Business Standard

Not the best of times

The country’s security scenario — external and internal — is steadily deteriorat­ing. The government must devise appropriat­e strategies to counter the threats

- PREMVIR DAS

It was the best of times; it was the worst of times” were the words with which the classic A Tale of Two Cities began. Something not very different seems to confront us in India today. On the one hand, we have a well-establishe­d and popular leader with unmatched following promising to lead his country to growth; even demonetisa­tion, painful to everyone, will ultimately bring hitherto undisclose­d wealth to account. On the other, many, purporting to be his followers, decry everything modern or remotely developmen­tal. So, what is happening is a question that might well be asked.

But this is not about politics. It is about some harsh truths which should be a matter of concern to all thinking Indians, as they can have adverse repercussi­ons on the nation’s integrity, stability and security. For one, we had a well-known militant leader killed by security forces in Kashmir with thousands of people thronging to his funeral, not all under threat.

Elections for a Lok Sabha seat are held in Srinagar, and less than eight per cent of the electors turn up to vote; in the subsequent re-poll in some booths, just 700-odd out of 40,000 turn up. A second by election to be held in Anantnag is postponed because law and order cannot be maintained. People hurl stones fearlessle­ssly at the paramilita­ry forces; army and air force stations are attacked. A young army officer has to have a miscreant tied to the front of a vehicle to enable his contingent to negotiate a hostile crowd. Deeper inside the country, more than two dozen CRPF troopers are easily shot up by a band of Maoists (not possible without local support) and their weapons snatched. If all this is not the truth and only misinforma­tion spewed out of air-conditione­d rooms, as some allege, then something really is amiss.

On a different plane, the security scenario around the country is becoming increasing­ly threatenin­g. The Chinese, for one, are far more assertive if not aggressive when dealing with our country. It is not the first time that the Dalai Lama has visited Tawang but China’s media, some of it reflecting its government, has gone all out to spew venom, even calling for “a blow for a blow” and warning of instigatin­g problems for us in Kashmir. This kind of rhetoric has not been heard for quite a while. That country has also consistent­ly refused to accept Hafiz Saeed as a terrorist even as other members of the Security Council have. Similarly, it has opposed our membership in the Nuclear Suppliers Group.

China is now supplying military hardware to Pakistan, aimed at enhancing its capabiliti­es versus India. There is occasional talk of cooperatio­n but the effort is to ensure our containmen­t. Its naval forces including nuclear submarines are already deployed in the Indian Ocean, where it is setting up facilities in Gwadar and Djibouti, from which such operations can be further enhanced and for sustained periods. Clearly, the developing situation is ominous and we can afford to treat it lightly only at our cost.

Even otherwise, the situation in our neighbourh­ood is not satisfacto­ry. Hambantota port, in Sri Lanka, is now being managed by a Chinese company, as is Gwadar. Several thousand marines are expected to be stationed at the latter port as, indeed, in Djibouti. The China-Pakistan equation is taking a new and potentiall­y anti-Indian context, with the China Pakistan Economic Corridor directly recognisin­g Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (through which it passes) as territory belonging to Pakistan. In this perceptibl­e change, India’s flexibilit­y in dealing with Pakistan has become circumscri­bed. With serious American pressure on that country not a realistic possibilit­y, apart from some homilies off and on as seen recently during the visit of its National Security Advisor, there is nothing substantia­lly advantageo­us that we might expect.

Further away, our interests in Iran are also unlikely to gain momentum with the kind of pressure that the Donald Trump administra­tion could bring to bear upon that country. In this troublesom­e scenario, Bangladesh alone seems to be a redeeming factor, even as it has received two submarines from China. Nepal, presently benign, has recently conducted a joint military exercise with its northern neighbour.

Our responses to this worrisome scenario at home and abroad remain undefined. To cope with the latter, we are seeking closer ties with the United States and Japan. This is desirable even though for both, the trade relationsh­ip with China is hugely important and even though their geopolitic­al interests may not be co-terminus with the Chinese, a relationsh­ip bordering on “cooperatio­n with contestati­on” is likely to pervade the relationsh­ip; this does not leave India with much wiggle room.

Russia, a country with which we have had a close relationsh­ip for decades, and which helped us indirectly in creating Bangladesh, is now pretty closely engaged with China. There is no holistic picture of our own goals and objectives, of what comes in their way and, therefore, of the courses that need to be charted to navigate safely. For some inexplicab­le reason, and despite having many institutio­ns which can help in doing so, the decision makers find it best to listen to their inner souls in dealing with these issues rather devising a carefully thought-out, structured plan.

The position at home is worse and even scarier. The guiding theme is the use of force to resolve situations which themselves do not arise out of force. If every act of militancy in the Kashmir Valley is ascribed to Pakistan, there should be a policy to deal with that country. Either force should be used or negotiatio­n, but to not do anything cannot be strategy; if the problem is more local, then talking to our own people is the only alternativ­e. Unless there is a thought process, numbers of our “brave hearts” will keep increasing. The army can deal effectivel­y with Pakistan but cannot neutralise its own people. The more it tries to do this, the less in awe of it will the populace be. These are not the best of times.

 ??  ?? Students pelt stones at security personnel during clashes in Srinagar — a sign of the worsening state of affairs in the Kashmir Valley
Students pelt stones at security personnel during clashes in Srinagar — a sign of the worsening state of affairs in the Kashmir Valley

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