Deccan Chronicle

Hindu Rashtra’s videsh policy

- K.C. Singh

With rising inevitabil­ity of the Bharatiya Janata Party’s ascendancy in the ongoing election to the Indian national Parliament, the manifesto of the party was keenly anticipate­d and its delay much analysed. The portion on foreign policy invites special attention, besides the portion on India’s nuclear doctrine.

Compared to the foreign policy portion in the BJP’s 1998 election manifesto, that heralded the first BJP-led government, the current chapter is miniscule, poorly drafted and replete with omissions, even inaccuraci­es. It does not, however, hold hyperbole back, promising to “reboot and reorient the foreign policy goals, content and process”, providing little hint of what these would be.

Essentiall­y Indian foreign policy was “rebooted” in 1991, when Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao adjusted it to the reality of Soviet Union’s collapse and the reshaping of the world following Cold War’s end. It spelt a new outreach to the US, a “Look East“orientatio­n to integrate India into the global market and the long journey to get nuclear apartheid lifted. An important mile- stone since has been the 2008 civil nuclear deal with the US. Meanwhile, however, new challenges have emerged in global trade and climate change negotiatio­ns, with India-US relations again manifestin­g some of the old mistrusts. While Indian foreign policy adjusted well to the post-Cold War scenario, it is struggling to deal with contempora­ry global power re-distributi­on and related contestati­on. The twin challenges facing India are the relentless rise of China and the survival, spread and transmutat­ion of radical Islam despite the US’ war on terror since 2001.

The BJP manifesto skirts these complexiti­es with facile, even inaccurate phrases. Under the subtitle “Guiding Principles of our Foreign Policy”, are one-liners that are imprecise, unlike the 1998 manifesto which was detailed in fleshing out potential BJP approaches to neighbours and beyond. Following is an ad seriatim analysis of some proclaimed principles.

The BJP proposes to “champion uniform internatio­nal opinion on issues like terrorism and global warming”. India annually introduces a resolution at the UN General Assembly for a Comprehens­ive Convention on Terrorism. The outliers traditiona­lly have been from the

The BJP manifesto, finalised after the likes of Jaswant Singh had been exiled, is short on ideas and deficient in language. Hopefully, the Gujarat model includes solution to obvious shortcomin­gs in the fields of foreign policy and national security.

Arab camp with the Palestinia­n issue on their mind. Over time resistance has diminished, as even countries like Saudi Arabia are today relatively more sensitive to the perils of radical Islam, though still selectivel­y sponsoring those they consider their allies, as demonstrat­ed by their literal boycott of Qatar for supporting the Muslim Brotherhoo­d. A government lead by Narendra Modi would need greater outreach to the Islamic world, today split amongst Shias and Sunnis as indeed various libertaria­n movements espousing different shades of radical Islam with one extremity tethered in Al Qaeda. Mere slogans will not suffice.

On global warming, the next government has its work cut out. China is rapidly moving to cleaner energy, which can isolate India, resorting still to formulatio­ns like reducing energy consumptio­n per unit of gross domestic product. China proposes to cut this by 40-45 per cent by 2020 against the 2005 base. Can an India, with collapsing industrial production, kickstart the economy while opting for cleaner energy alternativ­es? A Modi government may find that balancing growth with environmen­tal concerns will require more than just “championin­g” some outdated approach.

On the regional and global groupings that a BJP government will favour, the approach is confusing. The regional ones listed are Saarc (South Asian Associatio­n for Regional Cooperatio­n) and Asean (Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations), shifting Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on under global forums, whereas it, too, is a regional organisati­on. BIMSTEC, a Bay of Bengal initiative that bridges Saarc and Asean, borrowing members from both and the Indian Ocean Rim Associatio­n of Countries that border the Arabian Sea, has been omitted

The six-nation Gulf Coordinati­on Council (GCC), where over six million Indians live and work, is vital for Indian energy security as well as a trade destinatio­n just does not figure. While the role of the Malayali lobby in the United Progressiv­e Alliance government in monopolisi­ng the India’s GCC policy needs curbing, no Indian government can devise a balanced policy by ignoring the vital Muslim neighbourh­ood beyond Pakistan. East Asia Summit, a principal grouping of Asian and global powers, also finds no mention.

Then comes a novel declaratio­n that India “shall remain a natural home for persecuted Hindus and they shall be welcome to seek refuge”. For a secular country, to rest its refugee policy, which currently India lacks, on a single faith is anti- thetical to its Constituti­on and history. The 1998 BJP manifesto recalled that “Bharat received with open arms all faiths and people fleeing persecutio­n...” Are we seeing the burial of Vajpayee-articulate­d inclusive vision and the ascendancy of a Modi blessed cloistered idea of India?

Finally, while the Indian nuclear doctrine needs periodic review, it should not be undertaken simply to satisfy hawks who see only mendacity in UPA’s national security policies. India contends with a Pakistan which uses nuclear bluster and opaqueness to keep India on edge, a China that declares like India a No-First Use policy and apparently a responsibl­e stance while letting Pakistan do the irresponsi­ble badgering, and a global community that has used offers of full civil nuclear commerce in exchange for keeping Indian nuclear strategic programme modest. Any hawkish review is bound to upset this balance.

The next Indian government will inherit a more complex world than the one National Democratic Alliance-I faced. It would need not just more soft power, as the manifesto proclaims, but more smart power. The manifesto, finalised after the likes of Jaswant Singh had been exiled, is short on ideas and deficient in language. Hopefully, the Gujarat model includes solution to obvious shortcomin­gs in the fields of foreign policy and national security.

The writer is a former secretary in the external

affairs ministry. He tweets at @ambkcsingh

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