysts have noted is that India is struggling for its
identity at a time when there is maximum stress on India externally. The Media and
education have manipulated India
for so long that its national identity and Civilizational identity based on
Indian civilization have been muted. One suspects that the bar has been set, is
one that is unrealistically high and is specific only to India and that
the consequences of failure , which may already be pre-ordained, would be
catastrophic. This will affect the way the world regards India, we are
told. This is a kind of a threat since the west with their control of media can
demonize one group and change and delegitimize any movement to create a
Civilizational identity inside India
in the eyes of the world and create factiousness. Lack of a civilizational identity will result
in loss of self esteem; keep India
in check for decades to come. This is the essence of the Civilizational threat
to India.
The
contested nature of the history is being monitored and the influence of the
Diaspora is being analyzed. They are analyzing the future of the Indian past
and history. The western analysts are supporting the old establishment, which
is dominated by the leftists, and have been nurtured for a long time.
Accusing the center of
propagating and patronizing historians who were supportive of a “different
history which validates the ideology of religions nationalism”, eminent
historian Romila Thapar recently took a dig at a section of the Diaspora who
was facing the “problem of self-projection” in its homeland.
“Nationalism focuses
on the link between power and culture and seeks to use culture in its access to
power. Culture becomes a euphemism for power. The redefinition of Indian
culture as essentially Hindu and of the Upper Caste has also become the
ideology of a section of the Hindu Diaspora. It is a rich Diaspora, and as a
wealthy patron it intervenes in the politics of the homeland,” she said
delivering the Seventh D.T. Lakdawala Memorial Lecture on “The Future of the
Indian Past”.
According to Prof.
Thapar, who is emeritus professor of history at Jawaharlal Nehru
University here, for such
“long-distance nationalism” the culture of the homeland becomes an abstract
construction. “There are fantasies about the past of the homeland, some of
which are a response to confrontations with the culture of the host country.
Migrants are minorities in the host country, which is a problematic status to
come to terms with if they have been part of the majority in the home country.
To the degree that the rewriting of history is a political act, history becomes
the ground of contestation.” Those in the Diaspora were also seeking a bonding
and an identity. This was sought to be derived from religious nationalism, and
therefore the Hindu past had to be viewed - consistently and uniformly - as a
golden age, and no critique was allowed, she said and added: “There are virulent attacks on scholars who
do not support religious nationalism. But scholarship has to be contested
through scholarship and through political polemics. There is, therefore, a link
between religious nationalism in the home country and its manifestation in the
Diaspora.”
Stating that there was
no way to protest religious nationalism through religion and culture, Prof.
Thapar said: “There now has to be an awareness of the need to monitor
curriculum procedures and the quality of textbooks, with a constant effort to
keep the discussion on these open and active. At the same time, the universe of
discourse on Indian history and the human sciences, among academics both in India and
outside, will have to be maintained through protecting the right to free
expression.”
“Historical writing
across the intellectual and academic spectrum has to be available to whosoever
wants to read it. There can be no concession to the claim that a history
propagating religious nationalism is the only way to protect the religion and
culture of Indian society. Protection lies in preventing the closing of the Indian
mind,” she added.
Questions such as the one
quoted are asked to confuse the Indian elite. Will India gain
greater global respect as a decidedly Hindu nation in a 21st century
world defined in Civilizational terms? Or, as the writer Raja Mohan has suggested,
will India
win global power and respect as an exemplar of the Enlightenment project into Asia?
In each of the terms
of reference – legitimacy, order, efficiency, moral-political values,
factiousness, and initiative – India
has performed to mixed effect. This is
no small achievement. No state in
history has been as populous, diverse, stratified, poor and democratic as India. The attempt to resolve all of its internal
conflicts through democratically representative government leads to muddling, almost by definition. Francine Frankel has
described the multi-faceted political transformations India is now undergoing:
“the electoral
upsurge of historically disadvantaged groups, the political organization of
lower castes and dalits in competition with each other and in opposition to
upper castes, fragmentation of national political parties, violence between
Hindus and Muslims…, and the emergence of Hindutva…as the most important
ideological challenge to the constitutional vision of the liberal state.”
Some analysts consider the ideological challenge to be insurmountable by India.
Factiousness is an
important but often ambiguous variable of state health. As proponents of checks and balances note,
government that allows factiousness can protect the rights and interests of
minorities by preventing a large majority from coalescing and dominating a
polity. One measure of liberal
democracy’s genius is its tendency to enable factions to cancel each other out. On the other hand, a state constantly
embroiled in factional disputes will find it difficult to make and execute
major strategic decisions or to satisfy the aspirations and values even of a
majority. For India
factiousness is considered the weakest point in state cohesion. This has been
exploited by western powers by manipulating Indian influential groups within
the country.
Statecraft can
increase or decrease a country’s influence relative to its material
capabilities. The combination of
leadership, strategic vision and tactics, moral example and persuasion, and
diplomatic acumen can earn a state great international influence. The western analysts perception about India is that -The
potency of India’s
statecraft has ebbed and flowed in decades-long tides. The currently rising tide follows decades of trough
after the Nehru years. The overt demonstration of India’s nuclear
weapon capabilities seems to have heightened Indian leaders’ confidence in
developing and prosecuting an international diplomatic strategy. The analyst also note the coming changes in
UN. Finally, India,
as other states, regards a permanent seat on the UN Security Council as a
measure of major power. But India would be
unlikely to win a vote to award it such a seat, either from the current
Security Council members or the General Assembly. One measure of Indian diplomacy in the future
will be how it either lowers the value of a Security Council seat and therefore
makes India’s
power ranking independent of such a position, or alternatively how India attains a
seat. India is considered to have low
influence for the size of its population. Its poor image and low income does
not help in increasing the influence. The location of India in a poor
region with troubled history and decrease in trade over the last several
centuries has given India
low clout in the comity of nations.
India
passionately seeks to de-couple or de-hyphenate Pakistan from India. This has
been noted by the analysts and they see that India has been in a trap with
Pakistan/Kashmir issue for the last 10 years since 1989. The explanation given
by Perkovich as follows- Treating the two states like twins
diminishes India. India is greater than Pakistan in
every regard except one: nuclear weapons.
But, unfortunately for India
and the world, nuclear weapons are great equalizers. The world, including of course the U.S.
government, fears the humanitarian horror that nuclear weapons could unleash in
South Asia, but also the dangerous disordering effects
on the international system. So, when Pakistan, or
terrorist groups affiliated with it, instigates a crisis in Kashmir,
and India
responds by threatening military retaliation, the world worries that the
escalatory process could lead to nuclear war.
We know that this fearful reaction might play into Pakistan’s
interest. But the fact that India naturally
threatens military escalation makes it impossible to discount the possibility
of warfare that could lead to nuclear use.
Nuclear weapons gave Pakistan
this capacity to stay in the game, to continue to pop up and grab India by the
dhoti. Neither the U.S. nor India has the
power to compel Pakistan
to do otherwise. Neither one of us can
take over Pakistan
and neither would benefit from the results of economically strangulating Pakistan. Thus, neither India nor the U.S. can escape
from the reality that we have to deal with Pakistan.
This explanation is
another way the west tries to couple India with regional problems and
‘punish’ India
for going nuclear. While seemingly a plausible hypothesis there are inconsistencies
in Perkovich’s argument. Nuclear weapons may be great equalizers but nobody in
his right mind would equate Pakistan
(or India
for that matter) with the US.
Further while Perkovich goes to great lengths
in his book to devalue India’s nuclear capability as being of dubious value in a real conflict, he
seems to attach a great deal of value and importance to the nuclear capability
of Pakistan. Consequently, he does not hesitate to say that nuclear weapons
have the capability of equalizing Pakistan with India, a
country seven times its size in both population and GDP.
There is another point
to be made and this is that India
would not benefit from economically strangulating Pakistan. This is an arguable
hypothesis and the case for the opposition has been made effectively by Jaideep
Menon
Perkovich also says
the prominence and power of the Pakistani Army, intelligence services and jihadis
will not diminish as long as the prominence and power of the Hindutva agenda
are rising in India. These two internal dynamics are related; they
feed on each other. Pakistanis cite the
RSS and VHP as proof that Hindus are out to destroy Muslims and, of course, Pakistan. The RSS and VHP, of course, use the
prominence of Islamist parties and terrorist organizations in Pakistan as
proof that Muslims are evil. The pursuit
of the Hindutva agenda will only tighten the handcuffs, the hyphen, that
connects Pakistan
to India.
India is
typically analyzed from within the framework established for Pakistan. Since
Pakistan
is an Islamic state, and it is at war with India, therefore this must be
because India
is a Hindu state. Since Pakistan
is known to have been the recipient of nuclear weapons proliferation from China and
missile technology proliferation from China and North Korea,
therefore India
must be the recipient of proliferation from other states. Since Pakistan is
known to have proliferated nuclear technology to North Korea, therefore India must be a
likely proliferator as well. There is circularity in this argument, namely that
a hyphen exists between India
and Pakistan.
Once such an assumption is made, it is not surprising that the actions of India are
hyphenated with those of Pakistan
and then it is a short step to assert that those who espouse Hindutva are no
different than those who flew the planes into the World Trade Center (WTC).
The western reports
about India
and Pakistan
all suffer from all the aspects of the flaws of groupthink. Essentially, the
authors assume that there is an India-Pakistan dyad through which any data is
to be viewed. This assumption is probably based on the work of discredited
experts such as Stephen Cohen. This framework views
all actions within the dyad, thus refusing to admit of policy drivers (what is
the cause of the violence in Kashmir, for
instance) that are inconsistent with the assumption of the dyad. In essence,
the “experts” review all the data from within the established paradigm and
force-fit the anomalous data to the paradigm by resorting to illogical
gymnastics, and dismissing data that are inconsistent with the paradigm as
“questionable”. By not questioning the paradigm and its underlying assumptions,
no new ideas are generated, and more importantly, key trends are missed because
of faulty analyses.
In order to appreciate why India
and Pakistan
are not a dyad, it is important to ponder the following set of facts and
inferences. Both nations have a history of conflict that has resulted in three
major wars (1971, 1965, and 1948), one minor one (1999), and proxy wars in Kashmir (1984-present) and Punjab
(1981-1993). It is therefore easy to assume that the other drives each nations
foreign policy objectives, and strategic imperatives. Further, since the two
nations were hewn by the British along religious lines, it is easy to assume
that the conflict is between Muslim Pakistan and Hindu India. The historic
Hindu Muslim competitive field is extrapolated between India and Pakistan.
Finally, since much of the conflict has occurred over the territory of Jammu and
Kashmir, it is easy to conclude that the future
of Jammu and Kashmir
is the root cause of the tension. The reality is significantly different.
India is a functioning democracy,
where a variety of religions and races live in harmony. The only other
multi-cultural parallel to India
is the United States.
Although the United States
is a Christian majority state, it is well recognized that viewing US actions
from a religious prism is flawed. Viewing India as a Hindu State
is as irrelevant. Pakistan,
on the other hand is a religious state. Its entire raison d’etre is based on
being an Islamic state. Its very name, in Urdu, means “Land of the Pure”,
meaning wherein the pure are implicitly defined as being Muslim. Pakistani
actions and government statements are routinely couched in Islamic terms.
Creating an analysis that is based on Muslim Pakistan versus Hindu India is
doomed to failure, because it fails to understand the fundamental drivers
between the two states.
Jammu and Kashmir is not the root cause of
conflict between India
and Pakistan.
The other basis involves positioning Jammu
and Kashmir as a nuclear flashpoint. Often, the
discussion circles around the “self-determination” of the Kashmiris, without
ever questioning the meaning of “self-determination” in the appropriate
context. The notion of self-determination was one that gained currency during
the colonial age when vast peoples were under occupation and without basic
individual rights. The notion of self-determination implied providing to the
people the right to democratically elect their leaders, make their own laws and
taxation. In the Indian state of Jammu
and Kashmir, the citizenry are free to elect their
leaders and routinely replace their leaders through elections. The most recent
elections had a voter turnout that was observed by the US Embassy, and saw
larger number of people casting their ballot than vote in the US general
elections. All this occurred despite facing the threat of terrorists. On the
other hand, the part of Kashmir that is under
Pakistani control has never had a free election in its history. The actuality
of the violence in Jammu and Kashmir
is related to the Islamic-supremacists that wish to ethnically cleanse Jammu and Kashmir of the
Hindus, Sikhs, and Buddhists that reside therein. The real conflict in Jammu and Kashmir is one
those that wish for a free democracy and the Islamists that believe in
religious cleansing and “purity” of the religious composition of the state.
Clearly, the root cause of the conflict between India and Pakistan then
is about freedom, of which Jammu and
Kashmir is a symptom. As we step outside the paradigm
created by groupthink manufactured by the West and Pakistan, we are better able to
join the dots. The conflict in Jammu
and Kashmir is related to the Islamist nature of Pakistan, it is
this Islamism that demands the ethnic cleansing of Jammu and Kashmir. The same Islamism shouts
anti-American slogans and engages in proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction to America’s
enemies.
Health Care
Aids and other basic
health are threatening a crowded India and this will increase as the
population increases in the next 30 years. This will affect the health of the
average Indian inside India
and when Indians travels outside India, they will be subject of
health scrutiny. Psychological Operations using AIDS as a scare tactic has
already projected India
as the country with largest AID population by 2010 with 15-20 million people
infected by the virus. Economists in 2002 had an article on the chaos in the
health care of India.
It pointed out since India
has some trained skill set which move around the world the western countries
have an obligation to fix the health care of India.
Psychological profile
and perception about Indians and various cultures inside india:
British did the first
large scale analysis of the different sect and castes in India from 1881
and have drawn their demographic and psychographic character. There has been
attempt to reduce the non-Muslim character with highlighting the martial
character of the Muslims. After independence the social anthropologists with
leftists leanings have csrried on this task of
social engineering to create political and social justice slogans. They
have worked with western academics to change the perception of India.
Some of the conclusion
such as the notion that India
is a ‘weak society with no social order’ have been internalized by Indians in
their academic discourse. Some have also concluded that the non Muslims do not
have political consciousness and a global world view. The Muslims, Christians
and Communists have, according to this narrative, a global world view and are
more conscious of the world than the non-Muslims. Robert Kaplan in one of his
book says that during a travel he was informed in India that a uniform Hindu identity has now coalesced
which did not exist before. The implication is that this identity and
consciousness is an unknown quantity. Their consciousness of a nation state and
their psychological behavior model is still under research at various universities.
Current perception of India and its future
Perceptions about India are
shaped against expectations which are articulated not in universal terms, but
in terms specific to India
that would cast her in an unfavorable light. It is left unsaid that when such
yardsticks are applied to most other states, they would in fact fail even more
ignominiously than would India.
Indians may be forgiven when they assume with very justifiable reason that such
yardsticks are applied only to India.
Typical of such perceptions and expectations is the following passage from Perkovich;
To produce and sustain
significant power a state must have a political system that citizens
support. A state with a disgruntled or
dissident citizenry will divert precious resources to impose order and will not
be able to mobilize the full creativity and energy of its people. Politics also
serve broader human needs than efficiency.
People participate in politics to pursue justice, liberty, glory, community
and other virtues and vices. To the
degree that a government does not help its citizens to achieve these values and
aspirations that state’s long-term power probably will wane. A society’s morale depends heavily on the
qualities of its governors – leaders.
Political leaders who do not embody justice, communal toleration,
fraternity, and altruism will not foster government that pursues these
attributes.
Factiousness is an
important but often ambiguous variable of state health where India is
watched closely. As proponents of checks
and balances note, government that allows fractiousness can protect the rights
and interests of minorities by preventing a large majority from coalescing and
dominating a polity. One measure of
liberal democracy’s genius is its tendency to enable factions to cancel each
other out. On the other hand, a state
constantly embroiled in factional disputes will find it difficult to make and
execute major strategic decisions or to satisfy the aspirations and values even
of a majority.
In each of the terms
discussed above legitimacy, order, efficiency, moral-political values,
fractiousness, and initiative – India
has performed to mixed effect. This is
no small achievement. No state in history has been as
populous, diverse, stratified, poor and democratic as India. The attempt to resolve all of its internal
conflicts through democratically representative government leads to muddling,
almost by definition. Francine Frankel has
described the multi-faceted political transformations India is now
undergoing: “the
electoral upsurge of historically disadvantaged groups, the political
organization of lower castes and dalits in competition with each other and in
opposition to upper castes, fragmentation of national political parties,
violence between Hindus and Muslims…, and the emergence of Hindutva…as
the most important ideological challenge to the constitutional vision
of the liberal state.”
Each of these phenomena involves competition to acquire the power and
patronage that come with government office at the state and union levels. Meanwhile, imperatives of economic
liberalization and globalization require diminishing the role of government in
overall national activity.
Representative democracy gives long-disadvantaged groups opportunities
to mobilize and compete for control of
government and, therefore, patronage.
At the same time, the “rules” of private markets do not provide such
clear avenues for the disadvantaged to advance.
So, will the shrinking of government intensify political conflict? Will, or should, political actors concentrate
primarily on how the pie is divided – patronage—or on making a bigger pie
-reform?
Here the current central government of India reveals conflicting
tendencies. On one hand, economic
reformers seek to bake a larger pie. On
the other hand, the BJP, whipped onward by its highly mobilized and more
extreme sister-organizations the RSS (Rashtriya Swayamesevak Sangh) and VHP
(Vishwa Hindu Parishad) concentrates on the flavor of the pie and who is
entitled to partake of it and under what terms.
The carnage in Gujarat last year
dramatizes the stakes in this conflict over the very essence of the Indian
nation’s and state’s identity. Yet India’s
manifold diversity precludes easy conclusions about the likely outcome. The BJP aspires for sustained national
leadership. This has required it to
temper its social agenda in order to attract diverse political partners into
the coalition it needs to rule the Union government. Among the current government’s 22 coalition
partners are many that do not subscribe to Hindutva. Geographically, the Hindutva movement draws
its strength primarily in northern Indian states. The Hindutva movement’s campaign to define India’s
national identity in one uniform way heightens tensions not only among Hindus
and Muslims, but along geographic and other lines as well. This campaign for cultural nationalism
contravenes the essence of India’s
“democratic nationalism,” in Achin Vanaik’s words. Democratic nationalism seeks to “try and
build a sense of Indianness which recognizes and respects the fact that there
are different ways of being and feeling Indian, and that it is precisely these
plural and diverse sources of a potential nationalism that constitute its
strength.”
They are watching the
fissure between the cultural nationalism and democratic nationalism to see
which would prevail in the long run and create the faultline inside India.
Whither India
and South Asia
There have been
serious discussions inside western think tanks about the total collapse of India and its
surroundings due to economic stagnation and economic isolation and political
and governance breakdown in the long run. The trajectory of India and its
statistics did not give much hope for any rejuvenation and rebuild. There would
be chaos and anarchy as the population rises.
The first large-scale spurt in population growth was in 1965 onwards.
The next was in 1985 and this contributed to a large young population in South Asia, which is less than 35 years
old.
With less resource and
a stunted economy the only end point was a collapse and split of India. This view was prevalent in the late 80s and
early 90s. Internally the think tanks would be still debating on the future of India as a
single state looking at the fractious political and religious divide with
excessive diversity. The threat faced by the nation within itself is considered
insurmountable and greater than external threats.
Quote from an article in 1965
Nehru’s delusion of
Indian spirituality as a guarantee of privileged noninvolvement having been
shattered—whither India?
She is at the moment a land in which nothing succeeds and nothing fails. Is it
that all the world is secretly contemptuous of India’s lack of power, physical or
moral, and that everyone respects only her land mass and population numbers?
Nehru himself had the awful doubt. He asked in The Discovery of India, “Have we had our day and are we ... just
carrying on after the manner of the aged, quiescent, devitalized, uncreative,
desiring peace and sleep above all else?” India has not yet given him the
answer he would have wished.