The Sunday Guardian

Indophile Boris

- RAVI KANDAMATH

opinion

few months, to cut through the bureaucrat­ic mess of the EU, and proven his understand­ing of statecraft by finally obtaining a deal. Churchill was a hard figure to understand. So is Boris. Despite the many enemies of the democratic will of the British public including derision of those in his own party, he has managed to do what no one else save perhaps for his hero Churchill could have done.

Brits can enter 2021 with heads held high. What wonderful days lay ahead for Britain and all those who associate with this 21st century Anglospher­e in the making! Lessons from history are valuable in this regard. British heroes from Wellington to Churchill and Orwell spent their formative years in India—what stops us from claiming them as our very own? They shaped the very way of British thinking. Indophile Boris has consistent­ly supported India and strived to strengthen this key strategic relationsh­ip. PM Johnson’s first major bilateral visit since taking office and the first since Britain’s departure from the EU was to have been to India, but the pandemic situation in the country led to its postponeme­nt to a more propitious time.

The trip was intended to kick off a significan­t year for Global Britain on the world stage. The post-brexit tilt to the Indo-pacific is to feature prominentl­y in the Integrated Review of Security, Defence, Developmen­t and Foreign Policy due to be published this month, a document set to re-define Britain’s place in world; the largest of its kind since the Cold War.

Boris wants to transform the G7 group of leading industrial­ised nations at its forthcomin­g summit in London into a broader grouping with India, Australia and South Korea to form 10 leading democracie­s capable of challengin­g Communist China. We must rekindle our historical ties with the UK and ensure that Turkey with whom Britain has already signed a free trade deal and the traditiona­lly Anglophile and free countries of the Middle East must remain key allies in this partnershi­p. Boris has signalled his clear geopolitic­al priority for India by visiting India multiple times and consistent­ly supporting India at the internatio­nal stage. A free trade agreement is top of the list and in the past, Boris has offered to address Indian concerns on various issues as part of a comprehens­ive deal. Again we must turn to history for guidance: When the hero of the battle of Waterloo, Lord Wellington was asked how difficult it was to deal with Napoleon, he is recorded to have replied, “Not as tough in negotiatio­n as Nana Phadnavis”. There we have it! Ravi Kandamath is a lawyer and public-affairs consultant based in London.

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