PPS Geostrategic Factors in Indo US Relations
PPS Geostrategic Factors in Indo US Relations
PP Shukla
But the reality is that India did try and offer everything that
America wanted. Nehru’s first visit to a superpower was not to the
Soviet Union, but to the United States – as far back as in 1949. It
was, in fact, the Pakistan Prime Minister who was scheduled to visit
the USSR in 1949, though the visit did not take place. Nehru visited
the USSR only in 1955, by which time American policies in South
Asia were firmly locked down. And during his visit to the US, Nehru
did not lecture or hector any of his interlocutors, but instead,
assured them that India would stand with the democracies in the
event of war. This was more clearly spelt out by his trusted foreign
policy aide, Sir GS Bajpai, who assured his American counterparts
that he was speaking with the full authority of his Prime Minister.
His remarks, made to Acting US Secretary of State Lovett in April
1948, deserve to be quoted in detail:
This phase in our history set the basic parameters between India
and the US, and it was not very promising at this point of time.
However, worse was to come after the change of Administration in
1953. Whereas prior to this time, American military supplies were
proceeding more or less even-handedly as between India and
Pakistan, all this changed under the new Administration and by
1954, America had undertaken to provide military assistance to
Pakistan. The record shows that all sides declared that the
assistance was meant for the fight against Communist aggression,
in reality Pakistan was arming against India. However, this was the
occasion for the entry of the USSR into South Asian politics, and in
December 1955, Khrushchev visited Srinagar and declared that
Kashmir was an integral part of India and, in a pointed rebuttal of
the Pakistani demand for self-determination, added that the people
had already exercised their right of self-determination. As a veto
wielding permanent member of the UN Security Council, this
effectively put an end to any realistic chances of a UN-brokered
settlement of the issue.
The next phase opened after the Indian defeat at the hands of the
Chinese in 1962. Enough has been written about how it affected
Nehru and his foreign policy, so there is no need to go over that
ground one more time. What has not received adequate attention is
the brief period November1962 to about the end of 1965. The war
started on 20 October and continued until 21 November 1962,
giving enough time for countries to define their positions – even
their changing positions. In the initial period, the USSR was
cautiously neutral, even tilting towards the Chinese. The
Americans, under President Kennedy, were much more
forthcoming. In the early weeks, too, both these countries were
caught up in the Cuban Missile Crisis, and yet Kennedy was
strongly supportive. The Americans offered all help to the Indian
Army and went much further in terms of offering air defence cover,
manned by American forces.
However, once the actual shooting stopped, the Americans all but
made further military assistance conditional on India’s reaching a
settlement with Pakistan. It is a measure of the Indian desire for
American aid that the Indian leaders undertook some of the
toughest negotiations on the subject of Kashmir. In response to very
active shuttle diplomacy by Governor Harriman and Secretary
Sandys, India offered significant territorial concessions to Pakistan,
despite Pakistan’s signing a border agreement with China in March
1963, when the talks with India were at a very sensitive stage.
However, the Pakistanis were unwilling to settle for anything less
than the entire Vale, all the way south to the Chenab, and the talks
ended without result. By this time, habitual American positions
were beginning to assert themselves, and it did not help that they
offered to both sides what were called the “elements” of a
settlement, which, in essence, backed the Pakistani territorial
demands.
The Soviets, by now over the Cuban troubles, and slipping into their
long struggle with the Chinese, stepped in again and offered India
the fighter aircraft it had asked for – with no conditions attached,
unlike the Americans. Nevertheless, India did not make any long-
term commitment to either side. To his credit, Kennedy came
through with MAP assistance for India at this time, and the two
countries signed an Air Defence Agreement – the first and only
such understanding between India and America during the Cold
War. This was not easy, since the Pakistanis and their supporters
in the Administration, were all for holding aid to India hostage to a
Kashmir settlement.
This would be the appropriate time to pay tribute to Kennedy for his
role in strengthening Indo-US ties. Alone among the Presidents
during the Cold War period, he saw the virtue of a strategic
accommodation with India, and over-ruled all opposition in order to
build one. It is idle to speculate on what might have been, but it is
certain that, had he lived, there is a good chance that Indo-US
relations would have been qualitatively different.
Anyhow, Kennedy did not live long enough to fulfil the promise of
the new relationship. And once he was gone, things began to move
to their by-then traditional pattern. An observer would not have to
wait long for the hint of change. As early as 30 November 1963,
President Johnson was recorded as telling his aides that he was
unhappy at the way President Ayub Khan was being treated, and
wanted that changed.
Of course, change was not that easy to bring about, since Ayub,
and more particularly, his Foreign Minister Bhutto, were moving
ever closer to China – at that time a source of growing difficulties for
America specially in Vietnam. As for India, it was facing problems
with American arms supplies, and was increasingly finding the
Soviets a more responsive supplier. It was not only not insisting on
any political conditions, it was also willing to supply front-line
aircraft, and to transfer production facilities too.
Again, it may also be worth pointing out that Pakistan had offered,
under its SEATO obligations, to supply troops for the Vietnam War,
and Pakistan’s growing ties with China were a major irritant in its
relations with the US. However, Pakistan did not supply any troops
to Vietnam, again citing the need first for a settlement in Kashmir,
and the threat from India.
By the time the 1970’s started, two other major issues divided India
and the US: the Non-Proliferation Treaty and China. These issues
have been aired and discussed over the years, and there is little to
add to what is already well-known. Indians remember the American
act of sending a naval flotilla into the Bay from this period, with a
sense of unabated anger; it may help to mention that the Americans
had considered a similar nuclear-powered warship into the Bay of
Bengal in 1962, during the war with China – in a show of support
for India!
The Bush team had little time for India, engrossed as they were
with mopping up the debris of the end of the Cold War. The
Clinton Administration stunned the Indians with his reference
to Kashmir in his first UNGA speech in 1993, as did State
Department officials with their unbridled hostility, publicly
drawing parallels between India on the one hand and the USSR
and Yugoslavia on the other. It would be fair to say that, not
since the Nixon Administration had India faced such hostility
from the US. The then Prime Minister held two conferences on this
issue alone – why was the US being so hostile? This may not seem
like much to an American, but an Indian will understand – we do
not hold meetings to analyse anything – every Indian singly knows
it all. And he brought the best minds into play in order to
understand why the Americans were being so negative towards
India. This was a time when there was also no American
dependence on Pakistan as there was to develop after 2001, so
there really was no adequate explanation.
What this note has been attempting to show is that the main hurdle
in Indo-American strategic understanding is the question of
Pakistan, and the central symptom there is the issue of Kashmir,
though the issues of terrorism sponsored by Pakistan, not just in
Kashmir but in other parts of India too, and the future of
Afghanistan, have emerged as additional divisive factors. The
history of India’s engagement with the Soviet Union should
demonstrate that support on Kashmir is both a necessary and
sufficient condition for true strategic partnership. True, India is not
as vulnerable today on this, and other matters, as it was in the
1950’s and 1960’s. Still, it remains probably our most important
concern, and sensitivity on this issue is an important touchstone –
if not the important touchstone – for our foreign partners. Those
who have followed our recent stand-off with China on this issue,
and the linking of China’s stand on Kashmir with our position on
Tibet, will appreciate the point being made.
The first is that India, and every Indian leader, tried hard to
establish a solid relationship with America, and tried every
reasonable accommodation possible. Certainly, America remained
the major priority for each Indian leader. It was America that did
not offer a reasonable response, with its insistence on a Kashmir
settlement on terms that no Indian government could accept. The
only exception to this was John Kennedy.
The second is that Pakistan, which was the preferred partner for
America, offered support for American goals, but made a Kashmir
settlement a precondition for such cooperation. Thus, it offered help
in Korea in the early 1950’s, but argued that it could not spare any
troops because of the Indian threat; in the 1960’s, they would have
sent troops to Vietnam, but for the threat posed by the Indians.
Today, it is the same refrain, only now it is al-Qaeda and the
Taliban, along with the other terrorist groups that find sanctuary
and financing inside Pakistan. The surprising thing is that there are
sober-minded people in the US who are ready to buy into this thesis
even today despite this history of mistaken premises and false
promises.
The first is from the American record itself. In the early 1960’s,
when the Pakistanis insisted on raising the issue in the UNSC, the
Americans informed them that they would play no role in promoting
or building support for another resolution. This position was
abandoned after the Indo-Pakistani war of 1965, but the change in
American position was noted and appreciated in India. It would be a
very good idea for America to stop leaning on India to make
concessions on Kashmir and just take a back seat on this matter.
America has done this before, and would be wise to recognize that
there is no give in the Indian position on this issue. If in 1962, we
were being asked to surrender territory to Pakistan though we lost a
war to China, today we are being pushed into an even more illogical
position: because ISAF is in danger of losing to Pakistan, India
must make territorial concessions to Pakistan.
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