By Swapan Dasgupta
Earlier this month, New Delhi witnessed the release
of a quasi-official report entitled ‘Non-Alignment 2.0’. The report attempted
to set out the broad contours of a foreign policy doctrine that would indicate
carrying forward the contested legacy of Jawaharlal Nehru and, for good
measure, his foremost gladiator V.K. Krishna Menon.
Regardless of the understandable wariness of some
members of the committee to be typecast and slotted into a compartment, the
driving force behind Non-Alignment 2.0 was explicitly political. First, it was
aimed as a soft answer to those, notably in the Congress and Left parties, who
have aired their misgivings of a definite pro-US tilt in foreign policy.
Secondly—and this is being spoken of openly by members of India’s rarefied
‘strategic community’—Non-Alignment 2.0 is said to provide an intellectual
foundation for a post-Manmohan Singh approach to foreign policy by the Congress
establishment. It was, to put it bluntly, aimed as a policy primer for the
Congress’ designated heir apparent, an attempt to inject his candidature with a
cerebral gloss.
According to the report, a future policy of India
must be centred on three “core objectives”. “to ensure that India did not
define its national interest or approach to world politics in terms of
ideologies and goals that had been set elsewhere; that India retained maximum
strategic autonomy to pursue its development goals; and that India worked to
build national power as the foundation for creating a just and equitable world
order.”
It is unlikely that too many people will find the
proposed thrust towards “strategic autonomy” and “national power” objectionable,
even if they feel that linking common sense to the chequered history of
Nehruvian non-alignment is gratuitous. That India must take decisions based on
enlightened self-interest, rather than ideological grandstanding, is obvious
but a point worth re-stating. Equally, it is crucial to emphasise that any
visionary scheme to right all the accumulated wrongs of the world cannot be
contemplated unless India lives up to its potential as an emerging economic
power.
Perhaps India needs to remind itself that the
preachiness of Nehru and Menon were often seen as presumptuous because New
Delhi’s ‘national power’ was purely notional. It had become a euphemism for
sloth, incompetence and flawed decisions based on “ideologies and goals that
had been set elsewhere.” A country that led a “ship-to-mouth” existence in the
1960s had no credible basis to pontificate on the immorality of US policy
during the Cold War. Nor is the historical baggage associated with ‘national
power’ enhanced by the revelation in the Mitrokhin
Archive that there was a queue of ministers in Indira Gandhi’s Cabinet outside
the Soviet embassy offering confidential government papers.
The past history of Indian non-alignment, it is
clear, does not inspire automatic confidence in the ability of this doctrine to
serve as a guiding light for the challenges of the 21st century. But
even if, for the sake of argument, we are able to disentangle historical
baggage from the principles set out by the authors of Non-Alignment 2.0, a
recognition of ground realities is necessary.
Till the Nehruvian edifice came crashing down
following the ignominious collapse of the Soviet Union, there was an unstated
national consensus that drove Indian foreign policy. The consensus had as much
to do with the dominant position of the Congress in domestic politics as with
intellectual acceptance of Nehru and Indira Gandhi’s legacy—even the
short-lived Janata Government didn’t deviate from the consensus. However,
today, despite the apparent lack of interest in the political class with
diplomacy, Indian foreign policy has become far more contested.
The most significant impediment to the projection of
‘national power’ overseas is the emergence of regional interests in foreign
policy. In the past few months, the assertion of regional power in a coalition
led to the derailment of the Teesta waters accord with Bangladesh and a
commitment by the Prime Minister to vote for a resolution in the UN Human
Rights Commission condemning the excesses of the Sri Lankan military against
Tamil civilians. In the Indian context, the assertion of regional interests in
decisions governing foreign policy may seem unique. However, evolved
democracies such as the US—with a diverse, multi-ethnic population—have a rich
experience of keeping one eye on domestic politics in matters affecting foreign
policy. The vocal Irish lobby, the powerful Jewish lobby and the fiercely
anti-Castro Cuban émigré lobby in Florida have traditionally exercised their
hold over the US State Department. To these can be added commercial lobbies
and, in recent times, the vocal human rights industry that played an important
role in shaping US attitudes towards the Balkans, Libya and, now, Sri Lanka.
The problem with India is that the assertion of
‘national power’ has been a rarefied, elite preoccupation and insulated from
the larger political process. The mandarins of the Ministry of External Affairs
have been traditionally insensitive to domestic political impulses. They have
seen diplomacy in a way reminiscent of the Congress of Vienna and the Congress
of Berlin in the 19th century. Their inability to handle democracy
contributed to the mismatch of perceptions of Bangladesh with Kolkata. Likewise
in the case of Sri Lanka, there was inadequate groundwork to secure an
all-party consensus.
Asian Age/ Deccan Chronicle, March 23, 2012
2 comments:
President Mahinda Rajapaksa has rightly warned that countries which voted for the resolution will have to worry about consequences of terrorism We are already worrying like hell!
I remember a London Times article alleging that Indian Army was “on the rampage” in Kashmir, and the then Acting High Commissioner, K V Rajan writing a rejoinder disclosing that 400000 Kashmiris had to flee the Kashmir valley because of murders, kidnappings, rapes and ethnic cleansing and various intimidatory activities by Islamic terrorists. He pointed out that terrorism, religious fundamentalism, and disinformation campaign had forged an alliance to pose a challenge to India’s secular and democratic framework and institutional integrity. OIC meetings routinely pass resolutions ratifying the Pak-sponsored terrorism in Kashmir as the struggle for legitimate aspirations of Muslims.
Once an Indian, Ravi Nair, who headed Delhi-based South Asia Human Rights Documentation Centre, was heard alleging before a Round Table Conference convened by the European Parliament at Brussels that Kashmir was a bleeding colony of India. He was not the first, not the last. There are International Church bodies who consider India as a country that is lacking in religious freedom!
And as regards the gullible bleeding hearts in the United States government, Including Bill Clinton when he was the President, had no difficulty in believing that” Khalistan the Sikh homeland” was indeed an independent entity born on October 7, 1987 which he acknowledge in a letter to a Canadian Khalistani leader in a reply to an appeal!
Indian Forein Policy, right from Nehru’s days was a policy based on an enormous quantity of left-wingery, a lot of disproportionate moralising and poor diplomacy. Our Non Alignment as hilariously though truthfully put in the BBC serial ‘Yes Prime Minister’, just meant non-aligned to the United States. And it went a lot way to enthuse the American media and administration to hate us. They continue to hate us. Otherwise how could they have Pakistan as a front-line ally in their fight against terrorism when their Defence establishment emphatically confirms that the ISI is continuing to support the LeT?/TMMenon
tmmenon.blogspot.in
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