General Douglas Macarthur, a very famous General of the Twentieth
Century, who served his country, the United States of America, with
dedication and élan for over half a century, both in peace and war, had
made a famous speech on 19 April 1951, to both houses of the Congress at
Capitol Hill. This was on his return from Japan, after his dispute over
policy decisions with the President of the United States and after he
was relieved of his command on 11 April 1951. It was a momentous speech,
quoted extensively throughout the world, but this piece only focuses on
one sentence of his long speech, which stated that ‘old soldiers never die, they only fade away’.
Although General Macarthur did tremendous service for his nation, I am
afraid he did considerable harm, albeit inadvertently, to the armed
forces of India, because of this sentence in his speech. The sentence
was soon picked up by our redoubtable bureaucrats (mostly of the ICS
variety at that time) and it was given the desired spin, including
de-emphasising the word ‘old’! The result was that the political
leadership, the media and even the intelligentsia became convinced that
it was the best option for retired soldiers, irrespective of their age,
who must quietly ‘fade away’. It may be recalled that these were the
days when many nations were becoming independent from their colonial
masters in quick succession. Unfortunately, many of these newly
independent nations were also falling prey to military coups staged by
some elements of
their armed forces. Hence, this ‘fading away’ appealed immensely
to these elites of the nation and they did everything to perpetuate
such thinking. No one bothered to find out the circumstances under which
General Macarthur had included this sentence in his speech. Let me
enlighten everyone.
Macarthur’s life as a soldier had covered 45 years of the history of
the US Army, from the Civil War, through the Indian Wars, to World War I
in Europe. He rose to the highest appointment in the U S Army in the
1930’s and was thereafter appointed the military adviser in the
Philippines. During the Second World War, he was appointed commander of
US troops in the Pacific theatre and under his command the war in the
Pacific was won. Macarthur was 65 years old when he presided over the
fall of the Japanese Empire in Tokyo Bay on 02 September 1945. After the
war, Macarthur became military governor of Japan, overseeing its
occupation and reconstruction. With the outbreak of the Korean War,
General Macarthur’s Far East Command became responsible for the conduct
of the war in Korea, on behalf of the United Nations. General Macarthur
was
dismissed by President Truman in the midst of the Korean War. When he
returned under a cloud and made his famous speech, he was over 71 years
old.
For General Macarthur to include this line in his speech had a lot of
meaning. After all, he had served the nation in many a battlefield and
in many complex situations and had come out unscathed and with glory.
For a person like him, who had seen it all, done everything, ‘fading away’
had a lot of meaning, especially at the age he was then. However, is
that really applicable to the officers and men of the armed forces of
India, who retire at much younger ages and who have the bulk of their
lives ahead of them? One should also factor in the increase in longevity
from what it was in 1950 and what it is today. That being the case, how
can these soldiers’ ‘fade away’ or more appropriately, why should they ‘fade away’?
On account of the spin given to the famous line, either intentionally
or by default, the bureaucracy managed to eliminate a fair chunk of
aspirants to the limited number of post-retirement opportunities
available to retiring government employees. The result, in real terms,
is that while practically every bureaucrat who retires gets an assured
plum job in a government appointment, personnel of the armed forces are
left high and dry! This is obviously grossly unfair, especially as the
bulk of the appointments do not need any specialization, only
administrative acumen. In this field, the officers of the armed forces
are perhaps as good if not better than their bureaucratic counterparts.
They are also honest, which should perhaps be the biggest qualification
in our corruption ridden country. However, this piece is not about jobs,
but
about a phenomenal amount of talent going to waste, because of lack of
vision and deeply ingrained attitudes amongst the elite of our country.
Unfortunately, the senior hierarchy of the armed forces of the early
Fifties, i.e. soon after Independence, was of a different mould than
what they are today. They mostly came from aristocratic families, from
the upper middle classes or from the landed gentry. They had joined the
armed forces for its adventurous life, their love for the outdoors or
for the dignity and respect which the donning of the uniform brought and
not as a vocation or a job. Consequently, they were not looking for
another career after their stint in the armed forces. Hence, this line
from Macarthur appealed to them too. After all, ‘fading away’
does sound theatrical and has a touch of melancholia about it. The
result was that very soon everybody expected all veterans of the armed
forces, irrespective of their age, rank or financial condition, to ‘fade
away’ quietly to some obscure corner of the country, in the so-called retirement mode. This must obviously change.
The soldiers and officers of the armed forces of India retire at
extremely young ages. Our jawans retire in their Thirties, our junior
commissioned officers in their Forties and the bulk of our officers in
their Fifties; instead of fading away, what they need is a second
career. As opposed to them, all bureaucrats retire at the age of sixty
years and perhaps the bulk do not need a second career. Yet, the reality
is that no bureaucrat who wants to continue working for the government
need be disappointed, as adequate numbers of slots are earmarked, ready
and waiting for them and they are loath to part with any of them. The
result is that either the veterans of the armed forces are left to fend
for themselves or are encouraged to ‘fade away’.
Luckily, there have been exceptions. I recall that when Lt Gen S K
Sinha, the then Vice Chief of Army Staff had resigned, following his
supersession by General Vaidya, the media and the elite of the country
had gone to town praising him for doing the so called ‘fading away’
act. In actuality, all he was doing was that he was showing dignity and
character in a highly adverse situation. He had no intention of ‘fading away’.
Within a few years, he was back in action, whether as our ambassador to
Nepal or being the Governor of Assam first and now of J&K. He
continues to serve the nation even today.
My intention of writing this piece is to urge all soldiers, young and old, not to fall into the trap of ‘fading away’
and wasting their considerable talents doing nothing or in
inconsequential and infructuous endeavours. While in service, you served
the nation with dedication and loyalty and sacrificed your comfort for
the safety and security of the country. Your contribution to
nation-building has been unmatched. You need to continue in this vein
even after retirement, so that you continue this process of
nation-building, albeit individually now as opposed to the institutional
framework in which you operated earlier. We unfortunately, lack a
cohesive institutional underpinning for the veterans, but your
continuing love for your country and for your countrymen must not get
constrained by the lack of a coherent and vibrant
organization or the machinations of some spin doctors, whose sole aim
has always been to feather their own nests, by any means possible.
My bottom line to all my comrades in arms is not to succumb to the ‘fading away’
syndrome, but to continue with the soldier’s dharma, which has always
been ‘karma’; your salvation and that of the nation lies only in this
small but potent word.
Vikramaditya vs Liaoning
-
The Shenyang J15 has a range of 3500 km and a max speed of 2.4 Mach.
Max takeoff weight 27000 kg. Much superior to the MiG 29K on the
Vik’ditya.
- This means that the Liaoning, in a network centric environment, does need to enter the Arabian Sea at all.
- Incidentally, the Chief
of the, J-15 jet-fighter programme died Sunday morning (25/11)after he
had a heart attack on board the Liaoning. The trials were successfully
completed by then.
-
We will spend $ 2.3 B and get a Russian Carrier. The Chinese, after
spending $ 2 B, have a bigger ship and it is an almost “made in China”
Carrier
Rgds
Verma
Vikramaditya vs Liaoning
The
Chinese, who commissioned their first carrier (Liaoning) only 2 months
ago, have also conducted their first deck landing by a J15. The Chinese
baby (as some Indian Naval Officers called it) has suddenly become
bigger and certainly more professional.
Watch the accompanying video.
Vikramaditya
Liaoning
Launched
1982
1988
Commissioning Date
Unknown (postponed many times)
25 Sep 12
Cost of ship
USD 2300 Million (and growing)
USD 2000 Million
Tonnage
45000 Tons
65000 Tons
Previous History
Was a Carrier between 1987 - 1996
Unfinished Carrier. Project Abandoned 1992
Purchase Date
2004
Hull purchased 1998 by a private company.
Commencement of work
2004
2005
Length / Speed
283 m / 32 knots
305 m / 32 knots
Propulsion
Steam Turbines (Russian)
Steam Turbines (Chinese)
Air Elements
16 fixed wing + 10 helicopters
30 fixed wing + 24 helicopters
Aircraft
MIG 29K (Russian)
J15 (Chinese) comparable to Russian SU 33
Helicopters
10 – Various (Russian / British)
24 – Various (Chinese)
The Indian Navy has been operating Carriers for more than 50 years and the Chinese for about 2 months. Please compare the table above and decide how the Indian Tax Payers money is being spent?
Dogfights of the future- Very interesting
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vnUwxDhE1kU
Thursday, November 29, 2012
The armed forces must
do more for differently abled personnel Generals Ian Cardozo, Pankaj Joshi and Vijay Oberoi are
luminaries of the Indian army, for they attained that rank and served in the
frontline toughing it out on prosthetic legs. Soldiers, sailors and airmen, by the very nature of their
occupation, are prone to physical injuries, the severest form being spinal cord
injury. The conditions — paraplegia (paralysis waist down) and quadriplegia
(paralysis neck down) — sentence the victim to lifelong wheelchair mobility.
Given the nature of the profession, the armed forces need to
maintain a fit profile. However, not every soldier needs to be in the trenches;
the organisation has to deploy a mini-army in the offices to oil the wheels. So,
instead of sidelining hors de combat soldiers, they can be retrained for
sedentary tasks and made useful cogs in the machine, especially in a
computer-driven workplace. While the norm in the armed forces was to out the
spinal-cord-injured personnel, in the early 1990s, realising the worth of his
experience and utility to the service, the air force reversed its policy and
retained Wing Commander Ashok Limaye, a paraplegic. The army followed suit, thus
setting in motion the employment and rehab of wheelchair-bound officers within
the services itself. Beginning with amputees, it expanded to embracing worse-off
paraplegics, and this initiative came years before Parliament gave the
differently abled community its first sniff of empowerment through the Persons
with Disabilities (Equal Opportunities, Protection of Rights and Full
Participation) Act, 1995. Section 47 of the disability act, its high-water mark, is an
enabling measure that proactively protects the employment of differently abled
government staff. In a nutshell, it states that any employee who acquires a
disability during his service has to be retained in the rolls with full pay and
other dues till the age of superannuation (pension thereafter), even if he
cannot be accommodated in any post. He cannot be denied promotion on the ground
of his disability. One need not wade through the legalese to distil the spirit
of this section, which is to enable persons with disabilities to remain
employed, thus ensuring their sustenance and restoring their dignity and
self-worth. From the vantage point of a paraplegic soldier, all the fizz of this
act went flat with the issuance of a statutory notification (SN) via the gazette
of 13 April 2002. By exercising the powers conferred by the proviso to section
47, the Union government exempted, prospectively, all categories of posts of
combatants of the armed forces from the protective shield of section 47. Since
fighting fettle is a requisite, this exclusion does look reasonable. But only on
the surface. While the differently abled civilian employee is looked
after, the paraplegic soldier in the prime of life would be wheeled off to fend
for himself and his family on peanuts packaged as a disability pension. The
government consigns the paraplegic soldier to a far lower quality of life
vis-à-vis the differently abled civilian employee. The SN therefore
discriminates and does a grave wrong to those who risk life and limb in the line
of duty. The irony is that section 47 is unfurled in the act under the rubric of
“non-discrimination”. It would be a surprise if the SN was not found to fall
afoul of Article 14 (right to equality before the law and equal protection of
the law) of the Constitution. If the government doesn’t rescind the SN to restore parity,
then equality demands the enhancement of disability pension to match full
emoluments . If not, one expects our lawmakers to restore equal rights among
various differently abled employees when the new legislation to attune the
disability act to the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
comes up in Parliament. But that could mean a long wait. While the army struck the right note in the beginning, and
one presumed the inclusion of paraplegics had evolved into an imperative, it was
inconsistent in absorbing even pre-SN paraplegics. A major invalided out in
February 2002 had appealed against his expulsion. The Armed Forces Tribunal
upheld his contention and reinstated him. The army, readying to challenge that
order, indicated its reluctance to welcome paraplegics back to the fold.
The IAF has a history of compassion, but its test comes in
the form of a flight cadet who sustained spinal injury while ejecting from a jet
trainer last August. Then four months short of becoming an officer, this
paraplegic lad wants to serve the IAF in any non-flying capacity. A change of
branch and commission will mean setting a precedent. The lazy option is to throw
the rulebook at him and bid him goodbye. That will be a waste of his training
and cruel, to boot. Will the IAF choose to be a pioneer by commissioning him? By
some coincidence, the navy too will be asked to take a call as for the first
time, a wheelchair-bound officer has sought retention. Perhaps Defence Minister A.K. Antony, who lays great store on
fairness, can step in to tell the services to consider the spirit of the
disability act to be their lodestar when called upon to decide the fate of a
paraplegic soldier.
PAKISTAN remains the
focus of international attention today, not because of any expectations of its
contribution to peace, economic growth or regional cooperation, but owing to
fears of its pernicious role in international terrorism and nuclear
proliferation.
Its propensity for international terrorism lay exposed
when Osama bin Laden was found to be living comfortably with his three wives and
several children and grandchildren in the heart of Abbotabad cantonment. Its
readiness to even resort to nuclear terrorism was earlier exposed when nuclear
scientists like Sultan Bashiruddin Mehmood and Chaudhri Abdul Majeed, known to
have close links with Osama bin Laden, were detained after the 9/11 terrorist
strikes and charged with helping Al-Qaeda to acquire nuclear and biological
weapons. Shortly thereafter, the redoubtable Dr A.Q. Khan’s role in transferring
nuclear weapons designs and knowhow to Iran, Iraq, Libya and Saudi Arabia became
public, though the Americans deliberately avoided implicating Khan’s bosses in
the Pakistan Army.
While concerns about Pakistan’s nuclear weapons falling
into the hands of terrorists remain, the focus of international attention is now
on the fact that with an arsenal of already over 100 nuclear weapons, Pakistan
today has the fastest growing nuclear weapons programme in the world. It
is heading towards developing the third largest nuclear arsenal in the world. It
is not however, any Pakistani General who has displayed the ability to explain
why and how all this is happening. This responsibility has been left to
Pakistan’s most savvy and hardnosed lady journalist-turned-diplomat Maleeha
Lodi, well known for her close links with the Pakistan military establishment.
Drawing attention to why Pakistan is rejecting international calls for
concluding a “Fissile Material Cut-Off Treaty” (FMCT), Lodi avers that Pakistan
has been seriously concerned about India’s conventional and strategic military
build-up. Predictably, she refers to the India-US nuclear deal and the
subsequent waiver of the Nuclear Supplier Group’s sanctions on India as
contributing to Pakistan’s accelerated development of nuclear weapons and
missile capabilities.
In the course of her rationalisation of Pakistan’s feverish quest for new
nuclear weapons, Maleeha Lodi explains that after having
recently acquired plutonium capabilities to manufacture nuclear weapons,
Pakistan can now miniaturise its warheads, which was more difficult earlier,
with enriched uranium warheads. It is no secret that over the past one and a
half decades China has obligingly provided Pakistan with unsafeguarded plutonium
reactors and reprocessing facilities. She also makes it clear that Pakistan is
committed to developing a “full spectrum deterrence”, including the use of
tactical nuclear weapons.
India’s nuclear doctrine makes it clear that
while it will never be the first to use nuclear weapons, it will respond with
such weapons only if there is a nuclear attack on “Indian territory, or on
Indian forces anywhere”.
Pakistan now quite obviously seeks to reserve the right to carry out
terrorist attacks on India and threatens that if India responds with a
conventional strike to another 26/11-style terrorist attack, Indian forces would
face the use of Pakistani tactical nuclear weapons. Pakistani military officials evidently believe that India would not
resort to the use of nuclear weapons if its forces are attacked with tactical
nuclear weapons. George Perkovich, an American non-proliferation
analyst, recently noted: “Thus far the people of South Asia have been spared the
potential consequences of deterrence instability because Indian leaders have not
retaliated violently to terrorist attacks on iconic targets. India’s “neo-Gandhian” forbearance was
counter to the prescriptions of deterrence and cannot be expected to persist as
new leaders emerge in Delhi.”
While Pakistan has not formally enunciated a nuclear doctrine, the
long-time head of the Strategic Planning Division of its Nuclear Command
Authority, Lt-General Khalid Kidwai, told a team of
physicists from Italy’s Landau Network in 2002 that Pakistan’s nuclear weapons
were “aimed solely at India”. Kidwai added that
Pakistan would use nuclear
weapons if
1. India conquers a large part of Pakistan’s
territory, or destroys a large part of Pakistan’s land and air forces.
2. Kidwai also held out the possibility of use
of nuclear weapons if India tries to “economically strangle” Pakistan, or pushes
it to political destabilisation.
This elucidation, by the man who has been the de facto custodian of
Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal for over a decade and a POW in India in 1971-1973,
was a precise formulation of Pakistan’s nuclear
thresholds.
It now appears that Pakistan’s military wants to also keep open the option
of mounting further Mumbai-style terrorist attacks by threatening to lower its
nuclear threshold by use of tactical nuclear weapons.
Since India has no intention of wasting resources through a
prolonged conflict with Pakistan or by seizing its populated centres, Pakistan
should be left in no doubt that even a “neo-Gandhian” Indian leadership would
not sit idly in the event of a repeat of a 26/11 style terrorist
attack.
It is interesting that despite a large portion of Pakistan’s Army now being
deployed on its borders with Afghanistan, confident that India will not take
advantage of this development, the army should be adding new facets to its
nuclear doctrine to keep open its options for using terrorism as an instrument
of state policy, in relations with India.
While the Zardari government is sincere in seeking to improve ties with
India, Pakistan today faces a situation where its Army Chief General Kayani
publicly warns the judiciary and the elected government not to mess around in
dealing with its serving or retired officers accused of corruption and
manipulating elections.
The sad reality, however, is that it is India
that has yielded ground on terrorism continuously after the 26/11 attack,
starting with the surrender at Sharm-el-Sheikh.
India resumed the composite dialogue process with Pakistan in 2004 only
consequent on a categorical assurance from General Musharraf that any territory
under Pakistan’s control would not be used for terrorism against India. India
has now, in all but name, resumed the dialogue process despite receiving no
assurance either on an end to terrorism, or on bringing the masterminds of 26/11
to justice. The least we should have done is to insist on the centrality of
action by Pakistan on terrorism in the dialogue process.
Feting Interior Minister Rahman Malik is hardly going to make any
difference in the minds of the Pakistan military, which not too long ago barred
Mr Malik from entering its headquarters in Rawalpindi.
The swagger and bluster of Pakistan’s military is, however, going to depend
largely on how the situation across the disputed Durand Line with Afghanistan
plays out. It is on this situation that India should remain focussed.
Covert Action Against Pak Terrorists
Much as I sympathise with the views expressed in the article
and the proposed covert action against Pak-based terrorists, one needs to
recognise some of the reasons why the GoI is hesitant. Underlying all the
reservations and hesitancy of the GoI is a fear that Pakistan will quickly
escalate to nuclear threats if the punishment meted out by Indian proxies is
truly effective. On the issue of nuclear diplomacy, Pakistan has already won
hands down because the Indian political establishment lacked the expertise to
engage in the game of nuclear brinkmanship and deterrence, which Pakistan played
to the hilt, unlike any nuclear-weapons state in history! India's nuclear
weapons acquisition and deployment were in the hands of scientists and
bureacrats who were preoccupied with achieving technical capacity rather than
diplomatic and strategic goals that ought to arise from it. India also suffered
from the additional disadvantage of dated delivery systems for nuclear warheads
while Pakistan was gifted these by China. This is now being rapildy remedied but
the submarine brone, third leg of the triad is yet to become
operational. India needs to issue threats that
Pakistan will find hard to ignore because third parties will force their
absorption by its leadership. I have repeatedly suggested that India engage in a
public discussion, without the involvement of the GoI, but with contributions
from senior retired military and diplomatic personnel, along the lines that if
India suffers a nuclear strike all bets are off and it will retailate against
the country which financed them (Saudi Arabia) and the country (China) to which
they ultimately belong, since they have merely outsourced the nuclear assets to
Pakistan. The GoI might also fear that Pakistan has many more resources
inside India than vice versa and retaliation will mean India having to absorb
serious costs. The advantage for India in the prevalent situation is that
Pakistan has fewer vital targets and India has many, which means the former will
be hard pressed to inflict enough damage to demoralise the Indian public. But
one must bear this hard reality in mind and prepare accordingly, with adequate
precautions, before embarking on undeclared war. The use of Afghan proxies for
the task of assasinating LeT, other leaders and their families is an option that
should be considered. In the main, once this policy is adopted there must be no
mercy or let up until the enemy surrenders. These people are beyond redemption
after their unpunished war crimes in East Pakistan during 1970-71 and the
torture and muder of Indian service personnel like Captain Saurabh
Kalia.
The Gaurdian - Etiquette, deference,
tradition and tea amid an unsung tour of duty
Dear Friends,
Here is a letter by a Jordanian Officer
written to my son, Col Sandeep Malik, who had been with him in Eritrea on an UN
Mission
The attached article is by David Smith,
correspondent of the Guardian
The letter and article is self explanatory,
paying tribute to our valiant soldiers of the UN Missions
What a tribute
Indeed proud of our boys serving humanity so selflessly
Need to send it all over
Gen NS Malik
Sandeep Malik
Dear Malik You really have taken me back to those lovely days of
UNMEE,where i had the honor to meet such distinguished guys likebyourself AP
singh and many others. That experience has given me the chance to know closely
one of the best nations on earth. A nation,which every single individual ofp
which feels proud,and behaves as if he was the ambassadore of India.I really
cherish those moments when I used to accompany my Boss,Gen AP singh to
Indbatt,where I used to recieve a distinguish treatment from everybody. I will
always feel.priviliged that I had the chance to serve side by side with such
brave gentlmen like you and your colleagues. May God bless you and your
country. All the best dear brother
The
author concludes, "I went back to Goma and said my goodbyes to Sharma. The
Indian army in Congo will never seize the international limelight like the
Americans and British in Afghanistan. Many people are unaware they are even
there. But perhaps a cup of tea should be raised in honour of these unsung tours
of duty in the half-forgotten corners of the world."
Etiquette,
deference, tradition and tea amid an unsung tour of duty
In
Congo, Indian troops make up the biggest contingent of the biggest UN
peacekeeping operation in the world
The
Indian army provides more than 4,000 of the 18,500 international troops who make
up the UN peacekeeing force in Congo. Photograph: Reuters
In
the shadow of Guantánamo Bay and Abu Ghraib, the default liberal view of US
troops in Iraq was often of stoned, cowardly rednecks shooting innocents for
sport. But when I spent time as an embedded reporter with the US army in
Baghdad, the soldiers I met were generally brave, quick-witted and
compassionate. It was, at the very least, a rebuke to oversimplification.
I
wasn't quite sure what to expect last week on an excursion with the Indian army.
The faces, languages and generous hospitality of India were the last thing I'd anticipated in rural Democratic
Republic of Congo. But with more than 4,000 troops on the ground, they're the
biggest contingent of the biggest UN peacekeeping operation in the world.
People
mocked George Bush for boasting that his Iraq war "coalition of the willing"
embraced Albania, Kazakhstan and Tonga. This UN peacekeeping force – known by
the French acronym Monuc – is no less inclusive. The blue helmets are worn by
18,500 troops from countries such as Bolivia, Cameroon, Ghana, Guatemala,
Jordan, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan, Paraguay, South Africa and Uruguay. Their motto: "Whatever, whenever,
wherever. Always present." Apparently the US and Britain were unavailable.
There
have been nearly 100 Monuc fatalities, but it's generally said that the greatest
risks are accidents or malaria rather than enemy fire. The entire operation cost
$1.3bn (£815bn) a year and, given the infamous failures of past UN peacekeeping
missions, the troops are allowed to open fire when necessary.
But
Monuc is garrisoned behind barbed wire and high walls near Goma airport and, a
year ago, the city looked set to fall to the warlord Laurent Nkunda, leader of a
rebel force that repeatedly routed Congo's army. Monuc fired some token shots in
response, but nobody here believes it would have dared stand in Nkunda's way if
he had chosen to take the city.
At
the Monuc compound, I met Major Rohit Sharma, 35, from Delhi, who in a military
briefing explained that in North Kivu province there is on average one soldier
for every 1,100 civilians or on for every 12 square kilometres (2,965
acres).
"I'll
not say it's hunky dory," he said. "But it's all relative. I've been here six
months and the change I've seen is considerable."
I
hitched a ride with Sharma in a UN jeep with such a low roof that I was unable
to sit upright. I tried curling into a foetal position, but on the rutted roads,
bumped my head enough times to conclude that I should have done combat training
inside a tumble dryer.
As
we rolled through the hills and villagers turned to look, Sharma said: "Every
time a child waves to me, it gives me a lift and makes me want to pursue the
mandate."
We
travelled 150km (93 miles) north of Goma and stopped at military bases along the
way. They all had an Indian flavour. There were Indian flags and shrines, Indian
food and furniture, and a military etiquette and deference to tradition that
somehow evoked popular notions of the British Raj. At every opportunity I was
offered a cup of tea, perhaps with biscuits, and we spoke a common language,
English, in this otherwise officially francophone country.
One
night in Kanyabayonga, a buffet was prepared in the mess tent and I sat with a
group of officers. Someone put on a DVD of the film Memento, explaining they
were curious because there is now a popular Bollywood remake. There was talk of
home, of the bitterly cold winter in Delhi this year, of the excitement of
economic miracles in a country that has more people than the whole of
Africa.
I
recalled my brief travels there: dawn light on the Ganges, the beauty of the Taj
Mahal at Agra. I imagined the air wobbling before a big red sun. I wondered if
these sons of India ever imagined they'd end up in the jungles of eastern
Congo.
One
said: "It's not so different from where we usually operate. The hills look a bit
like this. We've had a lot of experience with low-level insurgencies."
Sharma
added: "It's such a big army, you always take pride in an overseas posting. The
unit has to prove itself as one of the best to get sent here."
At
the base at Kiwanja, home to a unit called the Bodyguard, I found a mess tent
elegantly decorated with Asian carpets, ornaments, an antique desk and black and
white photographs of campaigns during the first and second world wars. I was
shown through to my home for the night, a hut with coffee table books such as
Portraits of Valour and Officers' Mess: Life and Customs in the Regiments by Lt
Col RJ Dickinson.
That
evening a white envelope was delivered to my door. It contained a neatly
embossed invitation that said: "Col Lakhbinder Singh Lidder requests the
pleasure of the company of David Smith to dinner at Bodyguard House at 8.30pm."
I joined guests on a clipped lawn under a tent where Lidder was holding court.
Plates of Indian canapes were offered by waiters with courtly manners.
To
my astonishment, Lidder presented me with a commemorative mug bearing the
emblems of Monuc and the Jammu & Kashmir Rifles. It said: "Reliving the
history. 'Bodyguard' once again in the shadows of 'Kilimanjaro' in east Africa
1918 to 1919 & 2009 to 2010." The presentation, and our handshake, were
captured for posterity by a military photographer.
The
soldiers expressed tentative optimism that their mission is working and violence
is slowly ebbing here. But that same night, two people were killed, and more
were hospitalised, in a rebel attack on a nearby village.
I
went back to Goma and said my goodbyes to Sharma. The Indian army in Congo will
never seize the international limelight like the Americans and British in
Afghanistan. Many people are unaware they are even there. But perhaps a cup of
tea should be raised in honour of these unsung tours of duty in the
half-forgotten corners of the world.
Monday, November 26, 2012
AUSTRALIA-Coalition leaders float nuclear navy
10 Nov 2012
Christopher Joye
Top Coalition leaders want to open the debate over the
purchase of nuclear submarines to replace the navy’s diesel fleet, a huge step
up in Australia’s military capability in response to China’s plan to become a
major maritime power in the Pacific Ocean.
Senior Coalition frontbenchers told The Weekend
Financial Review that acquiring or leasing Virginia-class nuclear submarines
equipped with conventional weapons, such as cruise missiles, would be supported
by the Obama Administration.
Purchasing the submarines is not yet Coalition policy
but some shadow ministers have discussed the idea with United States officials.
Australia’s dependence on seaborne trade and China’s ambitions make a powerful
submarine fleet the most sensible naval strategy, some Coalition leaders
believe, and nuclear submarines would be more reliable and lethal than
Australia’s existing submarines.
In discussions with defence experts US Ambassador
Jeffrey Bleich reiterated American willingness to provide Australia with
nuclear-powered submarines, which could receive technical support at US naval
bases in Hawaii and Guam. In the longer term, this could lead to a joint
Australian-US submarine base in the west or north of Australia.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Defence
Secretary Leon Panetta fly to Perth next week for annual defence talks with
Foreign Minister Bob Carr and Defence Minister Stephen Smith.
Privately, some defence ministers in Asia support
Australia obtaining nuclear-powered submarines because of mounting tensions with
China, which has territorial disputes with India, Japan, South Korea, Vietnam
and the Philippines, sources said.
“Putting all submarine options on the table will
lessen the chance we end up with a hollow force in 25 years’ time,” said James
Brown, a military fellow at the Lowy Institute for International Policy. “But
Australians should understand that nuclear propulsion does not mean nuclear
weapons.’’
labor white paper in 2009 advocated conventional
propulsion
China launched its first aircraft
carrier in September. Analysts think it operates up to 10 nuclear and 60
conventional submarines.
“China continues to build
submarines at a rate unmatched anywhere in the world whilst the quality and
capability of [its] fleet increases faster than [its] GDP,” said James Harrap, a
former captain of two Australian submarines.
Nuclear submarines were ruled out by the Labor
government in its 2009 Defence White Paper, which advocated 12 “blue-water”
conventional boats. A nuclear fleet would be cheaper than the white paper plan,
which the Australian Strategic Policy Institute estimated at about $36
billion.
Alongside the National Broadband Network it would be the
biggest public works program in Australia’s history. In February The Australian
Financial Review reported that Mr Bleich said that “whether [Australia] pursues
diesel power or nuclear power … the US is willing to help”. The strategy fits
with the current US policy to “pivot” military forces towards Asia from Europe.
It would contribute to the US costs of maintaining regional
stability.
There is a precedent for the move. In the late 1980s
Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan agreed to export the design, nuclear
reactors, and technical know-how necessary to permit Canada to build 12
Trafalgar class nuclear submarines.
As part of a review of the Defence Department’s
submarine project, which could include a commission of audit, a Coalition
government would also evaluate Britain’s Astute class nuclear submarines. They
are, however, believed to be inferior in cost, capabilities, and suitability to
the Virginia class, which the US produces at the rate of one or two a
year.
Rear Admiral Peter Clarke, who
was commander of Australia’s Collins Class Submarine Force Element Group, and is
the only Australian to have commanded a nuclear submarine and a conventional
submarine, said it was in America’s interest for the Royal Australian Navy to
operate nuclear submarines.
“Australia would be much better served with nuclear
rather than conventional submarines based on our strategic requirements and my
experience commanding both,” he said. “Provided the right questions are asked at
the right level, I’d be very surprised if the US did not favourably consider
this.”
Senior Coalition frontbenchers believe Australia suffers
from a maritime capability “gap”. Recently retired Collins class commander James
Harrap does not believe Australia’s submarines are sustainable in the long-run
and “will most likely be so technically obsolete by 2022 that the credibility of
the capability it offers will be seriously eroded”.
second generation of collins class remains
alternative
Another idea gaining traction in
the Coalition is a bridging solution for Australia’s submarine fleet. Under the
plan Australia would build a limited number of second-generation Collins class
submarines that resolve the propulsion chain problems that have plagued previous
vessels. Alternatively, it could construct an “off-the-shelf” design with proven
operating experience.
Since the highly regarded Japanese Soryu class
submarines are not available for export, a leading off-the-shelf candidate is
the German Type 214 boat, which has similar range to the Collins.
Close US ally South Korea has bought nine Type 214s,
which it is building locally. The Type 214 has a fuel-cell based
“air-independent propulsion” system that allows it to remain underwater for two
to three weeks without the need to “snort”. The current Collins class have a
maximum underwater operating endurance of around two to three days.
Former submariner Rex Patrick, who trains the
Australian, Malaysian and Singaporean navies in undersea warfare, says,
“Australia’s annual submarine cost is approaching $1 billion. This has given us
a pedestrian capability that usually delivers only two deployable boats. For $2
billion, we could build four Type 214s, which would supply navy with a
dependable, high-end platform that meets 90 per cent of our
requirements.”
Commander Harrap concludes, “Lack of platform
reliability is the single most limiting factor for the Collins. Let’s never
repeat that mistake. A submarine capable of most of the tasking available most
of the time is better than one that claims to do all of the tasking but is only
available some of the time.”
Challenging the Pakistan army
Last updated on: November 13,
The structural trends in Pakistan raise the
possibility that the army's opinions may increasingly have to parallel, not
shape, the public's, says Ajai Shukla
The Pakistan army's [ Images ]
overlordship of that country's national security decision-making has scarred New
Delhi's [ Images ]
engagement with Islamabad [ Images ], undermining the
dialogue between the two countries. In any discussions, India's [ Images ] Team A only meets
Pakistan's Team B. After they finish talking, Pakistan's Team A -- viz the
Pakistan army, which wields a veto over everything the diplomats and bureaucrats
have discussed -- rules on the outcome from General Headquarters,
Rawalpindi.
But that stranglehold is being challenged within
Pakistan in tentative but unmistakable ways. Following President Asif Ali
Zardari's [ Images ]
extended confrontations with the generals, it is now the judiciary that has
fired a broadside across the military's bows. On Thursday, Pakistan's supreme
court issued its detailed verdict in the Air Chief Marshal (Retired) Asghar Khan
case, in which it has ordered action against former army chief, General Mirza
Aslam Beg, and his spymaster, Inter-Services Intelligence head, Lieutenant
General Asad Durrani, for funnelling Rs 14 crore to various political parties to
rig the outcome of the 1990 elections.
Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, the
battle-scarred campaigner who was instrumental in unseating President Pervez
Musharraf [ Images ],
threw his full weight behind that verdict. After some TV news channels (a match
in inanity for our own) reported that the court registrar had authored the
judgment, the supreme court officially clarified that a three-judge bench headed
by the chief justice himself had delivered it.
In its judgment on the case, which has been a
judicial hot potato since 1996, Justice Chaudhry enjoined soldiers to uphold the
constitution, even if he received orders from his seniors ordering otherwise.
For the military, this must have sounded like, "Tell the general you're not
available for the coup."
Such judicial strictures could not but provoke a
military that is already under pressure from the media and from President Asif
Ali Zardari. The president from the traditionally anti-military Pakistan Peoples
Party has repeatedly taken on the khakis (as Pakistani liberals disparagingly
call the military), denting the army's aura of omnipotence. Since 2008, when his
government was forced to quickly withdraw a notification placing the ISI under
the interior ministry, President Zardari has grown steadily bolder. Last year he
refused to back down in the so-called Memogate affair, when the military
effectively accused Mr Zardari of asking Washington for protection against a
possible coup after Osama bin Laden [ Images ] was
killed in Abbottabad. This after a fleeting moment of legislative oversight,
when the military was forced to explain to parliament why it could not prevent
US special forces from mounting a military operation in the Pakistani
heartland.
Today the Pakistan military needs political cover
from the government for military operations against the Tehrik-e-Taliban
Pakistan in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province. The conservative opposition parties
steadfastly refuse to back those operations. All this boosts Mr Zardari's
confidence, already high after remaining in power for what could be an
unprecedented five-year term, despite massed resistance from the judiciary, the
military, his political foes and the jihadis.
Rattled by these potentially adverse political
winds, the generals have warned all concerned to back off. On November 5, the
current Army Chief, Ashfaq Parvez Kayani [ Images ],
issued a statement through the Inter-Services Public Relations directorate, the
military's own PR agency, warning that, "All systems in Pakistan appear to be in
a haste to achieve something, which can have both positive and negative
implications. Let us take a pause and examine the two fundamental questions;
One, are we promoting the rule of law and the constitution? Two, are we
strengthening or weakening the institutions? In the ultimate analysis, all of us
would have served Pakistan better if history and our future generations judge us
positively."
For a country that understands well their
military's praetorian lexicon, the meaning of this profundity is clear: "Hold it, chums. We love democracy like you all do. But
democracy does not mean that the institutions (the army) can be weakened. So
back off!"
For the first 60 years of
Pakistan's history, such a statement from GHQ would have had every institution
stepping back and issuing pro forma statements about the need to remain united
to safeguard national security. But, in yet another sign of change, the supreme
court's retaliatory salvo came within three days, in the form of the detailed
judgment.
This changing civil-military
dynamic, which only the ideologically blinkered can fail to perceive, has not
yet translated into any loosening of the Pakistani military's absolute
stranglehold over policy in four areas -- Kashmir [ Images ], America,
Afghanistan and China. Nevertheless, Pakistan's polity, judiciary, civil
society, clergy and jehadis are all increasingly willing to challenge the
khakis. Nobody yet knows how this fascinating contest will play
out as one side, then another, pushes back and flexes its muscles. But New Delhi must watch this power play carefully, keeping a
safe distance from the participants it favours, because India's approval is
still the kiss of death in Pakistan.
India provides the generals with a useful raison
d'être. But for most Pakistanis America has long supplanted India as the top
hate. As more Pakistani troops are diverted from the relatively peaceful
border with India to the roiling badlands of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, the Pakistani
soldier will also wonder where the real enemy lies. Now
the structural trends in Pakistan raise the interesting possibility that the
army's opinions may increasingly have to parallel, not shape, the
public's.
Ajai Shukla
__._,_.___
INDIAANDTHESOUTHASIANNEIGHBOURHOOD
Kanwal Sibal
India’s relations
with its neighbours need to be analysed frankly and unsentimentally, without
recourse to the usual platitudes when pronouncing on the subject. It is
fashionable to assume that there is some larger moral imperative that governs
relations between neighbours, with the bigger country obliged to show a level of
generosity and tolerance towards a smaller neighbour that would not be
applicable to attiudes and policies towards a more distant country. The
compulsions of “good neighbourliness” between countries are, however, not the
same as between neighbours in the same building or the same street. In the case
of the latter the rights, obligations and duties of citizenship are the same,
all live under the authority of the same state and conflicts are mediated
through the instruments of law. We should not commit the mistake of transposing
to international relations the codes of conduct between citizens of the same
country. The commandment “Love thy neighbour as thyself” elicits no obedience
from the chancelleries of the world.
Before talking of
India and its neighbours we should have a clearer idea of what, in India’s eyes,
consitutes its neighbourhood. Should we look at India’s neighbourhood
strategically or geographically? If the first, then a case can be made out that
India’s neighbourhood encompasses the entire region from the Straits of Hormuz
to the Straits of Malacca. This is India’s security parameter. Developments in
this region have a major impact on India. On the western side, six million
Indians are employed in the Gulf, sending back almost $35 billion as
remittances. This region is the largest supplier of oil and gas to India. This
area is the heart of Islam and influences and ideologies emanating from there
impact on our immediate external environment and indeed, to an extent, the
domestic scene. In any case, if India had not been divided in 1947, its western
frontier would have extended to the Persian Gulf.
In the east, India’s
possession of the Andaman and Nicobar islands stretches our frontiers to the
other choke-point, the Malacca Straits. The Bay of Bengal has Bangladesh,
Myanmar and Thailand as littoral countries. This stretch of the sea is our link
to Southeast Asia and beyond. For buttressing our Look East policy this area is
of vital importance. Apart from India forging bilateral ties with these
countries, the security of the sea lanes of communication in an area where the
only regional blue water navy is Indian devolves some special responsibilities
on India.
If geography alone
were to determine who our neighbours are, then Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan,
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Maldives constitute the core of our neighbourhood.
Myanmar is a contiguous neighbour, but as we have conditioned ourselves over the
years to view essentially the SAARC countries as our neighbours, Myanmar is lost
sight of, despite its critical geograhical location adjacent to our
north-eastern states. Myanmar, which applied for full membership in May 2008,
has yet to consummate it. However, with the rapid changes in the country, its
opening up and the progressive removal of sanctions it has been subject to, its
profile as India’s neighbour will keep rising.
Aghanistan may not be
a direct geographic neighbour today, but given the fact that we consider
Pakistan’s occupation of the northern areas in Jammu and Kashmir as illegal, we
can in a sense treat it as one. In any case, with the inclusion of Afghanistan
as a full member of SAARC, the political case for treating Afghanistan as an
integral part of our neighbourhood stands reinforced.
With China’s occupation of Tibet, that country has become our
direct neighbour. The outstanding border issue between India and China
constitutes a major Indian foreign policy problem, colouring our relationship
with the world’s foremost rising power. Moreover, in India’s perception, China
has adversely influenced India’s relations with its South Asian neighbours.
China therefore qualifies as India’s most formidable neighbour, affecting
India’s role not only in the South Asian region, but in Asia as a whole, and
even at the global level.
The management of relations with neighbours is always a
declared priority of any country’s foreign policy. The assumption is that a
stable neighbourhood strengthens a country’s foreign policy posture, whereas an
unstable and troubled neighbourhood saps its ability to act fully effectively on
the international stage. The credibility of a country’s regional and global
posture, it is believed, is also undermined if it is seen as embroiled in
disputes and conflicts with neighbours. The accepted view is that the time and
energy spent in controlling events in the immediate neighbourhood is at the cost
of pursuing wider interests at the regional and global level.
In actual fact, most countries have very problematic
relations with neighbours, and yet many are not held back because of this.
Historically, Britain rose to global power status despite almost ceaseless
conflicts with its neighbours. France became a world power despite being
embroiled in wars with neighbours. China has huge problems with its neighbours,
without this affecting its inexorable rise today as a global power. Turkey has
problems with virtually all its neighbours, without this materially affecting
its rise to regional power status. It is, therefore, open to question whether a
stable neighbourhood is a pre-requisite for a country’s rise to regional or
global status. There are many other factors at play that allow countries to rise
and flourish even if their neighbourhood is not peaceful.
While in theory the
need to have a peaceful, stable and friendly neighbourhood may appear
self-evident, what would that mean in practical terms? Can one have good
relations with neighbours simply because that would be desirable in itself? Can
one build such relations unilaterally? To what extent should one be willing to
make concessions? Should one look for reciprocity or not? How far is it the
responsibility primarily of the bigger country to make the requisite effort in
forging positive relationships? Is a smaller country always right in its
demands? Can a country demand or plead for extra consideration simply because it
is smaller? Should it on that basis be entitled to a more sensitive treatment of
its fears, vulnerabilities and even paranoia?
These are not the
only issues that arise in any examination of the conditions in which
neighbouring countries relate to each other. What about the role of third
parties, of external actors? During the Cold War period, the competing powers
had an incentive to extend their political and ideological reach to all corners
of the globe. In that process relations between neighbours, who were pulled at
times in different ideological directions, were distorted, adding to already
exisiting tensions or misunderstandings. Today, in the age of globalisation,
different pulls and pressures operate, and these could be helpful or harmful
depending on circumstances.
The short point is
that countries cannot always act in their neighbourhood as they please depending
on local advantages in power equations. Outside forces will be there to provide
a counterbalance, either because a particular country might want to bring an
external power into the neighbourhood to reduce the weight of a perceived
regional hegemon, or external powers themselves, pushed by balance of power
considerations, or policies of containment, may intrude into the region on their
own and manipulate their local partners for larger strategic purposes.
Sections of Indian
public opinion are acutely conscious of India’s failure to stabilize its own
neighbourhood. It is argued that India as the biggest country in the region has
the primary responsibility for managing the regional environment. Often India is criticized for not being sufficiently
generous to its neighbours, of hesitating to make unilateral concessions to
them, which it is believed it can well afford to do. Such concessions are
advocated especially on the economic side, the argument being that India as a
huge economy can easily absorb the limited sacrifice that is expected of it, and
in the process can attach the neighbouring economies to itself in a mutually
beneficial manner. The stakes which develop because of this interdependence
would theoretically make it difficult for other governments to pursue
adversarial policies beyond a certain point. Poor border management,
failure to create proper border posts and customs infrastructure is viewed as
another example of insensitivity to the need to facilitate relations with
neighbours.
Such criticism
overlooks many complexities. For one, India’s capacity to order its
neighbourhood in a manner congenial to its requirements is exaggerated. India
did intervene in Sri Lanka in agreement with its government, but the experience
left it chastened to the point that it rejected an intrusive role in Sri Lanka
later as the ethnic conflict grew, even when other countries prompted it to take
greater responsibility for steering the course of events there in the right
direction. It abdicated playing the central role in the developments leading to
the defeat of the LTTE, and it is to be seen how much constructive influence it
can bring to bear in ensuring that the present opportunity to settle the Tamil
question equitably is not lost. India’s intervention in the Maldives at the
request of its government was more successful, but this cannot be construed as
an attempt by India to shape its immediate environment to suit its needs, or a
model for future interventions.
India has been
sensitive in handling the issue of democracy in its neighbourhood. Even as
western democracies seek to impose democratic values on others and use
instruments of moral reprobation and boycotts to coerce select non-democratic
countries to reform their political systems, India has abjured such thinking.
Its basic approach is to do business with whichever government is in power. Even
as there is awareness that a truly democratic system in Pakistan, that limits
the power of both the armed forces and extremist groups, would be beneficial to
India-Pakistan ties, India has not sought to interfere in Pakistan’s internal
politics. On the contrary, it has willingly done serious business with
Pakistan’s military regimes, especially that of General Musharraf. Likewise in
Bangladesh, India has never rejected serious engagement with the military
regimes there. In the case of Myanmar, even at the cost of earning some
diplomatic flak, India has sought to build close ties with it irrespective of
the country’s regime for reasons of overriding national interest. India will of
course abide by legalities and UN sanctions against any country for
transgression of norms, but participating in a
crusade for democracy because of a senseof superior political
values is not part of India’s thinking about its neighbourhood and beyond. For
India this is practical politics, shorn of the hypocrisy of those who promote
democracy selectively and at lowest political and business cost to
themselves.
India, despite its
size and power, is, ironically, the country most targetted by terrorism from its
own neighbourhood. Although terrorism is now considered a global threat and the
consensus that it should be fought collectively by the international community
has been largely forged, India is still threatened by this menace as Pakistan,
where the epicenter of terrorism lies, has not yet been summoned by the
international community, acting through the UN, to eradicate it. The US and its allies want Pakistan to control terrorist
activity directed at them in Afghanistan, and deal as well with domestic
terrorism that threatens to impair Pakistan’s capacity to support them.
Terrorism directed at India remains a secondary western concern. Even US
pressure, however, has not compelled Pakistan to break its links with the
Haqqani group. The rise of religious extremism within Pakistan and the
surrounding Islamic world, extending now to North Africa, is creating
conditions for more jihadi violence. Pakistan’s failure to take any substantive
step in the last four years to try those responsible for the Mumbai terrorist
attack and the unwillingness of its leadership to accept that terrorism remains
a crucial outstanding issue in India-Pakistan relations, indicates that the
nexus between the jihadi groups and political and military power centres in
Pakistan will not be easily broken. India by itself lacks the capacity to coerce
Pakistan to abjure terrorism as an instrument of state policy, especially as
Pakistan now has the nuclear cover for its lawless activities. Pakistan sees the extremist religious forces that resort
to terrorism as allies against India and potentially in the takeover of
Afghanistan after the western forces depart.
Within the SAARC
region, apart from the recognition by the Karzai government of Pakistan’s
sponsorship of terror, the other countries keep their political distance from
the problem. Each of them, barring Bhutan, has interest in maintaining good ties
with Pakistanfor a mixture of motives that include leveraging
Pakistan’s hostility towards India to their own advantage, combining forces
against the threat of Indian domination, putting constraints on India’s freedom
of action within the region, not to mention the need to politically manage their
own Muslim communities. Pakistan of course has always had interest in
undermining India’s leadership role in South Asia. SAARC conventions on
combatting terrorism have little meaning given Pakistan’s complicity with
terrorist groups. Pakistan in fact uses Nepal and Bangladesh as bases for
infiltrating terrorists into India, or in the case of Bangladesh, using local
extremists for targetting India, though with Sheikh Hasina’s government in
Bangladesh this activity has been greatly curtailed.
The debate about unilateral concessions versus reciprocity
is somewhat besides the point in international relations. A big country has no
less responsibility than a small one to legitimately maximize its own interests.
No country can sustain a policy of making unilateral concessions. If the logic
is accepted that it is for the bigger country to make concessions, then it could
be argued that the US should base its international policies on making
unilateral concessions to all. And so should China. India has tried a policy of
unilateral concessions in the late 1980s and the early 1990s, but the results
have been meagre. It is ultimately a question of pragmatism. If making a
concession in one area can yield a return in another area, it should be made. In
any case, reciprocity need not be confined to balanced exchanges in specified
areas.
If Nepal, for
instance, had been more sensitive to India’s security interests because of the
open border, India could have been generous in areas of Nepal’s interest. If
Bangladesh, as is the case now, is more cooperative in dealing with anti-Indian
insurgents seeking shelter on its territory, it would certainly make India more
receptive to some of its demands on the commercial side. In fact this has
already happened. What does India do in a situation in which Nepal has for years
blocked any progress in implementing joint water resources projects, or
Bangladesh has until now even refused to talk about according transit rights
through its territory to north-eastern India or make a joint effort to promote
energy security along with Myanmar?
Rather than look
at such issues within the framework of bilateral relations between India and its
neighbours, they should be looked at within the framework of SAARC. The problem
of unilateralism or reciprocity disappears once the SAARC countries as a whole
agree on terms of trade and economic exchanges. Unfortunately, Pakistan right
from the start worked to limit progress within SAARC so that its own policy of
linking trade exchanges with India to a resolution of the Kashmir problem did
not get undermined. For this reason, it did not adhere to its obligations to
India under SAFTA. Indeed, because of Pakistan’s obstructive policies economic
integration in the SAARC area is poor. This situation is beginning to change
with fruitful talks between India and Pakistan to enhance trade with each
other. Pakistan has agreed in principle agreed to grant by the year-end MFN
treatment that it has long denied to India. With the just concluded Commerce
Secretary level talks substantive steps on the trade and investment front have
been listed in the joint statement. This change in Pakistan’s attitude has
occurred not because of India’s prodding but because of an internal assessment
Pakistan has itself made on the advantages to it from expanded economic ties
with India, given the dire economic straits Pakistan is in. Pakistan has not yet
felt the same compulsions on terrorism and other differences with India and
hence it clings still to its negative political postures. Now that Afghanistan
has joined SAARC, common sense would dictate that Pakistan accord transit rights
through its territory to facilitate Afghanistan’s trade with India as part of
the process of stabilizing Afghanistan and giving its people economic
opportunities so that they can, amongst other benefits, expand their legitimate
economy and conditions are created for the reduction in size of the illegitimate
drug based economy.
India, of course,
physically dominates its neighbourhood. Most of its neighbours are very small in
comparison, geographically, demographically and economically. Even Pakistan, the
second largest country in South Asia, is less than 15% of India’s size
demographically and economically and is not too much more geographically. Beyond
the disparity in size, India’s neighbours share with it strong civilizational,
cultural, linguistic and ethnic ties that are deeply rooted in history. Normally
these bonds should have brought the countries of the India sub-continent closer
together, being theoretically the building blocks of an enduring people to
people relationship. But this has not happened for various reasons. For one,
India’s overwhelming civilizational influence makes the neighbouring countries
feel insecure in their separate identities. As identity is a core constituent of
a sense of nationhood, these countries want to foster it by consciously
asserting their separate identity.
The ethnic links,
such as those of the Madhesis in the Terai in southern Nepal and the Sri Lankan
Tamils with the Tamils in Tamilnadu, instead of being a human link between India
and these countries, as is the case with the Indian diaspora abroad and their
country of origin, is a source of tensions. These sections of the population are
not as yet fully integrated into the societies in which they live and suffer
from disabilities. They are either suspected for their extra-territorial
loyalties or are seen as instruments of Indian influence, or the sympathy and
support they receive from groups in India create an atmosphere of distrust in
bilateral relations.
From the viewpoint of
India’s South Asian neighbours realpolitik would demand that they try to balance
India’s weight by bringing into play external powers. This with the objective of
giving themselves greater margin of manoeuvre vis-a-vis India, extorting more
concessions from it than would be the case otherwise, not to mention making
themselves more eligible for economic and military assistance from powers
wanting to check-mate India’s rise or imposing costs on India for not following
policies congenial to their interests.
Pakistan has, of course, in its obsessive pursuit of “parity”
with India and a pathological refusal to accept any status of inferiority
vis-a-vis it, has been most instrumental in facilitating the entry of outside
powers in the sub-continent. Today China is Pakistan’s biggest defence supplier.
The US too has not stopped supplying advanced arms to Pakistan as part of its
policy to obtain the cooperation of the country’s military to help combat the
insurgency in Afghanistan. With the US more and more cognizant of Pakistan’s
duplicity on the terrorism front, tensions in US-Pakistan relations are palpable
and Pakistan’s support for the US in Afghanistan now a question
mark.
The US policy of
hyphenating India and Pakistan was decisively abandoned by the Bush
Administration in its approach to the nuclear equation in South Asia, though the
US thought it necessary to balance its leaning towards India by elevating
Pakistan to the status of a “non-NATO ally”. With the change of Administration
in the US and the Afghanistan morass in which it is caught, Pakistan had found
more room to leverage US dependence on it for its operations in Afghanistan to
question the legitimacy of India’spresence and policies in
Afghanistan, not to mention press it to extract some concessions from India on
making progress on outstanding India-Pakistan issues without Pakistan being
required to move credibly on the issue of terrorism directed against India from
its soil. This has now changed, with the US openly supporting a stronger Indian
political and economic role in Afghanistan, as well as in military training.
India was the first country with which Afghanistan signed a Strategic
Partnership Agreement. In Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, Indian and US
policies have converged far more than was the case in the past, with the result
that the governments of these countries are no longer able to leverage India- US
differences as before to counter the Indian weight.
China, with its
increased political, economic and military weight, continues its policies to
counter what one of its commentators described as India’s hegemonist policies
vis-a-vis its neighbours. It continues to deepen its strategic relations with
Pakistan, with current activity in the nuclear field, major road and power
projects in POK and the development of Gwadar port. In Afghanistan China is
investing heavily in the mineral sector. Geopolitics seem to dictate close
China-Pakistancooperation in Afghanistan, despite current
uncertainties about Pakistan’s ability to contain its own internal failures.
In Nepal, China is
becoming more assertive in demanding that it be given equal treatment with
India, one example of which is to ask for its Friendship Treaty with Nepal to
match the one with India. With the Maoists now a powerful political force in
Nepal, and given their ideological compulsion to be seen as drawing Nepal closer
to China, coupled with their periodic rantings calculated to inflame public
opinion against India, the political terrain has become more favourable for
China to expand and deepen its presence and influence inNepal.
This can only make India’s task in handling Nepal more difficult.
China’s position in
Bangladesh is entrenched. Even the friendly government of Sheikha Hasina would
see it in its interest to maintain close ties with China for the many benefits
it can derive from that, including giving India an incentive to woo Bangladesh
more. China has earned the gratitude of the Sri Lankan government by supplying
it arms that helped in defeating the LTTE militarily. Sri Lanka, along with
Myanmar, Bangladesh and Maldives, are, in India’s eyes, targets for the naval
ambitions of China in the Indian Ocean area to protect its vital lines of
communication through these waters. The so-called “string of pearls” strategy
involving construction of new port facilities in these countries may have
commercial goals in view in the short term but is likely to have military goals
in the longer term perspective, To promote these objectives China is bound to
step up further its engagement with these countries, especially with increasing
material means at its disposal, posing further challenges to India’s equities in
its neighbourhood. India follows closely China’s initiatives in Sri Lanka on the
political, economic and military front, including the visit in September of the
Chinese Defence Minister to Sri Lanka, the first such visit ever. He seems to
have emphasized that the Chinese Army’s efforts
in conducting friendly exchanges and cooperation with its counterparts in the
region are intended for maintaining regional security and stability and do not
target any third party.
China has, of course,
every right to take dispositions in the Indian Ocean area to protect its trade
and energy flows. The countries with which China is cooperating are independent,
sovereign countries and have economic and investment plans of their own to which
China with its vast financial resources can contribute. Ultimately, for India’s
neighbours, it is a question of political judgment how far they should be
cognizant of India’s concerns and how to balance sometimes different pulls so
that they do not become platforms for tensions because of the divergent
interests of external partners.
One can broadly conclude that India will
not be able to shape its immediate environment optimally for itself in the
foreseeable future. Unless Pakistan is ready to genuinely end its politics of
confrontation with India, an integral part of which is the over-assertion of its
Islamic identity, its propagation of the jihadi mentality, its nurturing of
extremist religious groups involved in terrorism, and the political domination
of the military in the governance of the country, the SAARC region will remain
under stress.
Afghanistan presents
potential problems of a grave nature. If the extremist religious forces
ultimately win there, the strategic space for these obscurantist elements will
expand enormously, with the risk of a seriously adverse fall-out in the region
that has either other Islamic countries or large populations of Muslim faith
living in non-Muslim countries. A triumphant radical Islamic ideology can be
destabilizing for the religiously composite societies of South Asia. Pressure on
India from these forces would grow. The increasing Talibanisation of Pakistan
would be most deleterious for the South Asian environment.
The prospects for a border settlement with China remain
distant. China has, on the contrary, added to tensions by making aggressive
claims on Arunachal Pradesh. India has been compelled to begin upgrading its
military infrastructure in the north in the face ofmounting
Chinese intransigence on the border issue. With Chinese actions in
the East China Sea and South China Sea, India has to be even more on the alert.
The tactical alliance between India and China on climate change and WTO issues
should not obscure the deeper sources of India-China problems. It must be said
though that both sides have managed to prevent their differences from erupting
into military confrontation. No bullet has actually been fired on the
India-China border since 1967. China has become India’s biggest trade partner in
goods, which is a remarkable development.
The political drift in Nepal portends continuing
instability there with all its deleterious consequences for the economy. India
has to play its role without getting embroiled in domestic controversies to the
extent possible, though traditionally anti-Indian forces there would continue to
propagate the canard of overbearing Indian interference in Nepal’s internal
affairs. With the Sheikha Hasina government in power in Bangladesh
India’s relations with that country seem set to improve. Bangladesh is showing
an unprecedented willingness to deny safe havens to anti-India insurgents and
discuss transit issues. If it opens up doors for Indian investments in the
country the economic issues in the bilateral relationship can be addressed to
mutual advantage. Bangladesh can play a positive part in linking the eastern
region of South Asia to Myanmar, Thailand and beyond. A solution has to be
found, however, to the problem of illegal Bangladeshi migration into India.
The commencement of a dialogue between the US and the
Myanmar junta validates India’s policy towards that country. If
the US has woken up to the danger of leaving China to consolidate its hold over
Myanmar, it is all to the good. Here again, India cannot prevent Myanmar from
developing close links with its neighbour China. How far it should move in that
direction and lose its capacity to manoeuvre is for the Myanmar government to
decide. So long as India-China relations are not normalized, India will always
have concerns about strategic encirclement.
India’s very cordial
relations with the Maldives need to nurtured, especial in view of the attention
it is receiving from China at the highest level. The spreading piracy in the
South Eastern Indian Ocean also makes Maldives more central in combatting this
menace. Maldives is gripped with domestic political turmoil, placing India in a
delicate position of being invited to intervene in favour of a duly elected
government and hesitating to get embroiled in internal political rivalries.
Bhutan has
been the only real success story in terms of India’s relations with its
neighbours. Bhutan has border differences with China. It has kept its
distance from Pakistan and the great powers as well, giving them little scope
for interfering in its relations with India. This underscores the point that
good relations between India and its neighbours depend not only on wise policies
on our side, but, equally, the pursuit of wise policies by our partners.
Our relationship with Sri Lanka has been burdened in
recent years by the Tamilian issue. We have handled it as well as we could from
at our end. Despite the sensitivities in some quarters in Tamilnadu, we have
supported Sri Lanka on the issue of terrorism. We have been both principled and
practical.
As a neighbouring country we cannot
ignore what is happening in Sri Lanka if developments here have a political
impact in India. On the one hand, India must not intervene in Sri Lanka’s
internal affairs; on the other, if they impact on India’s internal affairs, a
case for a dialogue opens up with a view to helping find constructive
solutions.
The nearly three-decade long armed conflict between
Sri Lankan forces and the LTTE came to an end in May 2009. The armed conflict
created a major humanitarian challenge, with nearly 300,000 Tamil civilians
housed in camps for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs). India has put in place
a robust programme of assistance to help these IDPs return to normal life as
quickly as possible.
India does reiterate at the highest levels the need
for national reconciliation through a political settlement of the ethnic issue.
The element of time is important. With three and a half years having elapsed
since the military conflict issues got resolved, a solution to the political
issues remains pending. Whether the level of statesmanship required to deal with
complex issues in a longer term perspective will be forthcoming or whether
shorter term calculations of political advantage will dictate policy remains to
be seen. Democratic governments are always generous with their own people, and
no polity can be stable without mutual trust between its various sections. This
is the challenge Sri Lanka faces.