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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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04 May 2010 By Mahdi Darius
Nazemroaya
Since
1947, India has not fully pledged itself to any camp
or global pole during the Cold War and as a result was
a founding member of the Non-Aligned Movement (N.A.M.).
Since the post-Cold War era that position has eroded.
New Delhi has been gradually moving away from its
traditional position, relationships, and policies in
the international arena for over a decade.
India has been vied for as an ally in the "Great Game"
that is underway, once again. This round of the "Great
Game" is, however, being played under a far broader
spectrum than the one played between Britain and
Czarist Russia. In question is the Indian power
relationship with two geo-political entities: the
first is the "Periphery" and the second is "Eurasia."
The Periphery and Eurasia: Vying for India on a
Geo-Strategic Chessboard
Physical geography alone does not form or carve or
determine geographic entities. The activity of people
also is of critical importance to this process.
Geographic units, from blocs and countries to regions,
must be understood as a product of people interacting
in socio-economic and political terms. The geographic
entities that are subject herein are social
constructions. In this conceptual context, Eurasia
itself can be defined as a geo-political player and
entity.
In a physical sense, Eurasia as a geographic landmass
and spatial entity is neutral, just as are other
geographic regions or units, and carries no meaning or
value(s). Eurasia in socio-political terms as an
active player, however, is altogether different.
Herein, it is this active and politically organized
Eurasia that is a product of the anti-hegemonic
cooperation of Russia, China, and Iran against the
status quo global order of the Periphery that is the
Eurasia being addressed.
The Periphery is a collective term for those nations
who are either geographically located on the margins
of the Eurasian landmass or altogether geographically
outside of the Eurasian landmass. This grouping or
categorization of geo-political players when described
are namely the U.S., the E.U., and Japan. In almost
organic terms these players at the broader level
strive to penetrate and consume Eurasia. This
objective is so because of the socio-economic
organization and political mechanisms (all of which
serve elitist interests) of the Periphery. Aside from
the U.S., the E.U., and Japan, the Periphery includes
Australia, Canada, South Korea, Singapore, and Israel.
It is in this tugging match that India is centred. It
is also in this geo-strategic bout that India has
adopted a pragmatic policy of open opportunism. Yet,
New Delhi has also been steadily moving towards a
stance favouring the Periphery against Eurasia.
India's historically warm relationship with Iran has
been tainted because of negotiations with the U.S. and
E.U. and New Delhi's relationship with China appears
cordial on the surface, but it is fragile and
double-edged. Although Russia and India maintain
cooperation in regards to the purchase of Russian
military hardware by India, this relationship too is
in question regardless of continued Russian weapons
supplies.
State policy, in turn influenced or controlled by
local elites, is also pivotal to the formation of the
larger geographic entities being addressed. The ruling
circles and elites of India are pragmatic opportunists
and their is no question in this. This characteristic,
however, is a trademark of almost all elitist circles
and is not unique to Indian elites alone. The position
of the Indian elites, however, is noteworthy because
they can flex their muscles and they can play both
sides.
New Delhi Caught between Alliances?
As stated, New Delhi has been walking a pragmatic path
between the emerging Eurasian pole and between the
more established Peripheral pole. The Eurasian pole
was originally formed out of a reluctant necessity for
survival against the thrust of the Periphery by
Moscow. As the Russian-initiated Eurasian-based
alliance gains global momentum it is also working to
cultivate an end to Eurasian rivalries.
Since 2003, the lines of cooperation with the U.S.,
Britain, Germany, and France have been shifting and
continuously restudied by Moscow, Beijing, Tehran, and
their other allies, such as Kazakhstan, Belarus, and
Tajikistan. The U.S., Britain, Germany, France and
their shared proxies, NATO and the European Union,
have been trying to obstruct the solidification of a
united Eurasian entity. This is where India is key.
A factor that has obstructed Eurasian cooperation,
with the inclusion of India, is the mutual suspicions
of the Eurasians and, in general terms, their
underlying resource rivalries. Due to these factors,
the Eurasians appeared to be working together and
alternatively to be keeping the lines of cooperation
open with both the Periphery. A case in standing of
this schizophrenic policy is what was once called the
"Paris-Berlin- Moscow Axis" that clasped Russia on one
side and France and Germany on the other. This
Paris-Berlin- Moscow Axis flexed its muscles in
international relations and at the U.N. during the
Anglo-American march to war against Iraq in 2003.
India and the Encirclement of China
New Delhi is not a constituent of the Periphery. Nor
does India fully trust the nations of the Periphery.
India does,, however, appear to favour the Periphery.
This can be attributed to the demographic nature of
global resource competitions and long-standing
Sino-Indian cleavages and tensions. The tensions and
cleavages between China and India have also been
capitalized on by the Periphery just as the
Sino-Soviet split was by Henry Kissinger during the
Cold War to keep China and the Soviet Union divided.
Due to tensions with China, the Indian ruling
establishment still holds onto a vision about a
showdown with the Chinese. Both states are demographic
dinosaurs and are competing between themselves and
with the status quo Peripheral powers for resources.
Despite the fact that it is the nations of the
Periphery that are disproportionately exploiting a far
larger share of global resources, in the eyes of many
in New Delhi the perception is that it is far easier
to reduce the effect of global resource competitions
by working to eliminate China rather than competing
with the Periphery. It is these two reasons that are
the basis for the formation of Indian animosity to
Beijing.
An encircling military ring that involves India has
been created around China. New Delhi has been involved
in the framework of military cooperation with the
Periphery aimed at China. Under this framework, India
has joined Japan, the U.S., and Australia in forming a
de facto "Quadrilateral Coalition" to neutralize China
through the establishment of a ring of containment
that could see a naval blockade form in the event of a
war around the borders of China. [1]
In a war between China and an outside power, cutting
off Chinese energy supplies would be central to
defeating Beijing. Without any fuel the military
hardware of the People's Liberation Army would be
rendered useless. It is from this standpoint that
India is building its naval strength and cooperating
militarily in the Indian Ocean and the Pacific with
the Periphery. It is also with Chinese energy
supplies, Indian naval expansion, and the encirclement
of China in mind that the Indian military has prepared
to introduce, by 2014, what it calls "Indigenous
Aircraft Carriers" (IACs), each with two takeoff
runways and one landing strip for up to 30 military
aircraft. [2]
China, as well as Iran, also has a direct border with
NATO-garrisoned Afghanistan, which can be used as a
military hub against the more vulnerable western flank
of China. In this regard, the massive American-led
NATO military build-up in Afghanistan is monitored
with the utmost suspicion by Beijing and Tehran. In
many senses, the Periphery is moving or pushing
inwards towards the heart of Eurasia. The encirclement
of China also parallels the rings of military
alliances and bases created around Russia and around
Iran. China also faces the threat of a missile shield
project in East Asia just as the European core of
Russia faces one in Eastern Europe and Iran faces one
via such countries as the Arab states of the Persian
Gulf, Israel, and Turkey in the Middle East.
Playing all sides to get New Delhi its Place in the
Sun?
The 2006 meetings between George W. Bush Jr. and Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh, including the Indo-U.S.
nuclear cooperation agreement, are examples of the
"divide and conquer" game the White House and its
allies are playing. India is not passive in this game
and is an active player too. The trilateral summits
held between Russia, China, and India represent the
opposite push to bring India fully into the Eurasian
coalition of Moscow and Beijing. The U.S. has also
been trying to obstruct the creation of a trans-Asian
energy grid in Asia or a trans-Eurasian energy grid
that would involve both sections of Europe and Asia
within a single framework. One of these projects is
the Iran-Pakistan- India gas pipeline and another is
the building of pipelines from the former Soviet Union
to China.
Moreover, India has nurtured military ties with
Russia, China, and Iran on one hand and the U.S.,
NATO, Australia, Israel, and Japan on the other hand.
This is evident from the joint naval exercises held in
April, 2007 between India and China off Qingdao and
the joint Indian, U.S., and Japanese trilateral
military exercise in the Pacific Ocean. [3] Yet, India
has not been neutral. India has also upgraded its
missile arsenal so that it can target deeper into
Chinese territory.
All in all, New Delhi has tilted in favour of the
Periphery. At first glance, this is reflected by the
fact that India is the only Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO) observer member that has not
applied for full membership within the Eurasian bloc
and through New Delhi's growing ties with NATO.
India's course also became clearer after an important
trilateral conference between Russia, China, and India
in 2007 that saw India diplomatically refuse Chinese
and Russian demands to rebut America and reject full
cooperation. In this regard, Indian officials have
said that they do not want to compromise their
strategic flexibility. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
of India has also degenerated the situation further
and expanded the rift between India on one side and
Russia, Iran, and China on the other.
An Expanded Missile Arsenal for India
New Delhi has also been working to upgrade its
military capabilities to match those of the U.S.,
Russia, and China. The process involves the possession
of inter-continental ballistic missile (ICBM),
submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM), and
ballistic missile defence (BMD) capabilities. The
Times of India reported on May 13, 2008 that Indian
military scientists predicted that India would posses
all three capabilities by 2010 or 2011:
By 2010-2011, India hopes to gatecrash into a very
exclusive club of countries, which have both ICBMs
(intercontinental ballistic missiles) and SLBMs
(submarine-launched ballistic missiles) as well as BMD
(ballistic missile defence) capabilities.
Only the US and Russia strictly qualify for this club
as of now, if all the three capabilities — ICBM, SLBM
and BMD — are taken together, with countries like
China not too far behind.
Top defence scientists, on the sidelines of the annual
DRDO awards on Monday, told TOI [Times of India] they
were quite confident India would have ICBMs and SLBMs,
even though their strike ranges would be much lesser
than American, Russian or Chinese missiles, as also a
functional BMD system soon after the turn of this
decade. [4]
The nature of such a military build-up must be
questioned. Who is it aimed at and what are its
primary objectives? Are these capabilities meant to
act as a deterrence or are they part of something
more? These are important questions.
The United States Directly Threatens China
The answer to the Indian military build-up is embodied
in two parts. One element to this answer is the
military dogma of the U.S. towards China. The U.S.
attitude is clarified in a May 2008 interview given to
the Voice of America by Admiral Timothy J. Keating
after a new Chinese submarine base was discovered,
which was called a threat to U.S. interests in Asia.
Admiral Keating is the American flag officer
commanding U.S. forces in East Asia and the Pacific
under United States Pacific Command (USPACOM), one of
the highest military posts in the U.S. military.
Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported on May 12, 2008:
China's new underground nuclear submarine base close
to vital sea lanes in Southeast Asia has raised US
concerns, with experts calling for a shoring up of
alliances in the region to check Beijing's growing
military clout.
The base's existence on the southern tip of Hainan
Island was confirmed for the first time by high
resolution satellite images, according to Jane's
Intelligence Review, a respected defence periodical,
this month.
It could hold up to 20 submarines, including a new
type of nuclear ballistic missile submarine, and
future Chinese aircraft carrier battle groups, posing
a challenge to longstanding US military dominance in
Asia.
China should not pursue such "high-end military
options," warned Admiral Timothy Keating, the top
commander of US forces in Asia, in an interview with
the Voice of America last week.
He underlined America's "firm intention" not to
abandon its dominating military role in the Pacific
and told Beijing it would face "sure defeat" if it
took on the United States militarily.
(...)
He said Washington should "tighten" its alliances in
Asia to check China's growing military might and
develop "interoperability" capabilities among allies
such as Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines
and Singapore, as well as Indonesia and Malaysia.
James Lyons, an ex-commander of the US Pacific Fleet,
said the United States needed to reestablish
high-level military ties with the Philippines as part
of efforts to enhance US deterrence in the wake of
China's naval expansion.
He said "operational tactics" used against the former
Soviet Union during the Cold War should be applied
against China.
He suggested US leasing a squadron of F-16 fighter
jets and navy vessels to the Philippines, where
Washington once had naval and air bases, as part of
the deterrence strategy.
"We don't need a permanent base but we need access,"
Lyons said, suggesting also that Japan play a more
"meaningful" role in protecting critical sea lanes in
the region.
"Again the Soviets, we raised that deterrence equation
and we won the war without firing a shot basically ...
there is no cheap way out and we have to improve our
posture in the Western Pacific along with our allies,"
he said.
Richard Fisher, an expert of China military affairs at
the International Assessment and Strategy Center, a US
think tank, expected US confrontation with China as
Beijing modernized its nuclear ballistic missile
submarines, referred to in military jargon as SSBNs.
[5]
What James Lyon suggests as an ex-military officier
about the U.S. using Japan as a counter-balance
against China is clearly being applied with other
nations in Asia. In addition, without India using
Japan or a whole coalition of other Asian states
carries far less weight against China, especially one
supported by Russia. India is clearly key in the U.S.
geo-strategy for dealing with China and in general for
Eurasia.
The Hindustani Wild Card: India as a Eurasian Wedge
against China?
To obstruct the unification of Russia, Iran, and China
the Bush Jr. Administration in 2004 intensified the
venture of using India as a Eurasian wedge or
counter-weight to China. The U.S. aim is to eventually
undermine the coalition between Russia, China, and
Iran by using India or alternatively to use India as a
spearhead against the Chinese. This latter tactic
would be similar to the strategy used by the U.S.
government in relation to Iraq and Iran, which
resulted in the Iraq-Iran War in 1980.
In this Iraq-Iran War model both Baghdad and Tehran
were seen as enemies by U.S. strategists and the aim
was to get both Middle Eastern republics to neutralize
one another. Henry Kissinger summed this U.S. policy
by saying the point was for both the Iraqi and Iranian
sides to destroy one another. The same scenario could
happen and be applied to India and China. The
realization of this confrontational project has
already been announced by the Indian military. What
has long been thought has become public and that is
that the Indian military has been preparing for war
against Beijing. This is the second element to the
question about the Indian military build-up.
The Hindustan Times reported on March 26, 2009:
The Indian military fears a [sic.] `Chinese
aggression' in less than a decade. A secret exercise,
called `Divine Matrix', by the army's military
operations directorate has visualised a war scenario
with the nuclear-armed neighbour before 2017.
"A misadventure by China is very much within the realm
of possibility with Beijing trying to position itself
as the only power in the region. There will be no
nuclear warfare but a short, swift war that could have
menacing consequences for India," said an army
officer, who was part of the three-day war games that
ended on Wednesday.
In the military's assessment, based on a six-month
study of various scenarios before the war games, China
would rely on information warfare (IW) to bring India
down on its knees before launching an offensive.
The war games saw generals raising concerns about the
IW battalions of the People's Liberation Army carrying
out hacker attacks for military espionage,
intelligence collection, paralysing communication
systems, compromising airport security, inflicting
damage on the banking system and disabling power
grids. "We need to spend more on developing
information warfare capability," he said.
The war games dispelled the notion that China would
take at least one season (one year) for a substantial
military build-up across India's northeastern
frontiers. "The Tibetan infrastructure has been
improved considerably. The PLA can now launch an
assault very quickly, without any warning, the officer
said.
The military believes that China would have swamped
Tibet with sweeping demographic changes in the medium
term. For the purposes of Divine Matrix, China would
call Dalai Lama for rapprochement and neutralise him.
The top brass also brainstormed over India's options
in case Pakistan joined the war to [sic.; too].
Another apprehension was that Myanmar and Bangladesh
would align with China in the future geostrategic
environment. [6]
Although the materialization of a war against China is
not a guaranteed event, war preparations are being
made against the Chinese. The disturbances within the
borders of China in Xinjiang and Tibet and in Myanmar
(Burma), which is important to Chinese energy
security, that are so widely advertised in the name of
democracy and self-determination in the U.S. and E.U.
are part of an effort to destabilize and weaken China.
It is also in this context that India is involved with
operations, such as supporting the Tibetan
government-in- exile of the Dahali Lama, that have
been destabilizing China.
The Australian military has also announced it is
expanding its military in preparation for a forecast
major war in the Asia-Pacific region. [7] Japan has
also been expanding its military, while Tokyo has been
preparing itself to join a NATO-like sister-alliance
in the Asia-Pacific that would include Australia, the
U.S., and South Korea and be directed against China,
Russia, and North Korea. [8] Myanmar and Laos can be
targeted too by this military build-up and NATO-like
alliance, as can the other Southeast Asian states of
Indo-China, specifically Vietnam and Cambodia, if they
change their policies.
The Strategic Ties of New Delhi and Tel Aviv:
Indo-Israeli Military and Space Cooperation
On January 21, 2008 a new chapter in Indo-Israeli
strategic cooperation was unveiled; India launched a
Israeli spy satellite, known as TecSAR (TechSAR) or
Polaris, into space via an Indian space rocket at the
Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, Andhra
Padesh. [9] The Israeli satellite was bragged to be
mainly aimed against Iran by Israeli sources. [10]
Israel's spy satellite launched by India has greatly
enhances Israel's intelligence- gathering capabilities
against Iran, Syria, and Lebanon.
The satellite launch by New Delhi has revealed that
the Indian government has little reservations in
assisting in any Israeli or Anglo-American military
ventures in the Middle East against Iran and its
allies. Tehran immediately voiced its strong and
official disapproval to India for aiding Israeli
military objectives against Iran's national security.
The Israeli satellite launch was delayed several
times. The Jerusalem Post and one of its noted
reporters, Yaakov Katz, published an article that
claimed that the delayed space launch of the Israeli
satellite was a result of strong Iranian pressure on
the Indian government. [11]
Politicians in India opposed to Indo-Israeli military
and space cooperation denounced the Indian
government's attempts to present the launch as merely
"business as usual" by hiding the military
implications and objectives behind an act with
underlying hostile intentions against Iran. The Indian
government officially argued to the Indian people that
the satellite launch was just a commercial transaction
between Tel Aviv and New Delhi, but the military
implications of the deal reveal that India is no
longer neutral in regards to Tehran. The fact that the
Israeli spy satellite has been described by Tel Aviv
as a means to confront Tehran and Damascus (officially
described as "enemy states") is an omission in itself
that New Delhi is knowingly an accomplice to hostile
acts against Iran and Syria.
The satellite launch was shrouded in complete secrecy
by the Indian government. The Indian Space Research
Organization (ISRO) which had always announced all its
space launches as a symbol of national pride kept
silent for the Israeli satellite launch. Large numbers
of different Indian groups and people across India
condemned the secrecy behind the mission and cited it
as a sign of guilty by the Indian government. People's
Democracy, the official mouth piece of the Communist
Party of India-Marxist (CP-M), complained that the
citizens of India had to learn about the details of
the launch from Israeli news sources. [12]
The Israeli spy satellite was built by Israel
Aerospace Industries, which has major business
interests in regards to India. On February 18, 2008
Israel Aerospace Industries, and the Tata Group signed
a corporate agreement with Israel Aerospace to
cooperate and jointly develop military hardware and
products through a memorandum of understanding. [13]
Like a tell-tale sign this agreement was announced
less than a month after the launch of the Israeli spy
satellite built by Israel Aerospace Industries. The
Tata Group and its companies also have corporate
agreements with Boeing, Sikorsky Aircraft, and the
European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS),
which are all competing against Russian arms
manufacturers.
Indian cooperation with Israel extends all the way
into the realm of nuclear politics and policy. On
September 17, 2008 at the headquarters of the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna a
vote was almost unanimously cast for a IAEA resolution
urging all Middle Eastern states to abandon making
nuclear bombs. In a case of irony, the only state that
voted against the IAEA resolution was Israel, which
accuses Iran and Syria of pursuing nuclear weapons.
Tel Aviv voted against the IAEA resolution, while
Tehran and Damascus voted for it and the U.S., Canada,
Georgia, and India all in support of Israel abstained.
New Delhi Deepens ties with the U.S., NATO, and Israel
In military terms, there is a real strategic
"American-Indian- Israeli Axis." New Delhi's strategic
ties with the U.S., NATO, and Israel have been
deepening. The strategic axis formed by the U.S.,
India, and Israel has also been denounced by various
political parties and figures across the political
landscape of India.
Firstly, the geo-strategic rationale for an alliance
between the U.S. and India is the encirclement or
containment of the People's Republic of China. The
other rationale or intentions of such cooperation are
the neutralization of Russia as a player in Central
Asia and the securing of energy resources for both the
U.S. and India. In this project, the U.S. sees India
as a natural counter-weight to China. The U.S. also
has used India in its objective of trying to isolate
Iran.
In regards to Tel Aviv, Israel sees India as part of a
broader periphery. This broader or so-called "new
periphery" was imagined and utilized as a basis of
geo-strategy by Tel Aviv after 1979 when the "old
periphery" that included Iran, which was one of
Israel's closest allies, buckled and collapsed with
the 1979 Iranian Revolution. [14] In this context,
Israel's "new periphery" has been conceptualized
against both the Arab World and Iran (or compounded as
the Arabo-Iranian World). This is why the Israeli
relationships with India, Georgia, the Republic of
Azerbaijan, and Turkey are important, and in some
cases full fledged alliances. [15]
Likewise NATO and India also have shared interests in
Afghanistan and Central Asia, which India sees as part
of its own periphery or "near abroad." These shared
interests and the mutual animosity to Chinese energy
interests in Central Asia has brought India and NATO,
led by the U.S., into the same camp. NATO also sees
India as a military partner in its strategy to become
a global military alliance. In addition, dealing with
Pakistan is also another shared commonality between
NATO and India.
The Project for "Greater South Asia" and Indian
Ambitions in its "Near Abroad"
As Hindu means everything beyond the Indus and
Hindustan the "land beyond the Indus" in ancient
Iranian, the word "Industan" can be used to talk about
the land and basin around the Indus River. Hereon,
this term will be used to refer to the geographic area
adjacent the Indus to India's western flank. [16] This
area includes Pakistan and can be extended to include
Afghanistan and the former Soviet republics of Central
Asia. Although Industan may not be exactly an accurate
definition for the area beyond Pakistan, Industan
still fits well, especially in light of Indian
geo-political thinking. That is why the term will be
used.
Industan, is part of India's "near abroad" or
periphery, and in a sense even a part of an expanded
periphery that emerged with the dissolution of the
Soviet Union. It is with this in mind that India
established its first military base, at Ayni, on
foreign soil in Tajikistan. [17] The converging
interests of the U.S. and India are clear in the U.S.
State Department's re-definition of Central Asia as a
part of "Greater South Asia." Greater South Asia is
the conceptualization of Central Asia as a region
within South Asia, which is synonymous with the Indian
sub-continent. The concept of Greater South Asia is
part of the project to bring the former Soviet
republics of Central Asia into the orbits of the U.S.
through cooperation with India, as a regional
gendarme.
Turning to Pakistan, India has a shared interests with
the U.S. and NATO in the subjection of Pakistan.
Pakistan would cease to be a client state of the U.S.
or a manageable state, because of a likely revolution
that would occur in the scenario of a broader war in
the Middle East against Iran or a far larger Eurasian
war involving China and Russia. Nuclear weapons in the
hands of such a revolutionary government in Islamabad
would be a threat to Indian national security, NATO
operations in Afghanistan, and Israel. It is in the
shared interests of the U.S., NATO, Israel, and India
to neutralize such a strategic and tactical threat
from emerging in Pakistan. This is why NATO has
underpinned the objective of balkanizing Pakistan and
why the U.S. has talked about taking over Pakistani
nuclear facilities via the U.S. military. The
subjection of Pakistan is also territorially and
militarily to the advantage of New Delhi, because it
would eliminate a rival and allow India to gain
territory that in the view of many Indians was lost
with the partition of India in 1947.
The Naval build-up in the Indian Ocean and the
Geo-Politics of the Sri Lankan Civil War
To the southern borders of Eurasia is the Indian
Ocean. The Indian Ocean is the scene of major
international rivalries and competition( s). Sri Lanka
is also a front in these rivalries. It is in this
context that India is part of a major naval build-up
running from the coastline of East Africa and the
Arabian Sea to the waves of Oceania. Aside from the
fleets of the U.S. and its NATO allies that have large
presences in the Indian Ocean, the naval fleets of
Iran, India, China, Japan, and Australia are also all
being expanded in league with this trend of
militarization. Also, India and China are working to
release large nuclear submarine fleets into the Indian
Ocean and the Pacific Ocean. The naval encirclement of
Eurasia and the naval expansion of China are also
reasons why U.S. Navy ships have been repeatedly
caught violating Chinese waters and illegally
surveying Chinese territory. [18]
The water around the Arabian Peninsula all the way
around from the Persian Gulf, the Gulf of Oman, and
the Gulf of Aden to the Red Sea (Arabian Gulf) carries
large fleets of ships either belonging to the U.S.,
NATO, or their allies. At any point the U.S. and its
allies can stop international shipping in these
waters. The problem of piracy in these waters is very
closely linked to their militarization and is a
justification for militarization. This is one of the
reasons that the Gulf of Aden and the waters off the
Horn of Africa, where Somalia is located, have seen
the deployment of the naval forces of Russia, China,
and Iran as a strategically symmetric move. [19]
It should be noted that relations between Sri Lanka
and India started to unravel in 2009. The Sri Lankan
government has accused the Indian government of
supporting the Tamil Tigers drive to create a Tamil
state by dividing Sri Lanka. Much of this has to do
with the geo-strategic struggle between the Periphery
and Eurasia in the Indian Ocean.
In this regard, India is not only working against
Chinese interests in the Indian Ocean, but it is also
actively cooperating with the U.S. and its allies. In
the scenario of a conflict between Eurasia and the
Periphery or between China and India the maritime
route that passes by Sri Lanka would be vital to the
Chinese military and Chinese energy security. For this
reason Sri Lanka has joined the SCO as a "dialogue
partner" under the protective umbrella of Russia,
China, and their allies. Not only has Sri Lanka joined
the SCO, but it also hosts a Chinese port in a pivotal
point in the Indian Ocean and near the borders of
India that has put Colombo at odds with New Delhi.
Arms Manufacturer and Nuclear Rivalry in India
Since the end of the Cold War there has been a drive
to push out Russian arms manufacturers out of the
Indian market by Anglo-American, Franco-German, and
Israeli military contractors. France and Israel have
also been traditionally the second and third largest
weapon sources for India after Russia. Russian
manufacturers have been competing fiercely against
military manufactures based in France, Germany,
Israel, Britain, and the U.S. to remain as New Delhi's
top arms suppliers.
In addition, the elites in New Delhi have been putting
their weight behind Russia's rivals in India. India
has become one of the most significant markets for
Israeli military hardware and has replaced the void
left to Israeli weapons exporters by the loss of the
South African arms market that was caused by the
collapse of Apartheid in 1993. Additionally, Israel
has moved on to replace France as the second largest
provider of military hardware to India. [20] This is
while France in 2006 and 2008 has made headway in
nuclear cooperation agreements with India, following
the 2005 Indo-U.S. nuclear deal. [21]
India-Brazil- South Africa (IBSA): "Superalignment" or
"Counter-Alignment? "
In addition, the U.S. is trying to use the
India-Brazil- South Africa (IBSA) Dialogue Forum, a
loose trilateral alliance of go-between states,
against China, Venezuela (and its Latin American bloc
that can be called the Bolivarian Bloc), Russia, and
Iran. In reality and simplistic terms the IBSA powers
are rising, second tier global players. They
originally appeared to be engaging in a policy of "superalignment,
" the cultivation of strategic relations with all
major powers and blocs, as opposed to
"counter-alignment. " A global web of alliances,
counter-alliances, cross-cutting, and intersecting
alliances are beginning to come into view, just like
the environment in Europe and the Middle East on the
eve of the First World War.
Despite the fact that Italy was a member of the Triple
Alliance, along with Germany and the
Austro-Hungarians, it decided to side with the Triple
Entente after secret negotiations and promises that
were never honoured by Britain and France. There are
circles in Moscow, Beijing, and Tehran that believe
that India could act treacherously just as Italy did
by not honouring its obligations to its allies, Vienna
and Berlin. These suspicions also see this as a
possibility even if India entered the SCO as a full
member and joined the Chinese-Russian- Iranian
coalition in Eurasia.
In the frankest words, India, Brazil, and the Republic
of South Africa are benefiting from the compounded
friction between the U.S., France, Britain, Germany,
China, Iran, Venezuela, and Russia. To clarify, the
reason that this friction is best described as
compounded is because the Anglo-American alliance and
the Franco-German entente work as two separate
sub-units and sometimes align with the interests of
opposing powers. This is also true about cooperation
between Iran, Venezuela, Russia, and China. In
Eurasia, Russia and Iran sometimes work as a pair,
while Russia and China or China and Iran do so at
other times. This trend in regards to the Eurasians,
however, is changing as the cohesion between Russia,
China, and Iran increases.
This behaviour is observable in the positions of both
India and Brazil on Kosovar Independence. Both the
foreign ministers of India and Brazil, Celso Amorim
and Pranab Mukherjee, made a joint statement in
Brasilia about the declaration of independence by
Kosovo by announcing that India and Brazil were
studying its legal ramifications under a wait-and-see
policy of the "evolving situation" as Pranab Mukherjee
called it. [22]
The Case of Elitism: Where the Indian Elites Stand
On April 2, 2009 the Group of Twenty (G-20) met in
London in regards to the global economy and declared
that New Delhi would have a bigger role in the global
economy. The question about "India's place in the sun"
that is often mentioned in international studies about
its emerging status as a global power is not really
about India as a nation-state or even the interests of
its general population, but is really a question about
the position of its ruling and economic classes or its
elites (a small minority that make decisions on behalf
of the majority) and their place within the global
power structure and the international elitist compact
that is forming through neo-liberal globalization.
Part and parcel of this enterprise is what appears to
be India's demands for a greater role, or share, for
its elites in the global economy through some form or
another of expanded interlocking directorships.
Interlocking directorships is a term used to describe
when the members of the board of directors or managing
body of one corporation also serve as members of the
board of directors or managing body of other
corporations. This is very frequent amongst elitist
circles and a way for them to maintain a monopoly on
their power. It is these interlocking directorships
that are uniting global elites and the impetus for
global amalgamation.
India has always had indigenous elites, who in
numerous cases worked hand in glove with the British
during the period of the British Raj. Starting from
the colonial period, borrowing from a term used by the
Canadian political economist Wallace Clement, most the
Indian indigenous elites became "comprador elites."
Comprador elites are any elite groups that represent
or manage the interests of "parasite elites" or
foreign elites, which in the case of the British Raj
would have been the British elites. A modern example
of a comprador elite would be the Indian chief
executive officers (CEOs) of Indian subsidiaries of
foreign-controlled corporations, such as PepsiCo India
and Monsanto India.
Moving on, the British could not rule most of India
without these elites and therefore cooperated with
them. London made sure that the Indian elites would be
fully integrated into the British Empire by involving
them in the administration of India, sending them to
British schools, and making them Anglophiles or lovers
of all things British. Britain would also grant the
Indian elites their own economic fiefdoms in return
for their cooperation. The relationship was very much
symbiotic and in reality the Indian elites were the
biggest supporters of the British Empire and opposed
Indian independence. It is only when the Indian elites
were offended by London, because of the denial of
their requests to have a status within the British
Empire like the Dominions, such as Canada and
Australia, that the Indian Independence Movement
gained momentum.
With Indian independence many of the comprador elites
became indigenous elites, in the sense that they were
serving their own interests and no longer serving
British interests in India. Yet, some comprador elites
remained who served British economic interests. For a
period of time after Indian independence there were
tensions between the Indian indigenous elites and both
the comprador elites and their parasite elite backers
in London as the indigenous elites moved into the
former niches of the British. This does not mean that
there were not those within the indigenous elites that
made agreements or compromises with the British for
the post-independence period.
As time passed and the Cold War supposedly ended, the
Soviet Union fell apart, neighbouring China accepted
capitalism, and a push for unipolarity accelerated,
the different types of elites in India started
cooperating even more. More specifically, the
indigenous elites of India and foreign elites in the
U.S. and E.U. started collaborating, with the
comprador elites helping interlock the indigenous and
foreign sides even more. The state of elitist modus
vivandi, living together in uneasy post-independence
armistice, was gradually evolving into broader
cooperation. For example, in the financial sector the
comprador elites, indigenous elites, and parasite
elites have worked together to erode state control of
the banking system that has resulted in the
mushrooming and growth of private and foreign banks in
India starting in the 1990s.
Enter Dr. Manmohan Singh: The Economic Origins for New
Delhi's Strategic Shift?
The Indian shift away from non-alignment and its
strategic partnerships is deeply connected to the
unseen regime change in New Delhi that was initiated
with the restructuring of Indian economic policy. 1991
was a year of change for India. It was also the year
that President George Bush Sr. declared that the "New
World Order" was beginning to emerge and also the same
year as the Gulf War and the collapse of the Soviet
Union.
A common denominator between 1991 and India in the
late-2000s is Dr. Manmohan Singh, the current head of
the Indian government. Dr. Singh received his
doctorate (PhD.) as an economist from Oxford
University and also attended Cambridge University. He
is a former ranking officer of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) in India. His positions included
Deputy for India on the IMF Committee of Twenty on
International Monetary Reform (1972-1974), IMF
Associate (1976-1980, 1982-1985), Alternative Governor
for India on the IMF Board of Governors (1982-1985),
and Governor for India on the Board of Governors of
the IMF (1991-1995). Several of these positions
coincided with appointments within the government and
national cabinet of India. This also includes the
position of Dr. Singh as the Governor of the Reserve
Bank of India (1982-1985).
Dr. Singh was one of the faces behind the
restructuring of the Indian economy in 1991, in league
with the IMF. He was appointed as the Indian Finance
Minister in 1991 by Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao,
a man accused with corruption, during a financial
crisis that was brought about by IMF policies. India
was nearly bankrupted during this period of reforms
and state assets surrendered to domestic and foreign
private investors. The economic policies of
establishing a truly self-sufficiently Indian economy
were abandoned and privatization became wide spread.
Economic liberalization pushed aside the long-term
goals of eliminating poverty in India and providing
high standards of living. The Indian agricultural
sector was also infected by foreign multi-national
corporations through the so-called "Green Revolution."
Before being appointed to the post of Indian Finance
Minister, Dr. Singh was decisive in creating the
financial crisis in India through coordination with
the IMF. The policies of Dr. Singh by design also left
India without enough reserves to meet its financial
commitments. India was also deprived of the means to
improve its economy by IMF policies The origins of
these policies became obvious when Indian civil
servants started complaining of sloppy,
American-style, and non-British spelling, writing, and
grammar in Indian government finance documents and
papers. As a result Indian national assets and wealth
were siphoned off and foreign control, including that
of the Bank of England, of Indian finances began. 1996
spelled the death of the Rao Administration in India
because of the backlash of economic liberalization and
the unpopularity of the government.
With the economic shifts of 1991 began the road down
the path to political shift. On May 22, 2004 the IMF's
man in New Delhi, Dr. Singh, returned to office to
became the Prime Minister of India. This time
political reforms including turning India's back on
the Non-Alignment Movement (N.A.M.), Iran at the IAEA,
and Russia's aim to realize the Primakov Doctrine were
on the table.
India and the Manufactured "Clash of Civilizations" in
Eurasia
In many Indian circles the colonial bonds with London
are still strong and there are views that New Delhi,
or at least the Indian elites, are natural members of
the Anglo-American establishment. There is also a
taint of racial theory attached to these views with
links to the caste system and the Indian elite's Aryan
self-concepts. Huntington's "Clash of Civilizations"
notion and Mackinder's geo-strategic population model
are factors behind these views too. Resource
competition, demographics, and economic competition
are seen as fuel that will inevitably draw India and
China into a clash for supremacy in Asia.
Is it primarily because of geography, amongst other
factors, that Indian Civilization (labeled as Hindu
Civilization in regards to Huntington's model) is said
to have a conflicting relationship or affiliation with
Chinese Civilization (labeled as Sinic Civilization by
Huntington's model) and Islamic Civilization? This
theory is short-sighted; if true where are the
centuries of fighting between Chinese and Indian
civilization? For the most part both lived in peace.
The same applied to Islamic Civilization.
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A clash is not the natural ends of interaction between
different civilizations or societies. Interaction is
always based initially on trade and it is the form of
economic trade and the aims of either party that can
result in a clash. Foreign powers that utilize a
"Clash of Civilizations" scheme do so because of the
economy of control. A mere reading of Anglo-American
strategic doctrine and observations of Anglo-American
practices brings this to light.
A historical look will prove the "Clash of
Civilizations" as a theory to be wrong and actually
illustrates that Indian Civilization really overlaps
with both Islamic Civilization and Chinese
Civilization. Moreover, it is wrong to categorize the
conflict between Pakistan and India as a conflict
between all Muslims and the nation-state of India or
even any of the internal fighting amongst Muslims and
non-Muslims in India. Vedicists (one of the proper
names for Hindus) and Muslims, as well as several
other religions lived together in relative peace until
the the start of British involvement in India. [23]
The animosity between Pakistan and India is a
synthetic construct where local elites and foreign
powers worked together, not only to divide territory,
but to control local groups that have lived together
for hundreds of years by alienating them from one
another.
Why a "Clash of Civilizations" in Eurasia?
By extension of the utilization of the "Clash of
Civilizations" notion, which predates Samuel P.
Huntington, India and Vedicism are depicted as enemies
by the Pakistani elites as a means of domestic
distraction and to direct internal tensions about
social inequality and injustice towards an outside
source. The outside enemy, the "other," has always
been used domestically to distract subject populations
by local leaders. In the case of the Indian
sub-continent certain native circles have jointly
invested in continuing the British policy of localized
conflict as a means of monopoly.
In an over simplistic understanding, even if one were
to use Huntingon's model to explain who benefits from
civilizational conflict because of global
civilizational rivalry, it would have to be the
civilization with the most relationships due to the
fact that it has the most rivals to put down. In
relation to trade a civilization with the most
relationships would also be in a position to initiate
the most clashes because it can afford to burn some of
its bridges (or cut ties) and is in a position to
initiate clashes between other civilizations.
Under a system of cooperation and fair-trade conflict
of a grand scale would not happen, but under a
competitive international system pushing for monopoly
this is a direction being taken by the status quo.
This is where critics of global capitalism lament
about the unnatural nature of capitalism. This system,
however, is not a system of capitalism. It is fitting
to apply a new term at this point: ubercapitalism.
Ubercapitalism is a system where the framework of
regulation, taxation, and law are controlled and
directed by elites for their own benefits. In
Marxist-Leninist terms the state is an agent of elite
interests. Even the capitalist concept of laissez-fair
commerce is violated and disregarded because the state
and the business environment are controlled by these
elites.
If there was fair-trade between these so-called
civilizational entities there would be no need for
clashes, but this by itself does not mean that there
would altogether be no conflict. Ideology, faith, and
hubris are also factors, but in most cases ideology
and faith have been manipulated or constructed to
support the economic structure and to justify conflict
and hierarchy. A lack of fair-trade or control over
finite resources necessitates manufactured conflict;
this is the only way the players controlling wealth
can retain their positions.
Despite the talk about a "Clash of Civilizations" the
most natural path of social evolution is one of
relative peace and cooperation. The conceptualization
of Latin America, India, Israel, the so-called West,
China, the Muslim countries, the Orthodox Christian
countries, and the Buddhist nations as different or
distinct civilizations is also a fallacy in itself and
very abstract. Distinctions do exist, but they are far
less than the similarities and not enough to support
Huntington's civilizational model.
New Delhi's Trajectory: A Reversion to the British
Raj?
Is India reverting to the status quo of the British
Raj? India has moved beyond a policy of
superalignment. India's elites believe that to achieve
their place in the sun they must buy into the
socio-economic and political agenda of the so-called,
"Core countries" — the global financial power holders
of the Periphery. India's commitment to the
Non-Alignment Movement (N.A.M.) is also dead all but
in name. The foreign policy course that Pandit
Jawaharlal Nehru had charted for India has been
abandoned.
Internally, for the last two decades India has been
colonizing itself. Communities and ethnic groups have
been played agains one another. These are both cases
where local and foreign elites are working
hand-in-hand. The ruling elites, with the aid of the
Indian government, are appropriating all forms of
resourses, rights, and property from countless people
to fuel the so-called economic liberalization process
with no regard for their fellow citizens. Water and
national assets are being privatized and virtual slave
labour is, once again, being institutionalized —
everything that Mahatma Gandhi and his follower worked
hard to eliminate. The free trade deals being struck
by the U.S. and E.U. with India are a part of this
process and have been integrating India into the
global economic order.
Hand-in-hand with India being part of a global
economic order goes the domination of Eurasia. India
is on a serious path of militarization that will lead
New Delhi towards conflict with China. In such a war
both Asian giants would be losers and the U.S. and its
allies the real winners.
Due to their flexibility the Indian elite may still
change course, but there is a clear motion to exploit
and mobilize India in Eurasia against its neighbours
and the major powers of Eurasia. This is the true
meaning, intent, nature, and agenda behind the
so-called "Clash of Civilizations" in Eurasia. The
threat of a nuclear war between China and India is
real in the words of the Indian military, but what is
important to realize is that such a confrontation is
part of a much larger series of wars or a wider
struggle between the powers of Eurasia and the nations
of the Periphery, led by the United States.
NOTES
[1] Indrani Bagchi, India-Japan strategic talks
begin, The Times of India, March 23, 2007.
[2] India to lay keel of new aircraft carrier on
Saturday, Russian News and Information Agency (RIA
Novosti), February 26, 2009.
[3] Pallavi Aiyar, India to conduct naval exercises
with China, The Hindu, April 12, 2007.
[4] Rajat Pandit, Going ballistic: India looks to
joing elite missile club, The Times of India, May 13,
2008.
[5] China's new naval base triggers US concerns,
Agence France-Presse (AFP), May 12, 2008.
[6] Rahul Singh, Indian Army fears China attack by
2017, The Hindustan Times, March 26, 2008.
[7] Commonwealth of Australia, Defending Australia in
the Asia Pacific Century: Force 2030, 2009.
[8] Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya, Global Military Alliance:
Encircling Russia and China, Centre for Research on
Globalization (CRG), May 10, 2007.
[9] India launches Israeli satellite in boost to space
business, Agence France-Presse, January 20, 2008.
[10] Yossi Melman, Satellite launch bolsters ability
to spy on Tehran, Haaretz, January 21, 2008.
[11] Yaakov Katz, Iran delayed satellite launch, The
Jerusalem Post, January 22, 2008.
[12] Israeli Satellite Launch: Harmful Course,
People's Democracy, vol. 32, no. 6, February 10, 2008.
[13] Sandeep Dikshit, Tata-Israel Aerospace Industries
ink memorandum of understanding, The Hindu, February
18, 2008.
[14] Johan Nylander, Israel drops Indian venture under
`US pressure,' Agence France-Presse (AFP), July 6,
2009.
[15] Aaron S. Klieman, Israel and the World After 40
Years (Washington: Pergamon- Brassey's International
Defense Publishers, 1990), p.92, pp.168–9, p.236.
[16] Infra. n.23.
[17] Sudha Ramachandran, India makes a soft landing in
Tajikistan, Asia Times, March 3, 2007.
[18] Jane Macartney, China accuses US naval ship of
illegal surveying, The Times (U.K.), March 10, 2009;
Chris Buckley, China says U.S. naval ship broke the
law, Reuters, March 10, 2009.
[19] Atul Aneja, Iran, China will begin counter-piracy
patrols, The Hindu, December 22, 2008; Russia, China
conduct anti-piracy exercises in the Gulf of Aden,
Russian News and Information Agency (RIA Novosti),
September 18, 2009.
[20] Klieman, Israel and thr World, Op. cit.
[21] Amelia Gentleman, France and India agree on atom
deal, The New York Times, February 20, 2006;
India-France nuclear accord provides opening for
Areva, The New York Times, September 30, 2008.
[22] Kosovo legal issues being studied: Brazil, India,
Agence France-Presse (AFP), February 19, 2008; World
split on Kosovo issue, Agence France-Presse (AFP),
February 19, 2008.
[23] Sanatana Dharma or Vedic Dharma (Vedicism) is the
proper name for Hinduism. The terms Hindu and Hinduism
are misnomers, just as Mohammedan and Mohammedanism
are misnomers for Muslims and Islam. The term Hindu is
originally a geographic definition used by the ancient
Iranians to label all the peoples living in the lands
of the Indus Valley or east of the Indus River
regardless of religious affinity or faith. The term
Hindu was later adopted by the Arabs who conquered
Sassanid Iran and then expanded towards the the Indian
sub-continent. As the Altaic peoples, such as
Mongolian and Turkic-speaking tribes, migrated
westward in Eurasia they also adopted the term through
interaction with both the Iranians and the Arabs. At
this time in history and up to the rule of the Mugal
Dynasty in India the term Hindu started gaining
popular and recurrent usage, but was still used as an
ethnographic term and not a religious identification
label. The Muslims, Sikhs, Christians, Buddhists, and
Vidicists of India were all called Hindus. It was
during the colonial era that the British, who ruled
India, coined the English-language term/word Hinduism
and assigned the already existing and ancient Iranian
term/word Hindu in 1830 to describe and designate the
faiths and peoples of India belonging to Vedicism.
Hindus are in reality all the people of India. The
term Hindi, also used to label Indians and one of the
main Indic languages, comes from Hindustani which also
reflects the geographic nature and origins of the term
Hindu; Hindustan means land of India and Hindustani
people of India.
Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya is a Reseach Associate
of the Centre for Research on Globalization (CRG)
specializing in geopolitics and strategic issues.
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