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Clinton visit to the Indian subcontinent sets a new strategic
orientation
By Peter Symonds
23 March 2000
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Bill Clinton's current trip to the Indian subcontinent, the
first by a United States president since Jimmy Carter toured in
1978, marks a further shift in Washington's orientation in the
region away from its previous Cold War alliance with Pakistan
and towards a new, as yet tentative, strategic and economic relationship
with India.
In a sense, Clinton's itinerary says it allhe has spent
a day in Bangladesh, is in the middle of five days in India and
visits to five cities including Hyderabad, a centre for India's
burgeoning software and computer industries, and on Saturday will
stop for a mere five hours in Pakistan. The lopsided character
of the travel arrangements is matched by the different nature
of Washington's political messages to Pakistan and India.
In India, the US president has signed a joint vision
statement with Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee, which
in glowing terms pledges to create a closer and qualitatively
new relationship between two of the world's largest
democracies. In many ways, the document proclaims,
the character of the 21st century world will depend on the
success of our cooperation for peace, prosperity, democracy and
freedom.
Neither Clinton nor the US media has seen fit to mention, let
alone criticise, the fact that Washington's new partnership is
with a coalition government headed by the Bharatiya Janatha Party
(BJP)an extreme rightwing formation intent on pressing ahead
with its Hindu chauvinist agenda.
Washington has made several significant concessions to India
in order to allow the visit to proceed. The trip was proposed
several years ago but was abruptly halted after New Delhi exploded
five nuclear devices in May 1998, followed shortly after by nuclear
tests in Pakistan. The US imposed economic and technical sanctions
against both countries, and pressed them both to sign the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). In recent months, however, the Clinton
administration not only lifted some of the sanctions against India
but also indicated to the Vajpayee government that a pledge to
sign the CTBT would not be a precondition for the presidential
tour.
In contrast, in the case of Pakistan, even Clinton's brief
stopover in Islamabad was a matter of debate within the US administration.
It was only decided earlier this month after officials particularly
from the CIA and Pentagon insisted that it was necessary to maintain
longstanding ties with Pakistan. Clinton is likely to use the
stopover to publicly pressure Pakistani leader General Musharraf,
who seized power in a military coup last October, to set a timetable
for a return of parliamentary democracy and to rein in Islamic
fundamentalist groups, particularly Kashmiri separatists operating
from Pakistani territory.
Those in the US administration opposed to the Pakistan visit
pointed out that Clinton would be seen to be endorsing the military
junta. Since seizing power the Musharraf regime has banned all
strikes and political rallies, and has put deposed prime minister
Nawaz Sharif and a number of his top aides on trial on trumped
up charges of terrorism, hijacking and attempted murder. The prosecution
in the case has just called for Sharif to be put to death if he
is found guilty.
Clinton aides are attempting to put the best possible light
on the visit to Islamabad claiming that it is necessary in order
to encourage the two protagonists to reach a solution to the Kashmir
dispute. India and Pakistan were brought to the brink of war last
year when Pakistani-backed separatists seized key strategic positions
in the Kargil region of the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir.
Others have argued that Musharraf is a necessary bulwark against
a regime dominated by Islamic fundamentalists.
US administrations, of course, have never been loathe to embrace
military dictatorships in Pakistan or anywhere else when it suited
US interests. In different circumstances, Clinton's spindoctors
would be quite capable of inventing justifications for signing
a visions document with Pakistan and reading the riot
act to the BJP government in India for fomenting Hindu fundamentalism.
The present line of diplomatic bouquets for India and political
brickbats for Pakistan is determined by more fundamental economic
and strategic interests, not concerns over democracy or regional
peace.
Economic calculations
A key factor in Clinton's visit is the growing economic importance
of the Indian subcontinent, particularly India, for US corporations.
The chief purpose of the brief side trip to Bangladeshthe
first ever by a US presidentwas to discuss US investment
in the country's substantial natural gas fields. Clinton used
the opportunity to announce increases in US aid programs to Bangladesh
which included a pitiful $97 million in food assistanceless
than $1 a personfor one of the world's poorest countries.
In the backrooms the real business of encouraging the Bangladeshi
government to permit the export of natural gas was being hammered
out by US officials including Energy Secretary Bill Richardson.
US oil companies have already increased their investment in Bangladeshi
gas fields from $20 million in 1996 to $700 million. According
to Time magazine, the US Department of Energy has identified
$15 billion to $20 billion of potential investment projects in
South Asiamostly in India.
India itself is beginning to be discussed in international
financial circles with the same enthusiasm as China was five to
10 years ago. Commentators point to annual economic growth rates
in the 1990s of around 6 percent, an expanding middle class variously
estimated to number between 30 and 180 million and growing export
industries.
A former US ambassador to India Frank Wisner enthused in a
New York Times article that in coming years $250 billion
will be spent in India on power-generating equipment and $100
billion on telecommunications. The visit is a terrific opportunity
for the United States to root itself in the region, to get some
traction on the issues to create a privileged position for us
as we go forward, he said. US corporations are also eyeing
off medicines, airport equipment, food processing, mining including
gas and oil, engineering equipment and sporting goods as potential
areas for investment.
But the greatest hype is reserved for India's burgeoning computer
software and technology industries. Indian-based hi-tech companies
have been able to exploit the country's large pool of graduates,
who are paid a fraction of the salaries received by their counterparts
in Europe or the US, to carry out the labour intensive work of
computer programming. A report by the management consulting firm
McKinsey & Company forecast that by the end of the decade
the Indian software industry could earn $87 billion and employ
over 2 million people.
An article in the British-based Economist magazine entitled
The elephant and the pekinese noted: Perhaps
for the first time since inventing zero, India has a hot product
to sell and can keep the profits for itself. All this is entwining
India with the rest of the world and especially with the United
States in new ways. Software exports are growing at a rate of
50 percent a year, and around two-thirds of them go to the United
States. Much of that is serviced by Indians on temporary work
visas; India gets about a third of these, and hopes that Mr Clinton
will increase them. Indian companies are listed on American stock
exchanges; Indian Americans, an increasingly rich community, are
lobbying on behalf of India in their adopted country and investing
in their native land. A global bidding war has broken out for
Indian brains.
Investment opportunities for US corporations go a long way
to explaining the US administration's embrace of the Vajpayee
government in India. Powerful sections of the ruling class in
India and internationally calculate that the Hindu chauvinist
BJP is the best means to press ahead with the economic restructuring
measures demanded by corporate investors, including the privatisation
of state-owned industries, the axing of the country's limited
social services and prices subsidies and the removal of trade
and investment barriers. While appreciative of the steps carried
out in the 1990s, the IMF and other financial institutions are
insisting that the BJP government continue and accelerate the
process.
The Economist hinted at the logic behind the willingness
of the US and other powers to turn a blind eye to the BJP's Hindu
extremism. Since 1991, it noted, India has opened up its
economy to world trade and started to privatise, albeit too slowly
in both respects. The coming to power two years ago of Atal Behari
Vajpayee's Bharatiya Janata Party, which leads the coalition government,
has probably hastened the process. Although the Hindu-nationalist
party has a xenophobic streak, it has also been friendlier to
business and more hostile to communism than the opposition Congress
party, which dominated Indian politics for most of its past 50
years of independence... Increasingly, these days, India is being
treated with more respect in economic councils. When new-economy
issues, such as e-commerce, come up at the World Trade Organisation,
India and the United States find themselves on the same side.
Clinton will no doubt press Vajpayee to go further in the IMF's
agenda of economic restructuring than has been set out in the
latest Indian budget. Last November at a US investment summit
held in Mumbai (formerly Bombay), Dean O'Hare, Chubb Corporation
chairman and head of the US-India Business Council, noted rather
caustically that two main obstacles remained to further investment
ties: disrespect for the sanctity of contracts and the tardy
pace of economic reforms.
The Economist also noted: Like dot.com shares,
India's economy is more exciting for its potential than for its
current performance. Though it is the world's fifth largest economy
in terms of purchasing power, it accounts for less than 1 percent
of world trade and attracted just $2.5 billion in foreign investment
in 1998, about a twentieth of China's. The United States has a
bigger economic stake in India than any other single country,
but would barely notice if that commerce dried up.
A strategic reorientation
Clinton is in India not just to pursue economic opportunities,
however, but also to feel out the prospects for closer strategic
ties. In an article entitled US and India, Often at Odds,
Are on the Same Side in last Saturday's International
Herald Tribune, US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright outlinedin
veiled terms at leastsome of the US calculations behind
Clinton's visit. After referring obliquely to the hostile relationship
that existed through much of the Cold War, she stated: Today,
however, the mutual distrust is beginning to change. I believe
that both the United States and India are coming to realise that
there has always been something unnatural and regrettable about
the estrangement of our two democracies.
During the Cold War, US policy in the region was tilted
towards Pakistan. Washington supported what were often military
dictatorships in Pakistan with diplomatic, financial and military
assistance against its rival India, which, although part of the
so-called non-aligned bloc, had close relations with the former
Soviet Union. During the 1980s, US reliance on Pakistan became
even stronger as the CIA used the country as a base for funding,
arming and training Islamic fundamentalist groups in their war
against the Soviet-backed regime in Afghanistan.
But following the collapse of the Soviet Union, US strategic
concerns in the region have shifted. The US now regards the Islamic
fundamentalists it helped to organise as a danger to its interests
in the Middle East and also in Central Asia, where US corporations
are in competition with European and other rivals to exploit vast
reserves of oil, natural gas and minerals. The US has imposed
economic sanctions on the Taliban regime in Afghanistan for continuing
to give sanctuary to Saudi millionaire Osama bin Laden who is
accused of organising the bombing of US embassies in Kenya and
Tanzania. But the US administration is also concerned at the activities
of a number of armed opposition groups from the unstable Central
Asian republics that are thought to have bases in Afghanistan.
During the Kargil dispute last year, Clinton made an open political
overture to India when it pressured the Pakistani government of
Nawaz Sharif to withdraw support for the Kashmiri separatists
on Indian territory. Behind-the-scenes talks on strategic matters
between the US and India had, however, been going on for some
time. Under the guise of reducing tensions between India and Pakistan
following the 1998 nuclear tests, eight rounds of strategic
dialogue have taken place between US Deputy Secretary of
State Strobe Talbott and Indian Foreign Minister Jaswant Singhthe
lengthiest ever discussions between Indian and US officials. In
the aftermath of the Kargil clashes, US and Indian intelligence
services have begun to collaborate more closely in the name of
combatting terrorism.
The US has been careful to couch the strategic issues raised
by Clinton's visit in terms that indicate a pronounced tilt
towards India. In her article, Albright mentioned that India's
nuclear arsenal was still the No. 1 security concern
of the US but was at pains to point out that the US does
not regard India's missiles or nuclear weapons as a direct threat
and would seek to reconcile, to the greatest extent possible,
our nonproliferation concerns with India's appreciation of its
security requirements.
Combined with the fact that the US has not insisted that India
sign the CTBT agreement during the Clinton visit, the message
is being interpreted in Indian ruling circles as a tacit acceptance
of a nuclear-armed India. L. Subrahmanyam, head of an Indian committee
to investigate the army's performance in Kargil, bluntly pointed
out: This visit is purely symbolic of the fact that two
years after the nuclear tests, India had done nothing to comply
with the stentorian demands of the nuclear hegemonists and still
the US president is coming to visit. In spite of all the rhetoric,
the US accepts reality.
On the key issue of Kashmir, the US has also bent the stick
in India's direction. Clinton has shelved offers to personally
mediate the dispute between India and Pakistan in line with the
Indian government's longstanding insistence that Kashmir is an
internal problem and that it will not accept international mediation.
Moreover, Albright has called for the Line of Control (LoC)the
demarcation between Pakistan- and Indian-held Kashmir established
to end the 1971 warto be respected. Translated from diplomatic
language, her statement was directed against the infiltration
of Kashmiri separatist fighters from Pakistan into Jammu and Kashmir.
Prior to his visit, Clinton described the Indian subcontinent
as the world's most dangerous place. He has promoted
his trip as a means reducing tensions in the region and establishing
a lasting peaceparticularly between India and Pakistan.
But there is every reason to believe that closer ties between
the US and Indiaruled by the Hindu extremists of the BJPfar
from leading to peace will further destabilise an already unstable
area of the globe.
Subrahmanyam's comments are symptomatic of discussion in New
Delhi that India should take a far more aggressive stand towards
Pakistan and throughout the region. Indeed, the BJP-led government
has just brought down a budget that hikes defence spending by
a massive 28 percent. Indian Defence Secretary George Fernandez
has made renewed efforts to sell the doctrine of limited
warthe dangerous idea that Pakistan and India may
engage in fighting in Kashmir or even all-out conventional war
without resorting to nuclear weapons.
In Washington, the even more dangerous idea is being entertained
that a nuclear-armed India may be a useful tool against China,
which continues to support Pakistan and has a longstanding border
dispute with India. The Economist article, cited above,
commented: The second point of convergence between Indian
and American interests is one that may get no public mention on
this visit. It is this: that some strategists are beginning to
think of India as a counterweight to China. The world is beginning
to notice that India has nearly the same number of people as China,
plus a more benign system of government and no designs on its
neighbours. China-hawks in both India and America dream of a strategic
partnership' between the two great democracies.
While the article notes that neither the US nor India wants
their friendship to be seen as the start of an anti-China axis,
it nevertheless points out: Some people, such as Richard
Haass, of the Brookings Institution, a Washington think-tank,
wonder whether India and the United States can agree on an approach
to Asia, and thus to China. Maybe not. Nonetheless, both must
be aware that today's friendship could become tomorrow's alliance
if China turns hostile, a relationship that's there in time
of need,' as Haass obliquely puts it. Haass is tipped to
win a top appointment should the Republicans win the US presidential
election.
Regardless of the exact nature of the discussions between Clinton
and Vajpayee, a closer relationship with the US will encourage
India to adopt a more aggressive stance within the region. A concern
that the US may unleash something it is unable to control is no
doubt one of the calculations behind Clinton's touchdown in Islamabad.
In the uncertain and highly unstable period that has opened up
following the end of the Cold War, the US is not inclined to put
all its eggs in one basketcertainly not all at once. With
a foot in both the Indian and Pakistan camps, it is able to play
one off against the othera game which is also fraught with
immense dangers.
See Also:
As Clinton prepares to visit
subcontinent
US delivers a thinly disguised ultimatum to Pakistan
[4 February 2000]
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