There was a time when India was seen,
internationally, as an originator and major force in the
non-aligned movement, a leader of the developing world,
and generally a bulwark against imperialism. Much has
changed since then. Imperialism is probably stronger than
ever, but the world is muddier and more confused, and the
Indian government has clearly abandoned the effort to
project itself as anti-imperialist in any way.
This has been evident for some time in the economic
policy, with the right-wing BJP-led government
accelerating the process of liberalization which is based
on the hope of attracting more foreign capital into the
country. But the shift in terms of strategy and foreign
policy has possibly been even sharper. In the past few
years, the NDA government has systematically dismantled
the entire edifice of independent foreign policy based on
non-alignment, which was created in the post-Independence
period.
Instead of an independent international stance, the
current Indian government has moved closer to both the
right-wing Bush administration in the United States
government and the hawkish Sharon regime in Israel,
especially since September 2001. This closeness has hardly
been affected by the latest evidence of the aggressive
militaristic expansion of the Bush administration in the
Iraq war. Indeed, the intention of the Indian Union
Cabinet (albeit temporarily delayed) to send Indian troops
to Iraq to participate in the US-dominated colonial
control over that nation, exemplifies this trend.
Already, India is the largest market for high-tech Israeli
weapons, accounting for almost one half of Israel's arms
exports. Israel has become the second largest supplier of
arms to India, after Russia. Israel has already provided
India with sea-to-sea missile radar and other similar
systems, border monitoring equipment, and night-vision
devices. This new exchange of arms has the approval of the
Bush administration, which has recently cleared the sale
and delivery of Israel's new Phalcon reconnaissance
aircraft to India.
This sale had been stayed when the border tension with
Pakistan was at its height last year, and a similar sale
to China had been disallowed, but now apparently the US
government thinks that such Indo-Israeli military
cooperation is all to the good. In addition, recently
there have been reports of Indo-Israeli plans to
collaborate on the development of a missile defence
system, using the technology of Israel's Arrow
anti-missile system, developed jointly with the US.
Such hardware exchange is supported by other forms of
military cooperation as well, between India and Israel,
all under the benevolent gaze of Washington. Several
thousand Indian soldiers are being given specialized
'anti-insurgency training' in Israel. Within Israel,
strategic thinking looks upon the Indian Ocean as a useful
and desirable location for military infrastructure, using
the cooperation of the Indian navy. Apparently Israel has
already conducted tests on the possibility of launching
nuclear warheads in the Indian Ocean off the Sri Lankan
coast.
All this has been encouraged and abetted within India and
in the United States, by playing up to the anti-Muslim
sentiment implicit within the ruling BJP. Recently the
Prime Minister's National Security Adviser (whose very
designation is unabashedly copied from the US
administration's nomenclature) Brajesh Mishra visited the
US. It was the first time that a representative of the
Indian government actually attended and addressed a
gathering of the American Jewish Committee, a right-wing
Zionist lobby.
Even more than his presence at that function, what he said
was enough to confirm the common attitude of the current
Indian government with such rightwing anti-Islamic groups.
Mishra is reported to have argued that only a core of
'true democracies' such as the United States, Israel and
India can effectively fight terrorism, because they are
the prime targets and therefore must form an alliance.
This alliance according to him, should not dither in this
war by trying to define terrorism or discussing its
causes.
Rather, the implicit argument would be that it is
apparently enough to decide that all terrorists come from
a particular religious source. This appalling conclusion
was actually confirmed by Home Minister L.K. Advani in an
interview with Fox News, where he said, 'Terrorism
in so far we have seen it on September 11 or December 13
has a common source and that common source has described
the US, Israel and India as its three main enemies.’
Brajesh Mishra at the meeting with the American Jewish
Conference, apparently ridiculed the distinction sought to
be made between terrorists and freedom fighters (what,
then of our own Bhagat Singh, to quote one example?). He
is also quoted as saying that 'another fallacy
propagated is that terrorism can only be eradicated by
addressing the root causes.' In other
words, political solutions are a waste of time, whether in
Kashmir or in Palestine.
Surely, this unqualified aggressive stance would have made
even hardened Zionist hawks sit up in surprise. Not
surprisingly, the American Jewish Committee has announced
that it will soon set up an office in New Delhi.
But this alliance of the junior partners should not
distract us from the potentially even more lethal cosiness
of the Indian military and strategic establishment with
the US administration itself. This entails no less than
the complete subordination of Indian interests to those of
Big Brother, and associated complicity in the growing
number of misdeeds that US imperialism is engaging in
around the world.
India holds a very prominent place in the September
2002 National Security Strategy of the USA, which
is apparently a policy document that bears the personal
stamp of President Bush. The long-term strategic purpose
of the US in building up its alliance with India, is
really to contain, and possibly eventually destroy, the
growing power of China in the Asian region and in the
world.
This has been explicitly
recognized by many within the Bush administration. A
recent 130-page report from the Pentagon,
Indo-U.S. Military Relationship: Expectations and
Perceptions,
a classified version of
which was first disclosed in Jane's Foreign Report, makes
this quite clear.
The document
argues that 'China represents the most significant threat
to both countries' security in the future as an economic
and military competitor.’ It quotes an unnamed US admiral
as saying that both the US and India view China as a
strategic threat, 'though we do not discuss this
publicly’. The document goes on to observe that US
relations with its 'traditional' allies in Asia-South
Korea and Japan-have become 'fragile', and concludes that
'India should emerge as a vital component of US strategy.’
According to this report, China's rapid military
modernization, its impressive economic growth, and even
its relatively independent foreign policy, are all seen as
threats by both the American and Indian establishments.
In any case, there has been a significant increase in
military cooperation between the two countries, which has
been inadequately discussed within the Indian media or in
civil society generally. After the lull immediately
following the nuclear tests at Pokhran, military
ties between the two have expanded greatly in the last few
years. There has been a resumption in sales of US defence
hardware and also of joint military exercises.
These exercises have included Indian paratroopers working
with their US counterparts in Alaska, joint military
airlift operations in India that included a US Air Force
C-130 cargo aircraft, and American and Indian military
personnel taking part in the Shanti Path 03 peace-keeping
exercises in India. The US and Indian militaries are also
planning to conduct their first joint exercise with
fighter aircraft.
Indian and US navies have been jointly conducting a number
of exercises that included anti-submarine training, and
combating piracy. For more than a year now, they have been
jointly patrolling the heavily traversed Straits of
Malacca, a region where China's navy is also vying for
control. Encouraged by the US, the Indian navy has
launched a thirty-year-programme to construct a fleet
capable of projecting power into the South China Sea. All
this military intimacy was expressed in the recent Malabar
IV exercises, which coordinated the efforts of Indian and
US battle groups, including cruisers, destroyers,
frigates, submarines, aircraft, and several thousand
personnel.
The pathetically anxious attempt of the government to send
Indian troops to help shore up the colonizing occupation
by the American and British forces in Iraq, would only be
an extension of this general trend. But so much of this
occurs without the knowledge of the Indian public, that we
may one day wake up to find that the Indian government has
even allowed US military bases in the country. And we will
then have our government trying to persuade us that it is
in our own interests.
Of course, nothing could be further from the truth. The
people of India have little to gain-and much to lose-from
an increase in levels of military tension with China, and
from a potentially debilitating competitive
militarization. Not only will there be massive diversion
of badly needed public resources, but the increased
instability of the region would also lead, ironically, to
less security and less democracy for ordinary people.
That is why our policy makers are already thinking ahead
to find ways of justifying this entire new strategy. When
there is such a shift in military strategy, there has to
be some attempt to find intellectual justification for it.
And what better instrument for such rationalization, than
through a 'think tank' specially set up for the purpose?
The right wing in the United States has actually made a
fine art of the exploitation of these 'think tanks' for
pushing through ideas and policies that would have been
completely rejected in the more liberal conditions that
prevailed earlier.
According to Disinfopedia,
the 'encyclopedia of propaganda’, 'a
think tank
is an organization that claims to serve as a center for
research and analysis of important public issues. In
reality, many think tanks are little more than public
relations fronts, usually headquartered in state or
national seats of government and generating self-serving
scholarship that serves the advocacy goals of their
industry sponsors.' In the United States, there are twice
as many conservative think tanks as liberal ones, and the
conservative ones tend to have much more money.
The one that is relevant for our purposes
is the recently created US-India Institute for
Strategic Policy, based in Washington. It is the outcome
of a series of quiet meetings between the US and Indian
governments, which have also pushed all the military
cooperation. The Institute is closely aligned with the
ultra-conservative Centre for Security Policy, which
has strong ties with the Republican Party.
Many of its members have served or are serving in senior
posts in the administrations of Ronald Reagan and George
Bush Jr.
The Centre has not been shy about touting its close links
with the US government, and the new Insititute is not
likely to be either. But the potentially greater
significance of this Insitute is not in the involvment of
US hawks, but in the drawing in of Indian 'experts' to
justify this new Indian association with US militarism.
Tragically, we now have to be prepared for Indian
'strategic analyst' apologists to be even more closely
involved in the intellectual exercise of justifying the
Indian government's open and enthusiastic subordination to
the long-terms goals of US imperialism.
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