Western
Frenemies Do Not Want A Strong India To Contend With
Indian External
Affairs Minister (EAM), Dr. S. Jaishankar called it a ‘bad habit’ that the West
had. He said ‘the West thinks it has a God-given right’ to comment on the
internal affairs of India, and cast aspersions on its leadership, including himself.
He warns that that this sort of abuse of international protocol can go both
ways. And he speaks, not only as a minister of the realm, but a distinguished
former diplomat.
To a certain
extent it already is, with the Indian media regularly calling out the Western
interference, and pointing out its many shortfalls on its home turf.
It is a mote
in one’s own eye syndrome, to paraphrase the Bible. Multiple matters, ranging
from global warming-based natural disasters, forest fires, frequent shootings
at schools, racist killings by police, pogroms allowed by dissident Islamists
and Khalistanis, against Hindus, or Indian Missions, render most of the Western
carping about India nonsensical.
It is also an
intrinsic racist bias, where problems that concern the White nations are given
precedence over those of others. Why should blue-eyed and blond children die in
Ukraine, was one such proposition. Similar questions are not ever asked about the
ongoing turmoil in Syria. The EAM has pointed to this as well.
Overall,
this refusal to take Western bias and distortion as acceptable is a feature of
current Indian foreign policy.
The EAM has
also pointed to the efforts being made by Indian politicians who have lost
electoral favour in India, attempting to pressurise the government by
organising and lobbying ill-informed interventions from abroad. He said our
Opposition should actually stop inviting comments from abroad on our internal
matters.
Distortions
on the revocation of Article 370 with reference to Jammu & Kashmir, which
was, in the first place a temporary provision, should have been better
understood by the West. Criticism of the Indian judiciary, when it criminally convicts a politician, is
tantamount to disrespect of our institutions, particularly when it is mixed up
with allegations of motivation by the government. Slurs also need to be researched
properly.
Perhaps the
real reasons for all this go much deeper.
It is no
longer China, Pakistan, Turkey and sundry others, who oppose Indian ascendancy economically,
militarily and diplomatically.
Against these
detractors, from whose ranks Malaysia, with its massive sales of palm oil to
India, has wisely dropped out, a large number of countries have come forward to
back India.
These
include the 120 countries India reached out to, in addition to the ones
formally in the G-20, under India’s chairmanship for this year. Many are from
all the nations of Africa, South America, West Asia and the Asia-Pacific.
Quite a few
of these regard India as a torch-bearer and benign influence for the Global
South. This more so as the United Nations General Assembly, (UNGA), has fallen into ineffectiveness, hijacked by
Islamic interest groups, and China.
But even as
India is a member of QUAD, BRICS, SCO, G-20, ASEAN, BIMSTEC, etc, while associating
with AUKUS; a certain resentment of its rise, even amongst its Western friends,
seems to be brewing alongside.
Prominent
friends in the West, including the United States, Canada, Britain, Germany,
have taken to regularly commenting on and criticising India’s internal affairs
and its leaders in its media for some years now. Targets include Prime Minister
Narendra Modi, Home Minister Amit Shah, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi
Adityanath, and External Affairs Minister Dr. S. Jaishankar.
In short, many
of the distinguished politicians who have unfurled the proud banner of Indian
nationalism as of 2014, when this administration first came to power with a
large majority. Leaders, who define the ‘New India’ that will soon propel India
to 3rd rank economically, with a GDP upwards of $10 trillion per
annum, and PPP rankings undoubtedly at No.1, up from the present No.3.
This,
despite India being the most populous country in the world, already, with the
largest young workforce. China, that would like to retard this process, has an
ageing population. This is in common with much of Europe, Japan and America.
None of these countries and regions have any hope of rectifying the situation
despite population boosting measures taken, for at least three decades.
Part of it,
a Catch-22 of course, is a local populace resistant to immigration from other
races and cultures, while their own economies are faltering. Brexit has not
been a great success, prompted as it was by such sentiments.
The Global
South is rejoicing about this Indian good news, alongside India, but is this likewise
in the G-7 and the G-20?
The
criticism directed at India at present wants probably to slow down India’s rate
of progress at around 7% in GDP growth year-on-year, the highest amongst any
major economy in the world.
It is also a
campaign of negativity designed to blunt, if possible, the chances of re-election
of the present dispensation for an consecutive third-term in 2024.
A strong
Indian government is less biddable from the Western point of view. And India’s
propensity for building its foreign policy on enlightened self-interest is putting
most countries in the West in an adverse negotiating position, compared to its
facile domination of the exchange in the past.
India, as a
food surplus nation of over 1.40 billion people is showing up the currently food deficient West. It is also,
more and more, the ‘Pharmacy to the World’, and first in innovation as the
Start-Up Capital as well. Its banks are better managed than the West, and its
sovereign debt-profile is infinitely better, as hailed by the international
rating agencies, the World Bank, the IMF and others.
India is still
the biggest buyer of armaments in the world, even in 2023, with an expanded
buying list, despite its strong thrust at indigenisation for as much as 68% of
its purchases. But this too, raises two new problems. India is emerging as an
arms exporter, and a most competitive supplier. And it is buying less, and will
buy even less progressively, from the expensive armaments industry of the West.
Therefore,
there has been a step-up from the erstwhile media bias in certain well-known
publications and broadcasters with a leftist orientation masquerading as
liberalism, against the present Indian administration.
Unsubstantiated
charges include a tendency to dictatorship on the part of a wildly popular
Narendra Modi, communalism (read anti-Muslim and Christian), including of late,
an anti- Sikh (read the terrorists that want to wrest Punjab into Khalistan),
and anti-semitic bias (no basis whatsoever, given the excellent relations with
Israel).
There are
also charges of gagging of the Opposition (amplified by the constant whining of
electorally feeble and criminally convicted Congress leader Rahul Gandhi), alleged,
but spurious claims, of subversion of
Indian institutions including its judiciary, and muscular Hindutva (ditto).
The role of
George Soros, a Hungarian Jew and naturalised American, also allegedly active
against former President Donald Trump, soon to be in his felony trial in Manhattan,
the NGOs and activists he finances, is not often mentioned in these quarters.
Neither is
the avalanche of Chinese money via its embassies, Confucian Studies Institutes
and direct investments in companies, universities, Hollywood and so on, being
used to buy anti-India opinion. These extend to academia and amongst Western
politicians, lobbyists, anti-India activists, opposition politicians and their
financing.
Pakistan is
ever active, despite its bankrupt status, through its official machinery, and
its covert ISI. It is prominent in certain countries abroad, particularly
Britain, which finds it difficult to stomach India’s rise. Dubai, where the
Pakistani underworld has a network, via Bollywood, its infrastructure and
financing, via terrorist and drug cartels, and also directly in India through
disgruntled elements particularly amongst Islamists and Khalistanis. It is
however having trouble keeping this up, given its own terrorism problems
internally and breakaway movements in Balochistan, the NWFP, and friction with
Afghanistan.
Blow-hot
blow-cold countries including the immensely rich on liquefied natural gas (LNG),
Qatar, is also sometimes anti-India for hardline Islamic reasons, financing terrorists,
and criticising India via Qatar’s media outlet Al Jazeera. Qatar tends to play
influence games with both sides. It is a GCC member, despite sometimes prickly
relations with Saudi Arabia, and hosts a massive US air base in Doha.
India gets
on very well with Israel, Egypt, the UAE and Saudi Arabia. It has a military
base access at Duqm in Oman. Oman meanwhile is drawing closer to Saudi Arabia
with a new railway line linking the two countries.
India is
doing increasingly better with Iran, partially due to Russia’s good offices in
addition to its own long-term ties. A land-route from Russia is already
operational via Iran, an undersea fuel pipeline is extant.
Russia is
developing another sea route from its north to India and India has been invited
to build a new IT enabled city at Vladivostock despite Chinese claims on the
city and its environs.
India is
also doing very well with Greece in the EU, where it is developing the port of
Piraeus in an effort to establish another sea route to Europe from India.
Mauritius is
allowing India build a new military base in the Indian Ocean on one of its
islands close to the British-US occupied Diego Garcia.
All this
diplomacy and progress points towards future great power status in addition to
India’s economic prowess. And it is being done with much greater bonhomie than
anything China is up to in a variety of places around the world.
So the
causes of the disproportionate and intemperate Western media commentary on
trivia and gossip are fairly clear. It is expressing discomfort and even a
degree of fear at the prospect of a consecutive third term for the present
dispensation of the BJP backed by a formidable RSS. If all this has been
accomplished in under 10 years, what does the future hold in store?
So now, various
governments have now got in on the act. Government spokespersons in Western
countries are commenting as well. After
The US, Britain, it apparently is the turn of Germany.
The US finds
it difficult to stomach India’s neutral to independent stand on the Ukraine War
under the Biden administration. Should the Republicans win in 2024, some 18
months from now, they will, almost certainly put an end to the Ukraine War, if
it is still raging. The possibility of it tipping over into the use of tactical
nuclear weapons or even WWIII is ever present already. But the Republicans could end it because of a
greater comfort with Russia than under the Democrats.
Presently,
EU and British governments, beholden to American largesse, are chiming into the
Biden narrative, though most are feeling the pinch worse than both America,
and, ironically, Russia.
A strong
reason for British sniping, including via the BBC, is its colonial history with
India, and that India has already overtaken it in terms of its GDP. It is also
about to overtake Germany next.
Germany also
has continued good relations with China, strategically opposed to India,
despite China’s role in the Covid pandemic and their support of Russia in the
Ukraine War. German Chancellor Schultz recently visited President Xi Jinping in
China, one of the first Western leaders to do so, after China called off its
draconian Covid lockdowns recently. This despite the NATO and EU positions
generally cool to ongoing Chinese ties and the dependence on Chinese supply
chains.
Germany has
also been the biggest buyer of Russian gas and fuel over the last several
decades. It continues to do so to an extent, via a circuitous route, even now,
compelled by otherwise very high fuel prices from elsewhere, despite stringent
sanctions imposed on Russia by NATO, EU and Britain.
Germany,
like Britain, has been steadily slipping in terms of its economy, including in its vaunted car industry, and
other engineering enterprises. This has limited its options and autonomy.
France, the other big EU economy, despite its fiscal troubles, is on good terms
with India.
Fortunately,
so is Japan, which India is also destined to overtake economically, and this bodes well for the future.
(1,999
words)
April 3rd,
2023
For:
Firstpost/News18.com
Gautam
Mukherjee
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