Foreign
policy has rarely mattered in Indian elections, yet one of the biggest
challenges the new government in New Delhi will face is in confronting an
international system that has felt systematically let down by India over the
last few years. The world is hoping — as are India’s impatient and angry young
voters — for a quick recovery of India’s self-esteem and a more robust
engagement with the international system. The challenges are enormous, and
overcoming them will require leadership from the very top. Only a thoughtful,
forward-looking and determined Prime Minister — aided by an equally deft
External Affairs Minister — can get this task right. New foreign policy
architecture is required here — radical reform, not piecemeal incrementalism.
Only with all those factors present can India aspire to play the global
leadership role it should be playing, and to advance its interests in a
turbulent world.
Footnotes
in poll manifestoes
Unfortunately,
in all the party manifestoes released so far, the weakest sections are on
foreign policy. Most parties merely repeat the homilies and ideological
positions of the past. The Congress manifesto, for instance, says: “We will
continue to support the goodwill nurtured for decades amongst socialist
countries”––a sentence that might have been crafted in the 1960s, 1970s or
1980, but which makes no sense today. The BJP seeks to blend, not very
coherently, soft power: the task of “reviving” Brand India (on the strength of
Tradition, Talent, Tourism, Trade and Technology) with the suggestion of a
muscular foreign policy (“…where required we will not hesitate from taking
strong stand and steps”). The CPI (M) will have “India join the Shanghai
Cooperation Organisation as a full member,” except that membership is not
India’s by right, but subject to the decision of the existing members in the
council of heads of states. The Aam Aadmi Party wants to recover “Sino-Indian
civilizational exchange” — whatever that means. And the Trinamool Congress
believes that the world is “one single family,” but that national security is
“upper most.” Unlike political parties and shoddy manifestoes, the new
government of India will not have the luxury of engaging with a make-believe
world. It will need to act with immediacy on at least three fronts.
First,
craft a vision for India in Asia in what is undoubtedly an Asian century.
Our
continent is being defined and redefined over time. Regions are shaped, after
all, as much by powerful nations seeking to advance their interests as by any
objective reality. But whatever nomenclature we adopt, and whatever definition
we accept, we are faced with, as Evan A. Feigenbaum and Robert A. Manning put
it, two Asias: “There is ‘Economic Asia,’ the Dr. Jekyll — a dynamic,
integrated Asia with 53 per cent of its trade now being conducted within the
region itself, and a U.S.$19 trillion regional economy that has become an
engine of global growth. And then there is ‘Security Asia’, the veritable Mr.
Hyde — a dysfunctional region of mistrustful powers, prone to nationalism and
irredentism, escalating their territorial disputes over tiny rocks and shoals,
and arming for conflict.”
For
a vision in the Asian century
As
the Asian Development Bank put it, by nearly doubling its share of global gross
domestic product (GDP) to 52 per cent by 2050, Asia would regain the dominant
economic position it held some 300 years ago, before the Industrial Revolution.
And yet, as many have pointed out, Asia “is beset by inter-state rivalries that
resemble 19th century Europe,” as well [as] the new challenges of the 21st
century, including environmental catastrophes and natural disasters, climate
change, terrorism, cyber security and maritime issues. This is compounded by an
increasingly assertive China with a leadership that has abandoned Deng
Xiaoping’s 24-Character Strategy: Observe calmly; secure our position; cope
with affairs calmly; hide our capacities and bide our time; maintain a low
profile; and never claim leadership. The Chinese no longer want merely to
observe, or to hide their capabilities, but may well use 2014 to announce their
arrival as leaders by teaching Shinzo¯ Abe’s Japan a lesson. Do we have a
strategy for coping with such a hegemonic and potentially belligerent China? Do
we have a clear alternative vision of Asian stability and the security
architecture needed to support it? And do we have the instruments, together
with like-minded Asian states and perhaps the United States, to ensure a
balance in Asia?
Even
middle powers like Australia have developed a comprehensive understanding of
their place in today’s Asia. Surely, the first task of the new government must
be to develop a vision for India in the Asian century. This will require deep
consultation both within the government and outside it. Indeed, the most
interesting alternative insights can often be found outside government. The
most thoughtful recent commentary on Asia, for example, is Pankaj Mishra’s
brilliant From the Ruins of Empire: The Revolt Against the West and the
Remaking of Asia. Mr. Mishra describes how three 19th century thinkers, the
Persian Jamal-al Din al-Afghani, Liang Qichao from China and India’s
Rabindranath Tagore, navigated through eastern tradition and the western
onslaught to think in new, creative ways about striking a balance and finding
harmony. In many ways, these ideas remain relevant today: if Asia merely mimics
the West in its quest for economic growth and conspicuous consumption, and the
attendant conflict over economic resources and military prowess, the “revenge
of the East” in the Asian century and “all its victories” will remain “ truly
Pyrrhic.”
Second,
develop a comprehensive strategy for integrating South Asia. Consider this
conundrum. India’s military and economic prowess is greater than ever before,
yet India’s ability to shape and influence the principal countries in South
Asia is less than it was, say, 30 years ago. An unstable Nepal with widespread
anti-India sentiment, a triumphalist Sri Lanka where Sinhalese chauvinism is
showing no signs of accommodating the legitimate aspirations of the Tamils, a
chaotic Pakistan, which is unwilling even to reassure New Delhi on future
terrorist strikes, and, potentially, an anarchic Afghanistan are only
symptomatic of a region that is being pulled in different directions.
Do
we not need a long-term strategic vision for South Asia? Will India really be
taken seriously as a global player if it is unable to settle its own
neighbourhood? The present government’s South Asia policy, based on five
principles — bilateralism, non-reciprocity, non-interference, economic
integration and irrelevance of borders — failed because it lacked effective
political will, instruments and expertise. The new government must do better
and devise a comprehensive 10-year action plan for the region.
Restructuring
South Block
Finally,
empower the Foreign Secretary and restructure the Ministry of External Affairs
(MEA) as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MEA&FT). Over the last
few years, the position of the Foreign Secretary has been emasculated even
while the MEA, serviced primarily by the officers of the Indian Foreign
Service, has become an increasingly anachronistic institution. The growing
global emphasis on economics and trade must be reflected in the structure and
nomenclature of the MEA. India is lucky that, in the present Foreign Secretary,
we have one of the wisest Indian diplomats, who will be able implement the
change that is needed if there is clear political direction.
The
Indian Foreign Service was created on the eve of India’s independence; its
first officers, drawn from the Indian Civil Service, were rich in experience
and had served in various departments and in different parts of India. For
instance, Sir Girija Shankar Bajpai — the first Secretary General of the MEA —
had been Secretary of Education, Lands and Health when he was in his 30s. The
first Foreign Secretary, K.P.S. Menon, had been Dewan of Bharatpur. The fifth
Foreign Secretary, Y.D. Gundevia’s masterly memoir, Outside the Archives,
reveals the energy, dynamism and wisdom of a remarkably collegial MEA in those
heady years after independence — led, of course, by the vision (as well as the
personal and non-hierarchical touch) of Jawaharlal Nehru, who remained External
Affairs Minister throughout his tenure as Prime Minister. On one occasion,
Nehru, deeply allergic to protocol, dragged Gundevia, then a junior officer (in
shorts and chappals and a white bush shirt preparing for a swim at Delhi
Gymkhana), to the airport to receive the then Burmese Prime Minister!
Even
today, the IFS has some of the most talented and hard-working diplomats of any
country in the world, but they are overstretched, too often lacking the
expertise needed to negotiate effectively on complex contemporary issues and
confined in protocol silos which are out of tune with contemporary realities.
India’s foreign policy must be seen as a shared partnership across departments
within the government of India, and academia and think tanks outside the traditional
corridors of power. The Task Force on National Security, chaired by Mr. Naresh
Chandra, is believed to have pointed out correctly that the IFS does not have
enough diplomats to “anticipate, analyse and act on contemporary challenges.”
To increase its strength and improve its expertise the MEA must allow, to begin
with, secondments from other all India and Central services and the armed
forces. A new political-military affairs division should be created within the
MEA (not in the MoD as suggested by the Naresh Chandra task force) with
officers from the services and intelligence agencies serving it. The new
emphasis on trade must mean that a dedicated trade expert should be attached to
most Indian missions.
Let us face it, with an
unsettled neighbourhood, an increasingly aggressive China and a politically
weak and ambivalent Obama-led United States of America, India’s external
environment is defined by uncertainty. Without a major transformation in the
style and substance of our foreign policy, “the India story” — already fading
in the global imagination — will be viewed as a fantasy.(Source: The Hindu)
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