Tuesday, March 25, 2008

ambassador bhadrakumar: Tibet issue and the Indian reaction

mar 24th, 2008

i am disappointed that an ex-ambassador should be embracing china's POV so strongly.

has anyone read ex-ambassador gajendra singh? he sends me some of his articles. does anybody have any opinion on them?

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Bhadrakumar


 

The Hindu, March 24, 2008

Tibet issue and the Indian reaction

M.K. Bhadrakumar

 

The Indian statement on the Lhasa developments is vacuous, self-righteous, needlessly polemical. Are we really imagining that we hold a 'Tibetan card'? Or are we playing to the gallery in Washington?

The eruption of violence and the vandalism in Lhasa, capital of China's Tibet Autonomous Region, and the Indian reaction to it raise some profound questions. Any casual visitor to Dharamsala on the Indo-Tibetan border, seat of the so-called Tibetan 'government-in-exile,' can make out that the recent violence in Lhasa was anticipated well beforehand by the Tibetan activists based in that Himalayan hamlet.

The 'bazaar' in Dharamsala is full of gossip. The Tibetan activists acknowledge that they knew that after a gap of over two decades, bloody incidents of arson and killing were about to be staged in Lhasa. They are in constant touch with the Tibetan dissidents inside China. But when I asked them what they did with those information nuggets about impending violence — whether they parted with their information to anybody in the Indian government or who their collaborators were — they wouldn't tell. They parried. They chuckled. Their wrinkled faces broke into enigmatic smiles.

Dharamsala is a beehive of intelligence operatives. Graham Greene would have relished the black comedy in such a spectacular setting where time stands still. The first question that occurred to me when I wandered through the narrow lanes and by-lanes of Dharamsala was whether the Indian intelligence sleuths knew beforehand about the imminent outbreak of violence in Lhasa. Do not be surprised if they did not know. We have a history of intelligence failures. But Dharamsala is on Indian soil. We have traditionally kept a close watch on the goings-on there, which have deep implications for India-China relations. Many brilliant careers in our intelligence community began promisingly in the Indo-Tibetan border regions.

But indeed if we knew, when did we know? More important, if we knew, what did we do with what we knew? Did we know when the Foreign Secretary visited Dharamsala three weeks ago? Was the Foreign Secretary's visit occasioned by what we knew? Highly intriguing questions.

The outfit of the 'government-in-exile' was obviously in top gear for undertaking sophisticated propaganda work within hours of the outbreak of violence in Lhasa. Chinese national flags were neatly spread on the streets. Tibetan activists began dancing on them. The posse of Indian policemen passively watched. Western photographers eagerly caught the excited Tibetan youth on camera — handsome young men with flowing hair and headbands who would look exotic like the wild Afghan mujahideen did at one time on the television screens in the drawing rooms in Europe and America.

A shed was erected in front of the Dalai Lama's compound where a 'relay fast' went on. Big names from the Western media were already gathering. The 'government-in-exile' still kept postponing the Dalai Lama's press conference so that the media sharks with real bite could reach the remote place. Finally, the press conference was held on a Sunday afternoon at 2.15 pm.

But even before the Dalai Lama spoke, Delhi had spoken. By Saturday, the Indian External Affairs Ministry already issued a rather substantive statement. It said the UPA government felt "distressed." It referred to the "unsettled situation and violence in Lhasa." It spoke of the "deaths of innocent people." It expressed the hope that "all those involved" — meaning, perpetrators of arson and killing as well as authorities — would "work to improve the situation." Most important, it called on Beijing to "remove the causes of such trouble in Tibet" through dialogue and non-violent means.

One does not have to be a practitioner of diplomacy to comprehend that the UPA government was advising China one or two things about how to set its house in order in Tibet. Evidently, our government is highly experienced in tackling political violence that regularly rocks our country and the Chinese government could learn a few useful things from the UPA. After all, in something like 150 districts in India, the writ of the Indian state no longer runs. Yet Beijing could see, our leadership calls the problem a mere "virus."

It boggles the mind on what ground India can be so very self-righteous in rendering unsolicited advice to another country. Do we countenance such advice when it is proffered by any world capital on the unseemly happenings in our country? There was a time when Pakistan used to take note of communal violence in India. We used to fret and fume then. Of course, on the basis of reciprocity, the two South Asian neighbours have made it a point nowadays to avoid making statements about their internal affairs. They saw that polemics didn't serve any useful purpose but vitiated Indo-Pakistan relations, and civilised inter-state behaviour can do without them.

The Indian statement on the Lhasa developments is vacuous. It is needlessly polemical. That raises a few questions. Are we really imagining that we hold a 'Tibetan card?' Or are we being merely opportunistic intentionally playing to the gallery in Washington that the UPA government comprises natural allies gutsy enough to stand up to China?

Double standards

The problem is that such vacuity and double standards can easily boomerang. Curiously, just as South Block was pontificating on how China should govern Tibet, a cable was landing in our foreign policy establishment informing it that the 60-member Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) at its summit meeting in Dakar, Senegal, adopted a devastatingly critical resolution on Jammu & Kashmir. Of course, this is not the first time that the OIC has done this. But the latest condemnation calling for the right of self-determination for the Kashmiri people has been unusually strong. Among others, Foreign Ministers of friendly countries such as Turkey, Tajikistan, and Saudi Arabia expressed their anguish over the "plight" of Kashmiris in "Indian-occupied Kashmir."

Very obviously, the UPA government's West Asia policy has begun to affect India's standing in the Islamic world. A perception is growing that India is edging away from an independent foreign policy and cosying up to U.S. regional policies; that India is harmonising its stance with the U.S. strategy in West Asia on issues such as the Iran nuclear file and the Palestinian problem. The chattering class in Delhi may disparagingly speak of the OIC as an organisation of no consequence. But the fact remains that Russia has taken it so seriously that it sought and obtained an observer status with it. U.S. President George W. Bush has appointed a Karachi-born Pakistani American as his special envoy to the OIC for the first time, openly acknowledging that the Islamic body impacts on the U.S. foreign policy and must be taken seriously.

Unsurprisingly, the UPA government's reaction to the OIC summit's statement regarding J&K has been swift and sharp. It said the government "regrets" the development — plainly speaking, shorn of diplomatese, it made its protest known. But curiously, it adds: "The OIC has no locus standi in matters concerning India's internal affairs including Jammu and Kashmir, which is an integral part of India. We strongly reject all such comments."

So we have behaved like a porcupine apprehending a mere threat of pain — almost reflexively. South Block hastened to underscore a fundamental principle in inter-state relations, which, ironically, India crafted a long time ago — Panchsheel. No doubt, it does not pay to cast stones while living in a glasshouse, least of all in our region where problems are galore. We should know that it is the tragic history of our region that the western powers fish in troubled waters. And at this point in contemporary history, Asia is on the West's radar screen as a potential locomotive of growth of the world economy.

Thus, the visit of the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, to India should have been kept as a bilateral exchange. Did the UPA government lack the courage to counsel the visiting dignitary on diplomatic decorum as she happens to be an influential American politician? She made provocative statements against China from Indian soil. China has taken exception to Ms Pelosi's interference in its internal affairs. Indeed, we would be appalled if any of our neighbouring countries became party to a similar theatre of the absurd berating India.

The Indian statement on Tibet may have pleased the Bush administration, which is straining to put pressure on China and embarrass its leadership in the run-up to the Beijing Olympics. But if a balance sheet is drawn for India's long-term interests, where is it that our advantage lies? Suffice it to say, there have been helpful nuances in China's position on Kashmir in recent years.

In a manner of speaking, it is possible to estimate that Chinese spokesmen have articulated on the Kashmir issue in a "Shimla spirit." The India-China relationship is like a half-full glass. Creative, forward-looking diplomacy lies in expanding on the content within, rather than adding to the emptiness. When the UPA came to power in 2004, a trajectory of mutual understanding in the India-China relationship was promised. Indeed, the then National Security Advisor, J. N. Dixit, earnestly set about the task, employing his formidable intellectual capability as a scholar-diplomat. At a minimum, UPA should not end up travelling back in time.

(The writer is a former ambassador belonging to the Indian Foreign Service.)

 


7 comments:

ramesh said...

Thus speaks the Communist !!
Is Bhadrakumar working for the Chinese foreign office? What’s the connection between Kashmir & Tibet. Is this man mad. Mr. Bhadrakumar should go to any of upscale shopping complexes in Delhi and see those subsidized, rich Kashmiri muslims merrily shopping away, buying property in Delhi even as thousands of Kashmiri hindus languish in camps in Jammu & elsewhere. If tomorrow some proper Chinese province – lets say Sichuan or Guangdong or whatever – would start demanding independence China would be well within its right to crush it, just as India is trying to do in Kashmir. But Tibet is not China. Xininjiang (or Chinese Turkestan) is not China. These are all territories conquered by the Han Chinese in their insatiable lust for more & more territory. As far as the Chinese are concerned Burma, Korea, etc. etc are all China.
Its pathetic to see a senior ex foreign official so completely embrace the Chinese & Muslim (OIC) standpoints. No wonder the The Hindu has published his article. Bhadrakumar belongs to the class of dhimmis who want India (read Hindus) to remain a second rate power; swallow all the historical wrongs inflicted on this country; and make our peace with Islam and China on their terms.

pizza said...

Googling will show that Bhadrakumar is of leftist inclination .. the typical pro Muslim, China position and anti Hindu/India/USA.

Virtually all his articles reflect that position. In the left's publication website www.leftword.com, his book shares pace with Vijay Prashad and Prakash Karat.

Now coming to his article ... he uses the word "vacuous" so many times. Which basically is what you get from his article.

Acorn national interest vividly dissects his article:

John 8:7 does not apply to international relations

Perfection is not a pre-requisite for expressing concerns over China’s treatment of Tibetans

M K Bhadrakumar’s op-ed in The Hindu criticising India’s response to China’s handling of the Tibetan protests is bizarre. It is bizarre because despite being a former diplomat, he appears to argue that foreign policies ought to be free of double (or multiple) standards, and only perfect states can criticise others.

Mr Bhadrakumar’s implies that India has no right to criticise China’s handling of Tibetan protests because of its own failure to tackle Maoist political violence in the country. This argument is flawed at many levels. For one, India has never used violence against any political movement that is non-violent. It defies imagination that Mr Bhadrakumar should equate the Maoists (for whom armed struggle is an article of faith) with the Tibetans (for whom non-violence is the article of faith). It defies imagination that he should equate India, a democracy with universal suffrage with China, a dictatorship where Tibetans (and non-Tibetans) do not have political rights.

It defies imagination that he should equate India, which still accords special statuses and prevents demographic change in states suffering from separatist violence with China, where transmigration is official policy and a ground reality. And it defies imagination that he should equate India, whose constitution protects religious minorities and whose governments go out of the way to pander to them, with China, which sees them as ‘primitive’ and in need of ‘modernisation’. In a world of imperfect states and imperfect governments, if there is a country that has moral right to speak to China, it is India.

For full analysis go here:
http://acorn.nationalinterest.in/2008/03/24/john-87-does-not-apply-to-international-relations/

pizza said...

I forgot to add. Check out the comments sections as well:

http://acorn.nationalinterest.in/2008/03/24/john-87-does-not-apply-to-international-relations/#comments

ramesh said...

There is one thing that makes very apparent with Bhadrakumar’s article. Marxists / Commies have few competitors when it comes to “word play.” They spin arguments & weave theories like nobody else does (read the Frontline, u’ll understand). It’s all hot air with no substance. I remember reading a very funny novel (set in WWII) -- The Secret of Santa Vittoria by Robert Crichton. In the town centre of Santa Vittoria there is this statue of a pissing turtle. When the German commander enters the town, the nervous Italian mayor greets him with a barrage of words. The German comments: “Words flow from his mouth like pis from that turtle.” Ditto Bhadrakumar and the The Hindu. These are the pissing turtles of India.

pizza said...

Marxists/Commies/Leftists are sick in their minds.

Poverty, ignorance, naivety are the reasons Indians vote such hateful, anti Hindu vermins. How many voters realize these vermins have an vicious anti-hindu idealogy which will work against the interest of the voter.

Kerala is the perfect example of how owing to this hateful philosophy, Hindus are turning against their own selfs -- (marxists) are killing Hindus (RSS) and vice versa.

I bet the semitics who will ultimately replace them are having a good laugh.

Wildcat said...

The commies/Chinese seem to have more than a fair share of their agents in the Indian foreign service. During the days when the Nehru-Menon duo sold the Tibetans down the Yangtze river, the Indian ambassador in China was some guy called Panicker, who was referred to as China's ambassador to India.

Anonymous said...

Bhadrakumar's article updates how we have been taken over by the brown-sahebs- the kind of slaves that worked with british to control the empire.

That some Tibetans know ( They would be having a lot of false alarms also) that something is wrong in China does't mean that Lammas are comfortable with maoism. The chinese Maoism is an atheist thuggery where state has inappropriate influence.

What Bhadrakumar Urging is that, unless one succumbs to those thugs, they will keep killing as in Kashmir.

The scoundrels occupy because Bhadrakumars justify those scoundrels. If ultimately the hindus, the lamas will be attacked, why the hell one would listem to Bhadrakumar ? Can he deviate beyond the slave role assigned by eurocentrists - to justify oppression of hindus ?