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India offers half-hearted criticism of US war on Iraq
By Wije Dias
25 March 2003
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The Indian government has made the most muted of criticisms
of Washingtons unilateral decision to launch war against
Iraq. After a meeting between Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee
and senior ministers last Thursday, an official statement cautiously
declared that the military action lacks justification
and was avoidable.
The statement carefully avoided any direct reference to the
United States and instead expressed grave concern
that differences in the UN Security Council had prevented
a harmonisation of the positions of its members, and were
seriously impairing the authority of the UN system.
At the same time, New Delhi reiterated its acceptance of the US
pretext for the warIraqs alleged weapons of
mass destruction.
Vajpayees stance is nothing more than cynical manoeuvre.
On the one hand, he wants to avoid openly supporting a war that
is viewed widely in India for what it isa neo-colonial war
of plunder. Already there have been significant antiwar protests
and the opposition is growing. On the other hand, Vajpayee and
his ministers are bending over backward to ensure that India retains
its close economic and military ties with the US.
US President Bush phoned the Indian prime minister shortly
after the first US strikes on Baghdad. According to the Hindu,
Vajpayee expressed the hope that military action would be
concluded at the earliest and offered Indias willingness
to provide humanitarian assistance in Iraq. At an all-party meeting
on Saturday, he blocked attempts by opposition parties to condemn
the US war, saying that Indias words and actions should
be aimed at trying to achieve pragmatic goals, rather than creating
rhetorical effect.
Indian Defence Minister George Fernandes declared over the
weekend that India would not provide refuelling to US warplanes,
as it had done in the 1990-91 Gulf war. The statement, however,
was an empty gesture as Washington has made no formal request
for such assistance. Fernandes has also made clear that New Delhi
has no intention of boycotting purchases of hi-tech US military
equipment.
During a visit to India last weekend by Iranian special envoy
Ali Akbar Velayati, Indian officials indicated that New Delhi
would undertake no diplomatic initiative to oppose the US war
on Iraq. According to sources cited by the Hindu, There
is, in New Delhis understanding, no need to antagonise the
US by using words like condemn to describe the American
military action. The article pointed out that New Delhi
was keen to retain Washingtons support over Kashmir in particular.
The Indian government would have preferred not to voice any
opposition at all. It was only after the global antiwar
protests in mid-February that Vajpayee criticised talk of unilateral
war by the US on Iraq. Speaking to a group of MPs from his Bharathiya
Janatha Party (BJP) on February 18, he declared that it would
be the moral death of UN if it succumbed to the pressure
of US. The government even expressed its readiness to pass
a joint resolution in parliament in opposing the US-led war.
Within hours, however, the Bush administration had begun to
apply pressure to New Delhi. US ambassador Robert Blackwill held
a series of private meetings with Deputy Prime Minister L.K. Advani,
BJP president Venkaiah Naidu and Foreign Secretary Kanwal Sibal.
The repercussions of these consultations were quickly
revealed as the bureaucrats in the Prime Ministers Office
(PMO) went into damage control.
In the evening of the same day, the PMO issued a statement
explaining that there had been a problem with the translation
of Vajpayees speech from Hindi into English. The prime minister,
it claimed, had only repeated what he had said before: when he
said that any action against Iraq outside the UN would be unfortunate
for the international community and would erode
UN authority.
Since then Vajpayee and his ministers have not stepped out
of line. Their criticisms have been mild and general, carefully
avoiding any direct reference to Washington. Behind the Hindu
chauvinists of the BJP are powerful sections of the Indian ruling
elite who are intent on maintaining the close economic, political
and strategic ties established with Washington over the past five
years.
And as the Indian press has pointed out, there are likely to
be immediate payoffs. Seema Mustafa wrote in the Asian Age
on February 21: The United States, soliciting Indias
support for its war on Iraq, has offered to pay the $2.5 billion
that Baghdad currently owes the government here. The article
also pointed out that Indian companies might be given lucrative
contracts for the post-war reconstruction of Iraq.
US ambassador Robert Blackwill confirmed the offer in comments
to the Times of India on March 11. He said India had a
role to play in the construction of civil society and economic
reconstruction of Iraq and had a number of comparative
advantages. India would be welcomed in that situation
where not every country would be welcomed, he noted.
Opposition parties
The opposition Congress and the Stalinist Communist Parties
have criticised the government and called for stronger statements
against the war. Their stance reflects concerns in ruling circles,
firstly, about the growth of antiwar protests across India, and,
secondly, about the implications for Indian capitalism of Washingtons
doctrine of pre-emptive war and the collapse of the UN and post-World
War II international relations.
An editorial in the Deccan Herald warned on March 12:
While India must not overlook its own strategic and economic
concerns in chalking out its strategy, taking an unprincipled
position on the issue of war and clambering on to the American
bandwagon is hardly likely to further Indias interests in
the long-run.
The extent of popular opposition to war is highlighted by a
recent survey in the city of Bombay. Of those interviewed, only
8 percent supported a US war on Iraq without UN approval and 59
percent opposed a war under any circumstances. While antiwar protests
have so far been relatively small by Indian standards, they have
sprung up in many major cities and are growing in size. One of
the largest was a rally of more than 100,000 in the southern city
of Trivendram in late February.
A significant feature of these antiwar protests is the absence
of any leading opposition figures. Like the government, Congress
has been careful to avoid offending Washington. Congress Party
president Sonia Gandhi has declared repeatedly: We are against
any unilateral action. A solution should be found through the
United Nations.
Not surprisingly, at the all-party meeting on Saturday, Congress
had no fundamental disagreements with Vajpayee. Its leaders simply
wanted stronger wordsa joint resolution condemning
the US. But there was no indication that the party wanted to take
the matter any further.
Behind Congress trailed the Communist Party of India (CPI)
and the Communist Party of India (CPI-M). In the debate, CPI-M
leader Somnath Chatterjee declared that it was unfortunate
that the Vajpayee government was not prepared to use the word
condemn in relation to the war. He joined Congress
in declaring that there should be an immediate end to the war
and a return to the UN.
From the outset, the Stalinist parties have sought to confine
the antiwar protests to pressuring official channels. A CPI-M
political bureau statement appealed to the Indian government to
join the majority of world governments in denouncing this aggression
and mounting a campaign against the USAs state sponsored
terrorism. But to borrow an oriental idiom, calling for
Vajpayee to oppose the US war is rather like expecting feathers
from a tortoise.
On March 7, CPI-M parliamentarian Jibon Roy withdrew his resolution
to oppose the war on Iraq in deference to External Affairs Minister
Yashwant Sinha, who repeated the governments well-rehearsed
position that India opposes any unilateral operation against Baghdad.
In other words, the CPI-M is not opposed to the invasion of Iraq
on principled groundsthat it is an imperialist war of plunderbut
rather, like the Vajpayee government, because it does not have
the imprimatur of the UN.
The war has confirmed that the CPI-M and CPI function as part
of the political establishment to defend the interests of Indian
capitalism. Any genuine opposition to the US invasion of Iraq
requires a complete political break with these rotten formations.
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