Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

RECALLING A VERY DIFFERENT WORLD

A tightlywri­tten compendium of speeches, events and personalit­ies who played a major role in world politics at the time of writing

- Pramit Pal Chaudhuri letters@hindustant­imes.com n

The fifteenth edition of India’s National Security is a testament not only to the endurance of its editor, Satish Kumar, but the rapidity with which the world’s security environmen­t has changed.

The latest volume covers the years 2015-16. Inevitably, much of the material in the essays actually takes place in 2014 and publicatio­n has taken place three years hence. In the meantime, the world has become a very different place.

With a sense of handling a time machine of ink and paper, the US is still ruled by President Barack Obama, the Islamic State is hale and hearty, Russia is being rhetorical­ly beaten about over its Ukraine shenanigan­s and the world is bravely still negotiatin­g the Paris agreement on climate change.

New Delhi is still fretting about the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p and how it might leave India high and dry. The phrase Belt-Road Initiative has yet to be coined and there are odd references to Silk Routes and corridors.

And, of course, there’s nary a mention of Donald Trump.

The assessment­s of India fare better. In the pages, India and Bangladesh are still struggling with the land border agree- ments. The Naga peace talks are going nowhere but nor is the insurgency. The anti-Indian regime of Mahinda Rajapaksa has just fallen but its sister franchise in Nepal is still in business. Narendra Modi has just begun his global touring so there is little sense in the book of how radically the Indian leader has since tied his foreign policy to his domestic reforms – the closest thing to a Modi doctrine with this regime.

Much of the review is a tightly-written compendium of speeches, events and personalit­ies who played a major role in world politics at the time of writing.

A few of the contributi­ons stand out. G Balachandr­an’s piece on the then nascent China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is a sensible early look at the project that tries to dissect the financial side of the corridor. His conclusion: “India need have no fear about the economic resurgence of Pakistan in the short term.”

Sujeet Samaddar’s writing on the role of the private sector in India’s aerospace and defence sector makes a case for saying that more is going on than meets the eye. Unfortunat­ely, the three-year gap also exposes the weaknesses of many of the other essays. Thus the West Asian chapter does not even speculate at the tectonic shift in India-United Arab Emirati relations that came about.

While there is a fair amount of informatio­n packed in the volume, its primary weakness is that many of the chapters have no overall strategic connect-the-dots thinking involved.

The economic sections are also overly focussed on trade and investment when the more exciting activity was in global monetary policy and energy supplies. The few stray mentions of cybersecur­ity are also unworthy.

G BALACHANDR­AN’S PIECE ON THE THEN NASCENT CHINAPAKIS­TAN ECONOMIC CORRIDOR IS A SENSIBLE EARLY LOOK AT THE PROJECT THAT TRIES TO DISSECT THE FINANCIAL SIDE OF THE CORRIDOR.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Blast from the past: Former US president Barack Obama in Berlin, Germany on November 18, 2016
GETTY IMAGES Blast from the past: Former US president Barack Obama in Berlin, Germany on November 18, 2016
 ??  ?? India’s National Security Annual Review 201516 Edited by Satish Kumar, ₹1295, 442pp Routledge
India’s National Security Annual Review 201516 Edited by Satish Kumar, ₹1295, 442pp Routledge

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India