Narendra Modi Visits An Emerging 21st
Century Concert of Europe
The 19th
century version of the Concert of Europe existed intermittently between 1815 up
to the beginning of WWI in 2014, lasting for an entire century. Its purpose was
to ensure stability by general consensus, maintain the European balance of
power, its political boundaries, and spheres of influence.
The first
phase of the Concert, up to 1848, was sometimes referred to as the Age of
Metternich, the conservative Austrian Chancellor with great influence over the
relatively newly formed German Confederation.
Notably, and
in the present context, Tsar Alexander 1st of Russia was very much
part of the Concert. It was a kind of EU of its times, given to breakdowns and
resurrections, till it gave up the ghost with the challenges posed by the Great
War.
Curiously
today, almost eight decades after WWII which the Soviet Union helped to win,
and thirty years after the end of the Warsaw Pact, Russia was not invited to
join NATO. It was not seen as part of Europe even as many of the former Soviet
satellites, Slavic states like Russia, have been lapped up.
Instead, as
Pope Francis made bold to say to an Italian publication recently, ‘NATO’s
barking at Russia’s door might have resulted in Vladimir Putin launching a
military offensive in Ukraine’.
While the
situation in Ukraine, was very much part of the discussions in every capital
visited by the Indian prime minister, India’s position is one of neutrality
between the warring sides, with calls for an end to hostilities and a return to
negotiations and dialogue.
India is
seen as a friend of both sides, and indeed an important global presence now,
part of QUAD, and an invitee to the G-7. This even as it has existential
problems with China, arraigned for thousands of kilometres along the Line of
Actual Control (LaC), on what was not so long ago, an independent Tibet.
Despite
this, are India and China slowly but surely pulling away at the balance of
power from Europe and America?
Could China and
India possibly unite someday, if a union amongst unequals can work? Can Russia
maintain its independence in its alliance with China on the strength of its
military prowess alone?
Between
India and China, is it the story of the hare and the tortoise? China with its
attempts to encircle and intimidate India, finally falling short because of
financial inability, and client states that have gone bankrupt. India making
its gradual but sure-footed progress towards a kind of invincibility against
Chinese designs, as well as other big power menaces?
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi’s first three-day visit abroad in 2022 began with him
touching down in Berlin to meet with the new Chancellor of Germany, Olaf
Scholz, from the centre-left Social Democratic Party, at the head of a
coalition with the environmentalist Green Party and the neo-liberal Free
Democrats.
It is
perhaps no surprise that the one solid announcement from the German leg of the
tour was about a Euro 10 billion German fund to be disbursed by 2030 to support
green projects in India.
It has long
been a plank of the latter-day economies like India and China that the
responsibility for global warming falls unequally upon the West. This is
because it is largely due to reckless exploitation of natural resources and the
environment during their earlier Industrial Revolution. Therefore, there is a
demand from the new economies that it should be financially supported in making
expensive changes to a more green format. India showed its willingness to make
deep cuts in its carbon footprint at the last Paris based Climate Talks. China
was less forthcoming.
The German
announcement was possibly in this context, and set the theme for Prime Minister Modi’s visit next to Denmark
where he was very warmly received, and where he also attended the Nordic
Conference with Denmark, Sweden, Iceland, Finland and Norway.
Green
technologies, techniques, and experience from Denmark and the countries of the
Nordic Conference were high on the agenda for discussions and early initiatives
in areas such as reforestation and environmental restoration. Other areas that
featured were renewables, waste water management, digitisation and innovations.
In the latter, India, despite its 1.4 billion population has made impressive
gains. Still there is a lot to learn
from the neat and orderly Scandinavians and Nordics, not least in value-added
and processed food technology, which strangely has not found a mention.
India’s
spectacular tackling of the Covid Pandemic, its production and administration
of tens of millions of doses of Indian vaccines, came up for admiring comments.
India is increasingly seen as the pharmacy to the world, not least of all due
to its affordable vaccine exports on an emergency basis to many countries.
In Germany,
seven more MOUs were signed, some with an eye to greater trade between the two
countries, easier exchange of personnel, solar power and hydrogen power
initiatives, greater trade, in the context of seeking diversification of supply
channels away from too much dependence on China. India, on its part, invited
investment from Germany in its bid to further its Aatmanirbhar aspirations.
Prime Minister Modi was accompanied on this
trip by the External Affairs Minister and the National Security Adviser amongst
others in his high-powered delegation.
Germany,
that Prime Minister Modi visited first, and France, the last stop on his tour,
are the mainstays of the European Union, and its biggest economies. The visit bracketed the solvent, even rich,
and important Nordic and Scandanavian countries in between, not all of them
members of the EU, or, as yet, NATO. The Indian diaspora in each country
accorded the prime minister a most effusive welcome, sometimes complete with
Hindu motifs.
What is
perhaps most significant about this trip is the growing importance accorded to
India in world affairs, and a growing desire for many countries in Europe going
through hard economic times, to engage with it.
The
immediate causatives are both the pandemic and the conflict in Ukraine which
has inflated costs, occasioned shortages of all kinds including food, fuel and
other goods. These challenges have come on top of slowed economies, high
defence costs suddenly thrust on them by the situation in Ukraine, and
potential increases in tensions with China, now allied with Russia.
China may
not be doing anything to annoy the Europeans or Americans at present, unless
one counts its solid purchases of Russian oil and gas and the support it is
providing to Russia’s financial systems. But the future, given the European dependencies, is not certain.
The Ukraine
conflict has also revived the spectre of a second Cold War, this time involving
a pugnacious Russia versus all the Western European states. A Cold War with no
end unless the EU and NATO rolls back from its Eastern expansionism. But that
will open up a new can of worms from the countries divested of the NATO
umbrella.
The Ukraine
conflict has distracted both the Europeans and the Americans from the
challenges posed by China in the Asia-Pacific region, opening up new strategic
possibilities for the strengthening Russo-Chinese Axis. Orders of howitzers
from Taiwan has seen America push back the delivery timelines by three years!
The clumsy
and hurried sanctions applied on Russia may have resulted in a closer embrace
between the Bear and the Dragon even as they have failed to constrain Russia
from prosecuting its military offensive in Ukraine. The world order, including
its reliance on the US dollar and the Euro as principal reserve currencies is
changing. The return to a possible Gold Standard is a real possibility, at
least in Russia.
Germany
however is willing to cut fuel imports from Russia even at considerable expense
to itself as announced during Modi’s visit. Is this wise or the fog of war?
Still, it may not be any of India’s business.
Most
glaringly, the failure of America and NATO to bring the Russian invasion of
Ukraine to a close, despite pouring in millions of dollars worth of armaments,
mercenary fighters, and NATO trainers, will have a major long term impact.
There are
divisions and cracks emerging in the Western alliance. Hungary is not on board.
Neither is Serbia. Belarus is firmly in the Russian camp. Poland is eyeing the
territory it lost to Ukraine after WWII. Moldova, not yet part of NATO, is on
the Russian radar. Other Russian supporters include Armenia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Cuba, most of Africa and the Middle East. Already Ukraine is cut off from the Sea of
Azov and the Black Sea, making it very difficult for its oil and other imports.
Prime
Minister Modi’s last stop in Paris was to congratulate Emmanuel Macron on his
consecutive second term victory as President, and to reaffirm ties with the
only country in Europe cooperating militarily with India.
France has also
supported India, over its going nuclear, over Kashmir, to be made a permanent
member of the UNSC, in the collaboration on Safran fighter jet engines, in
jointly building the Scorpene class diesel-electric submarines, in supplying
the Rafale fighter jets, missile suites.
We have
Russia in our armaments radar at some 45% today, down from 80%, but France is
picking up quite a bit of the difference, alongside America, Israel, South
Korea. We surely look forward to more military collaboration with France.
The Concert
of Europe in the 19th century tried to preserve the world of
monarchs against a rising tide of republicanism. It went under several times
only to surface and try again. But in those days, the rest of the world, Asia,
Africa, the Middle East were just so many colonial resources.
Today, while
the Europeans and Americans fight with Russia, it is countries like China and
India that will inherit the earth. More so, because their economies are under
immense pressure owing to the old-world politics they still pursue. Even the
survival of EU and NATO is not certain in the medium term.
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi has held and continues to hold his ground against
Western pressure in this knowledge. And the West, coming in a stream to India,
one after the other, partly to trade, occasionally to threaten or hold out a
carrot, have realised the need to shift gears to achieve a fairer, more
equitable basis, for its dealings with India.
(1,702
words)
May 4th,
2022
For:
Firstpost
Gautam
Mukherjee
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