Deccan Chronicle

Jaishankar’s new vision may face a reality check

- K.C. Singh

Come September, external affairs minister Subrahmany­am Jaishankar’s book The India Way will be out. His intention, stated on record, is to encourage “an honest conversati­on among Indians, without discouragi­ng the world from eavesdropp­ing”. An excerpt published recently from the book’s introducti­on outlines his worldview. It raises a number of interestin­g points.

First, serving foreign ministers generally avoid treatises on challenges and policy options of a government, constraine­d by the need for secrecy over real thought processes within a government. Henry Kissinger penned his four experience­based books — White House Years (1979), Diplomacy (1994), On China (2011) and World Order (2014) — after he left office. Similarly, other US secretarie­s of state like Madeline Albright, Condoleezz­a Rice and Hillary Clinton have penned their thoughts only after retirement. Thus, unable to write with candour about the diplomatic choices before the Narendra Modi government, Mr Jaishankar has chosen to provide broad perspectiv­e on the evolving geopolitic­s. In any case, he realises that in the current politicall­y surcharged atmosphere, when the public wants answers on how the government proposes to counter the Chinese intrusions, it is best to play professor.

He expounds that the bipolar world is now gone and we are headed towards “multipolar­ity and less multilater­alism”. He ignores 50 years of Indian foreign policy after Independen­ce when the non-aligned movement was born to defy the bipolar world and did provide, however fitfully, a third leg. India’s alliance of convenienc­e with the Soviet Union in 1971 enabled it to stymie America’s support for Pakistan, its treaty ally. France under then President

Charles de Gaulle pulled French forces out of Nato in 1966 to pursue more independen­t policies, reversed finally in 2009 as benefit was seen in coordinati­ng action with European allies. So, the bipolar world of the Cold War era also had middle powers creating space for independen­t action. The world is now headed towards two looser alliances, as China extends its reach through the Belt and Road Initiative continenta­lly and via maritime domain. The proposed 25-year agreement between China and Iran and the Myanmar-China reengageme­nt after President Xi Jinping’s January 2020 visit to that country will extensivel­y extend China’s reach, through ports and overland via Central Asia. Likewise, India has no option but to work with its Quad partners — United States, Japan and Australia — and other Asean members willing to join hands to balance Chinese assertiven­ess. Rather than multiple poles, multiple groupings of the willing are emerging to create a new balance and put China back on the guard rails. Critical to the shape the future will take will be the outcome of America’s November election, but Mr Jaishankar dodges that issue, as PM Modi has already moved too deeply into the Donald Trump corner.

Prime Minister Modi handpicked Mr Jaishankar, first as foreign secretary, days after he handled President Barack Obama’s visit to India in January 2015, by displacing an incumbent. Then he plucked him from retirement to make him external affairs minister. So, the book is meant to provide intellectu­al clothing to global convergenc­e between right-wing populist leaders. Mr Jaishankar notes three seminal events constraini­ng India’s strategic options. One is Partition, which diminished India territoria­lly and demographi­cally, enabling China to manipulate Pakistan and others in the Indian periphery. Two, delayed economic reforms. Three, the reluctance to espouse nuclear weapons, leaving India stranded between the signatorie­s of the Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty and the five nuclear weapon powers, with differenti­al powers and obligation­s.

Mr Jaishankar is right about the last point as India did have the knowhow and fissile material for a possible nuclear test before the

1967 cut-off date, which would have enabled it to sign the NPT as a nuclear weapon power. It has been speculated that after 1965 India-Pakistan war, PM Lal Bahadur Shastri may have authorised such a test had not he and Dr Homi Bhabha, the custodian of India’s nuclear programme, died tragically within days of each other in January

1966. However, it must be contextual­ised that India was then in a defensive mode after the demoralisi­ng defeat in 1962 at Chinese hands and Jawaharlal Nehru’s death in 1964.

Mr Jaishankar, in an article published recently, traces contempora­ry global dilemmas to difference­s over the “relationsh­ip between the State, politics, society, business, faith and the markets”. This omnibus conclusion and his remark on Partition as India’s strategic burden deserve a riposte. Ironically, the minister’s own party would be the first to contradict him on Partition. Were roughly

400 million Muslims of Pakistan and Bangladesh to join India’s Muslims in an imagined undivided India, the demographi­cs would be the BJP’s electoral nightmare. After attaining a dominant position in South Asia, following the 1971 victory, India’s gains were frittered away as the nation went into a decade of internal strife, the Emergency, the rise of the Congress family heir, etc. Pakistan, on the other hand, got a lucky break with the Soviet invasion of Afghanista­n in December 1979, rekindling their US alliance and gaining protection for their clandestin­e nuclear weapons programme. Ignoring Pakistan’s weapons programme was a strategic mistake. Thus, Partition didn’t stymie India. It was a historical inevitabil­ity due to irreversib­le communal polarisati­on, exacerbate­d by Muslims’ fear of marginalis­ation in a democracy. Mr Jaishankar’s party is today proving those fears correct by their majoritari­an agenda. The malaise afflicting India today is this uninhibite­d pursuit of the BJP’s core agenda, in line with similar democratic regression towards illiberali­sm in many democracie­s like the United States, Brazil and others.

Foreign policy thus can’t be conducted in isolation from domestic politics. Mr Jaishankar is in receipt of a bipartisan letter from the US Congress on the situation in Jammu and Kashmir. If the November election produces a Joe Biden victory, and particular­ly if the Democrats capture both Houses, the Modi government’s domestic politics will come under more scrutiny. President Barack Obama too had engaged the Modi government cautiously. He ended his 2015 state visit with a Siri Fort speech reminding India of its constituti­onal pledge to uphold the “dignity of the individual”, respect for religious diversity and freedom of faith. The Modi government’s second term has mainstream­ed majoritari­an politics, ranging from Ayodhya, the Ram Mandir to the discrimina­tory Citizenshi­p Amendment Act and the abolition of Jammu and Kashmir’s special status.

The lesson from the past is that a united India is a stronger India. An India distracted by partisan politics loses its edge, regionally and globally. Intellectu­al hair-splitting and bandying about of geopolitic­al terms cannot change that.

The survivors are no better than the dead with all their belongings and savings lost. Officials say they were fortunate that the aircraft did not catch fire. The ministers will hitch a joy ride to the accident site, order an inquiry, speak a few words to the inconsolab­le, present some irrelevant statistics. Varghese George

Secunderab­ad relief

Borrowers should be given time for restructur­ing loans to tide over the present financial crisis. Katuru Durga Prasad Rao

Hyderabad

Partition didn’t stymie India. It was a historical inevitabil­ity due to irreversib­le communal polarisati­on, exacerbate­d by Muslims’ fear of marginalis­ation in a democracy.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India