FROM NEHRU TO RAJIV
Forty Years of India’s Foreign
Policy
Prof. A. PRASANNA KUMAR
Andhra University, Waltair
Attempting to sketch the foreign policy of India,
stretching over a period of forty years, from 1946 to 1985, in an article like
this, would be a hazardous exercise. Still, I venture to do it; and
in doing so I am aware of the limitations this attempt inevitably suffers from.
I have chosen to start from 1946 as it was in that year that Jawaharlal Nehru
talked about some specific outlines of India’s foreign policy after
freedom was won. From that year to the present, constitute forty years of
momentous changes for India
in particular and the world in general. This is a period sandwiched between two
cold wars–one that had begun when India
was moving from bondage to freedom and the other, the second cold war, that has
begun almost in the neighbourhood of India. These forty years have seen
six Prime Ministers in India
(including Charan Singh’s six-month stint and excluding, of course. Gulzarilal
Nanda’s brief interludes as acting Prime Minister). Four wars have taken a
heavy toll of our scarce resources during this period. India’s
policies, domestic and external, were influenced by the politics of the
bi-polar world system that emerged after the second world war. The bi-polar
world later became multi-polar. Yet as Kissinger said, the world is still
militarily bi-polar though politically multi-polar. India
continues to be a “force” in international fora, being now the leader of NAM. But how
effective is India’s
role and how much of weight does she carry in world politics, compared to what
it was thirty years ago? India
is without doubt, the dominant power in South Asia
and the number one State in the sub-continent, flatteringly told sometimes that
she is going to be a “super power” by the turn of the century. Yet, no country
in the region regards India
as a genuine friend, with some of her neighbours trying to embarrass India now and
then with accusations of “hegemonistic” ambitions. Our defence expenditure
which was a meagre Rs. 300 crores thirty years ago, has now soared to over Rs.
7600 crores. Yet our borders are not more secure now than in the past.
The most dangerous developments of the recent
past have occurred in our neighbourhood. The super power rivalry in the Indian Ocean bas escalated to alarming proportions. The United States has not only built powerful bases
in the ocean zone but has dumped highly sophisticated military-ware in the
Middle East and at our doorstep in Pakistan. Russia’s occupation of Afghanistan has
created a severe security problem for the region. It is against this dark
background that India’s
challenging task has to be viewed. Can India guard her integrity and
protect her security without compromising on her avowed goals of non-violence,
non-alignment and goodwill towards all? Have India’s options become harder and
narrower? Can India
overcome the challenge by peaceful means through diplomatic channels, without
building pipelines of military supplies from abroad? These are some questions
that every thinking Indian might ask today as we pass through the mid-eighties,
hoping to land in a safe, secure and prosperous 21st century. In studying
foreign policy it might be considered arbitrary, if we discuss it under such titles as “the Nehru era” or “the Indira era” or “the
Janata period.” Every leader has his or her own approach to the issues of his
or her times. It may be right to say that our foreign policy is but a
continuation of a process begun forty years ago, though some differences in
approach can be found at different periods. Just as a streak of unity is said
to underlie India throughout
her long history, the basic philosophy of India’s
foreign policy has remained unaltered and the goals that Nehru had set for India and the role he had envisioned for India and Asia
in world politics continue to be relevant today.
The foreign policy of a democratic nation,
said Dean Acheson, is expected to reflect that nation’s “total culture”.1
Jawaharlal Nehru must have thought on those lines when he proclaimed that
India’s foreign policy was “inherent in the circumstances of India, inherent in
the past thinking of India, inherent in the conditioning of the Indian mind
during our struggle for freedom”.2 Nehru declared in 1946, when he
was the Vice-President of the Interim Government, that India would follow “an
independent policy, keeping away from the power politics of
groups aligned one against the other.” “India”, said Nehru. “would work for
international co-operation and goodwill and oppose racial discrimination.” The
motto too was stated: “Closer relations with neighbours and good relations with
all”.3 Distressed at the raging of cold war winds
then, Nehru struck a note of caution too when he said that “it would have been
astonishingly foolish to fall into this business of the cold war either on
grounds of principle or on grounds of expediency”.4 Nehru
seemed to have been constantly inspired by the heritage of the great Asian
civilizations, like the Chinese and Indian, and he did not hesitate to
emphasise, whenever occasion warranted, the greatness, if not superiority, of
these ancient civilisations. He summoned the Asian Relations Conference at Delhi in March, 1947 and
that marked the beginning of a new era for Asian consciousness and identity in
world affairs. For about a decade from then on the proclamation was made in no
unclear terms that Asia would show the way to the world; India would lead Asia in this effort; and he
(Nehru) would lead India
in pursuit of this goal. It was more than a movement. It was a mission.
Buddha’s concern for humanity, Ashoka’s renunciation and Gandhi’s non-violence
constituted the core of Nehru’s philosophy. The days of secret diplomacy the
narrow nineteenth century diplomatic methods and the crude cold war politics
could all be given a burial, Nehru thought. Nehru’s speech at the Columbia University
in 1949 in which he stated the goals of India’s foreign policy was another
instance of his determination to strike a new path in world affairs. The goals
of India’s
foreign policy, he said, included “maintenance of freedom both national and
individual”, “the elimination of want, disease and ignorance which afflict the
greater part of the world’s population”. 5 These
are goals not just for India
but for the entire world. No wonder India’s foreign policy became “a
fascinating study” to some Western scholars. As Geoffrey Tyson put it: “Nehru
did not need to go to New York to make
pronouncements of international affairs; the world press came to Delhi to hear him”.6 Delhi became a necessary diplomatic stopover for
world leaders and diplomats visiting Asia.
Yet, Nehru was aware of the hazardous path he
was treading. E. H. Carr once wrote that “foreign policy is not an exercise in
sainthood.” Nehru was in agreement with this view. In Glimpses of World
History Nehru admitted that the world was a hard place for “the idealist.”
He fully understood “the power dynamics underlying international relations.” As
K. Subrahmanyam observed, Nehru’s non-alignment “was a sophisticated policy of
retaining maximum available options at any given time in a bi-polar world”.
7 Nehru’s policy as Escott Reid perceptively
pointed out, “United India” and helped “to ease relations between the
West and Peking”.8 The creation of a new third force, practically
a moral force, arresting the spread of military alliances the fight for the
liberation of the oppressed peoples of Asia and Africa through non-violence and
the zeal to build bridges of understanding and goodwill among states, small and
big, and among people of all climes became the features of a new movement
launched under India’s leadership. “We are not neutral between right and wrong.
We are neutral between hatred and fear,” declared Nehru. Yet some Western
scholars and writers like Henry Kissinger poured scorn on India’s policy.
Said Henry Kissinger: “The most strident advocates of neutrality are often the
people who in dress, learning and manner of thinking are closest to the West”.9 Behind
“their anti-colonialism lies psychological chaos”, said Kissinger, adding that
Nehru and the non-aligned leaders were “tempted to play a leading role in
international affairs which was a fertile field of manipulation for ambitious
men because of their intractable domestic problems”.10 Kissinger accused the third world countries
of behaving like “arbiters” not “neutrals”, Exhorting the United States and the
USSR “not to compete for the allegiance of the uncommitted” Kissinger lamented
that “We sometimes act as if we and the communists were engaged in a debate in
the Oxford Union, with the uncommitted nations acting as moderators and
awarding a prize after hearing all arguments”.11 Such
strong comments were made particularly at a time when India looked “blatantly
partisan” in the eyes of many critics for her sharp condemnation of Israeli
aggression against Egypt (backed by the Western powers) and her reluctance to
condemn Russian invasion of Hungary. Criticism of India’s different positions on two
similar issues seemed justified. Michael Brecher, however, made a sharp
distinction of India’s
perception of the two crises. Said Brecher: 12 “Nehru’s
condemnation of Western powers over Suez and his initial rationalization of
Russia’s occupation of Hungary were due to two sub-conscious responses: (1) a continuing mistrust of Western actions because of the lengthy history
of Anglo-French colonialism in Asia and Africa and willingness to give Russia a
fair hearing because of the absence of direct Russian penetration into South
and South East Asia and (2) an unstated belief that violence that is bad
but white violence against non-whites is worse”. This explanation apart, India lost many friends because of the manner in
which India’s
spokesmen, Krishna Menon being the shining example of them, harangued in world
fora and the United Nations. The “liberation” of Goa
was described by the Washington Post “as
a world class instance of post-colonial hypocrisy”. 13 China’s aggression against India in 1962 caused immense damage to India’s policy
and to the non-aligned movement as a whole. In a way the Chinese attack
“exposed” the limitations of India’s
policy. A more practical approach became necessary in the light of new
developments. For India
the ’Sixties were the most troubled decade both internally and externally. Two
Prime Ministers, Nehru and Shastri, died suddenly. Two wars rocked the nation
that was passing through a severe food shortage. Another war with Pakistan was thrust on India. India’s treaty with the Soviet
Union in 1971 was criticised as the last straw on the back of non-alignment,
though Mrs. Gandhi made it clear that there was no question of making a
compromise of our policy of non-alignment. Critics should remember that by
taking American aid and advice during India’s
war with China in 1962, India had not
walked into the “American trap”. Equally the Indo-Soviet treaty did not make India a “satellite” of the Soviet
Union. In that precarious situation when there was a collusion
between Pakistan, China and America and with the Nixon administration being
determined to give India “a hen” there was no alternative for India except to
strengthen her ties with the Soviet Union which had stood by India through
thick and thin. Mrs. Gandhi’s brilliant reply to a Press reporter during her
visit to the United States
in 1982, summed up her approach to foreign policy. When a reporter pointedly
asked Mrs. Gandhi whether India
was tilting to the left or to the right, Mrs. Gandhi shot back, “We are tilting
neither to the left nor to the right, but standing straight.” Mrs.
Gandhi provided the right direction to India’s
policy stressing India’s
security and invulnerability in the region. India’s
decision not to sign the Non-Proliferation Treaty and the peaceful nuclear
explosion of 1974 confirmed India’s
determination to keep her nuclear options open. Mrs. Gandhi rebutted charges
that India
was growing nuclear ambitions by pointing out that there was a difference
between a nuclear country and a nuclear weapon country. The Simla Agreement
with Pakistan, the
magnanimity shown by India
in the return of POWs and the efforts to repair relations with Pakistan could not, however, allay Pakistan’s fears about India. Both
Mrs. Gandhi’s Government and the Janata Government tried to improve relations
with Beijing and the process of normalisation of
relations with China
is still on, though the pace of progress is slow. If India’s
relations with China have,
in the last ten years, not deteriorated, India’s relations with the other
neighbours have not much improved. It is here that a more
vigorous policy is called for in view of the recent developments.
Though Russia’s
occupation of Afghanistan
has been described as a serious threat to Pakistan,
there has not been any serious move from Moscow
to destablise Pakistan.
Yet. Pakistan has used the
issue to acquire massive supply of arms, planes and missiles, none of which can be used against any country but India. India
is opposed to Russian presence in Afghanistan. India is privately opposed to continued Russian
presence, though publicly India
has not opposed it. As Rajendra Sareen sums up: “India
has a vital stake in seeking the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan.
The restoration of Afghanistan
as a buffer between the Soviet Union and the sub-continent is of crucial
significance for the peace of the region”.14 Once the Russians
withdraw from Afghanistan, India will be more free to pursue the zone of
peace concept which she and Sri
Lanka had first talked about nearly fifteen
years ago. Pakistan’s
threat perception has increased despite flow of arms from abroad. So has India’s fear of Pakistan’s designs including
nuclear intentions. Now that the Chinese “threat” has receded India can play a more advantageous role by first
of all attending to the Pakistan
factor. Together, India and Pakistan, can
help in defusing tension in the region as a first step toward normalization of
relations between them to be followed by a sort of detente between the super
powers in the region as a whole. Should such a scenario develop, the other
countries in the region would automatically give up fears about India’s
intentions. Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bhutan
would not fear India
“as too big not to swamp the others.” Nor would Bangladesh
accuse India
of trying to play the “big brother” all the time. India’s
immediate problems are the ethnic riots in Sri Lanka and Pakistani’s war
hysteria.
Thus as India now thinks of moving into the
21st century as a strong and stable country, one has to reflect on the legacy
that India has inherited from a great past and of the foundations so ably laid by
Nehru, Patel and other stalwarts in our domestic and foreign policy. There have
been occasions when India
was accused, perhaps not without justification, of moving away from the chosen
path. There are still some “embarrassments” to us which we cannot easily shake
off. Yet, during the first two hundred days of his prime minister-ship Rajiv
Gandhi has struck the right note in his foreign policy pronouncements. First of
all, he has most reassuringly conveyed to our neighbours that India does not
wish to seek a dominant position in the region at “the expense” of others. The
manner in which he set at rest all doubts about India’s
intentions with regard to the Tamil-problem in Sri Lanka is a point in this
regard. He has made it clear to Pakistan
that India does not believe
in the disintegration of that country though Pakistan
cannot afford to take India
for a ride using the India
card to get massive arms aid from abroad. Secondly the Prime Minister’s first
visit abroad, to the Soviet Union, has been a
tremendous success and the relations between the two countries continue to be
good. More importantly the relations with the United States appear to be taking a
turn for the better and that can help in defusing tension in the sub-continent
gradually. India’s options seem
to have become wider and a new era of more positive relations with the Western
countries can be ushered in without alienating India’s old and trusted friends.
The fact that Mr. Rajiv Gandhi has referred to Jawaharlal Nehru’s vision and
approach to foreign policy on more than one occasion is indicative of the
new Prime Minister’s determination to correct a few “imbalances” that may have
crept into our policy-making system. There is every reason to hope for a fresh
and a more constructive approach to India’s policy.
All this is not to
argue that India should give up her preeminent position in the region or that
India should show any let up in her efforts to strengthen her defense. India’s
options, including the nuclear, should be kept open. No less important it is
for India
to guard her frontiers and the long coast-line with more strength and
seriousness. We cannot get back to those times when we were perhaps deluded
into thinking that our “friends” would not covet our territory. We were perhaps
complacent then. Over the years we have plugged the loopholes of our defence
system and are “now well-equipped to meet any threat to our integrity” as we
are constantly assured. Yet, we cannot afford to lose sight of the high goals
that we had set before ourselves – peace, goodwill and elimination of want and
disease. It was a tryst with destiny: It is still a commitment to humanity. And
if the land of Gandhi and Nehru cannot pursue such
goals, which country in the world can do it?
References
1 Quoted in Cecil V.
Crabb Jr. American Foreign
Policy in the Nuclear Age. Harper
and Row Publishers, New York,
1960. P. 5.
2. India’s Foreign Policy, Publications Division. P. 83.
3 Dr. B. Pattabhi
Sitaramayya, History of the
Congress. Vol. II, PCC XIV.
4 India’s Foreign Policy. Op. cit., p. 83.
5 Tyson, Geoffrey,
Nehru – The Years of Power, Pall Mall Press, London. Pp. 69-70.
6 Ibid.
7 Power and Foreign Policy. World Focus, 1980, Annual Number. P.7.
8 Envoy to
Nehru P. 228.
9 Nuclear
Weapons and Foreign Policy. Harper
Bros., 1957 P. 259.
10 Ibid.
11 Necessity
for Choice, Chatto and
Windus. Pp. 330 - 331.
12 Nehru, A
Political Biography. Oxford University Press, 1959. P. 556.
13 Guardian
Weekly, December 4, 1983.
14 Pakistan–The India Factor, Allied Publishers, 1984. P. 30.
15 J. D. Sethi, South Asia–Stability and Regional
Co-operation (Ed. M. G.
Agwari), CRRID, 1983. P. 78.
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