Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

India’s neighbours need more clarity from Delhi

S Jaishankar’s successor has to answer a fundamenta­l set of questions that preoccupie­d his predecesso­rs

- Swapan Dasgupta is a Rajya Sabha MP, senior journalist and political commentato­r The views expressed are personal prashant.jha1@htlive.com Inner Voice comprises contributi­ons from our readers. The views expressed are personal Innervoice@hindustant­imes.com

In 2013, at a meeting with Nepali interlocut­ors, the then Chinese ambassador to Kathmandu said, “I will do all that the Indian ambassador does here.” Given the traditiona­l range of interests and activities of an Indian ambassador in Nepal – from forming and toppling government­s to funding leaders, from influencin­g bureaucrat­ic appointmen­ts to being the primary developmen­t donor – the statement was a stark expression of ambition.

With the government announcing Vijay Keshav Gokhale as India’s next foreign secretary (FS) – and given that the FS personally monitors the neighbourh­ood – it is a good time to review India’s key challenge in the region. The fact that Gokhale is an old China hand helps since India’s major challenges in its periphery are now inextricab­ly linked to Beijing’s growing footprint in the same region.

What is India’s key problem in the neighbourh­ood today?

It is simply that even though Delhi believes having friendly regimes is indispensa­ble for its security, it has not been able to shape domestic political outcomes in key neighbouri­ng capitals as it desires; where it has succeeded in doing so, the situation remains fragile; and Delhi’s favourite political allies are ranged against Beijing’s preferred political allies.

In Maldives, India dislikes the Abdulla Yameen government, but despite its best efforts, has not been able to weaken or displace it. With Chinese and Saudi backing, Yameen remains comfortabl­y entrenched in Male. In Nepal, India dislikes the Chinabacke­d KP Oli and ousted him from power in 2016 — but he has emerged as the primary leader after recent elections and is in pole position to form the government. This was despite Delhi’s generous support to Oli’s rival, the Nepali Congress.

In Sri Lanka, Delhi succeeded in engineerin­g an anti Mahinda Rajapaksa alliance in 2015 — and brought together Chandrika Kumaratung­a, Maithripal­a Sirisena about our self, there is absence of self-resistance. This means that in order to experience happiness, we have to drop our selfjudgme­nt. Once we do that, we will experience the moment as a happy moment which is free from time and space.

While education plays an important role in enhancing the profession­al life of individual­s, the knowledge to assess oneself and our ability to understand our surroundin­gs helps us rationalis­e situations and get through bad periods, making us resilient.

Resilience is the ‘rubber ball’ factor — the and Ranil Wickremesi­nghe on a common platform. Sirisena became the president, Wickremesi­nghe became PM. But ties between the two remain fragile; the government has continued its economic relationsh­ip with China; it has not been able to deliver constituti­onal concession­s to Tamils; and Rajapaksa remains popular among his southern Sinhalese base and could well come back in the next round of elections.

In Bangladesh, India’s friend, the Awami League led by Sheikh Hasina, has continued to remain in power for two consecutiv­e terms. Delhi ensured that the 2014 elections, which the Begum Khaleda Zialed BNP boycotted thus converting it into a one horse race, was treated as internatio­nally legitimate. But popular resentment against the Awami League is growing. The BNP, whose links with the Jamaat remain intact, is all set to participat­e in the next elections and could well emerge victorious.

To deal with the specifics of each country, Gokhale has to answer the fundamenta­l set of questions which have preoccupie­d his predecesso­rs: When should India get involved in internal politics of its neighbours? Does it make sense to define interests narrowly (for instance, only security cooperatio­n) or more broadly (for instance, economic integratio­n or justice for minority communitie­s with cross border ties or behaviour contributi­ng to long-term democratic stability) in terms of expectatio­ns from a neighbouri­ng government? What are the specific redlines which Delhi cannot allow to be violated? What is the leverage India has to prevent these redlines being violated and punish those who do cross it, especially in a context when neighbours have an alternativ­e in China? Is India willing to exercise the leverage despite losing goodwill among constituen­cies in that country? Is it possible to get out of domestic political interventi­on and stop having favourites in each country or is that too big a security risk especially when China’s micro-management of domestic politics has grown? How does India deal with the politics of these states when their respective societies are becoming more autonomous of Indian influence than the past?

Politics is a dynamic business and no neat theory can help deal with rapidly evolving circumstan­ces. But if the next foreign secretary can build on the work done by his current boss, S Jaishankar, and offer a more coherent paradigm to deal with how the internal churning in neighbourh­ood and China’s growing role affects India, and how India should respond to it; it can lead to a more stable foreign policy. The clarity will help Delhi, and it will help the neighbours.

POLITICS IS A DYNAMIC BUSINESS AND NO NEAT THEORY CAN HELP DEAL WITH RAPIDLY EVOLVING CIRCUMSTAN­CES

ability to bounce back in the event of adversity; the ability to cope with the inevitable challenges and setbacks of life, and come back stronger.

As APJ Abdul Kalam one said, “Never stop fighting until you arrive at your destined place – that is, the unique you. Have an aim in life, continuous­ly acquire knowledge, work hard, and have perseveran­ce to realise the great life.”

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